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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13635 ***
+
+THE NEW YORK TIMES
+
+CURRENT HISTORY
+
+A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
+
+THE EUROPEAN WAR
+
+VOLUME I.
+
+From the Beginning to March, 1915 With Index
+
+[Illustration]
+
+NEW YORK THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY 1915
+
+Copyright 1914, 1915, By The New York Times Company
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ NUMBER I.
+
+ WHAT MEN OF LETTERS SAY
+ Page
+
+ COMMON SENSE ABOUT THE WAR 11
+ _By George Bernard Shaw_
+
+ SHAW'S NONSENSE ABOUT BELGIUM 60
+ _By Arnold Bennett_
+
+ BENNETT STATES THE GERMAN CASE 63
+ _By George Bernard Shaw_
+
+ FLAWS IN SHAW'S LOGIC 65
+ _By Cunninghame Graham_
+
+ EDITORIAL COMMENT ON SHAW 66
+
+ SHAW EMPTY OF GOOD SENSE 68
+ _By Christabel Pankhurst_
+
+ COMMENT BY READING OF SHAW 73
+
+ OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT WILSON 76
+ _By George Bernard Shaw_
+
+ A GERMAN LETTER TO G. BERNARD SHAW 80
+ _By Herbert Eulenberg_
+
+ BRITISH AUTHORS DEFEND ENGLAND'S WAR 82
+ _With Facsimile Signatures_
+
+ THE FOURTH OF AUGUST--EUROPE AT WAR 87
+ _By H.G. Wells_
+
+ IF THE GERMANS RAID ENGLAND 89
+ _By H.G. Wells_
+
+ SIR OLIVER LODGE'S COMMENT 92
+
+ WHAT THE GERMAN CONSCRIPT THINKS 93
+ _By Arnold Bennett_
+
+ FELIX ADLER'S COMMENT 95
+
+ WHEN PEACE IS SERIOUSLY DESIRED 97
+ _By Arnold Bennett_
+
+ BARRIE AT BAY: WHICH WAS BROWN? 100
+ _An Interview on the War_
+
+ A CREDO FOR KEEPING FAITH 102
+ _By John Galsworthy_
+
+ HARD BLOWS, NOT HARD WORDS 103
+ _By Jerome K. Jerome_
+
+ "AS THEY TESTED OUR FATHERS" 106
+ _By Rudyard Kipling_
+
+ KIPLING AND "THE TRUCE OF THE BEAR" 107
+
+ ON THE IMPENDING CRISIS 107
+ _By Norman Angell_
+
+ WHY ENGLAND CAME TO BE IN IT 108
+ _By Gilbert K. Chesterton_
+
+ SOUTH AFRICA'S BOERS AND BRITONS 125
+ _By H. Rider Haggard_
+
+ CAPT. MARK HAGGARD'S DEATH IN BATTLE 128
+ _By H. Rider Haggard_
+
+ AN ANTI-CHRISTIAN WAR 129
+ _By Robert Bridges_
+
+ ENGLISH ARTISTS' PROTEST 130
+
+ TO ARMS! 132
+ _By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle_
+
+ CONAN DOYLE ON BRITISH MILITARISM 140
+
+ THE NEED OF BEING MERCILESS 144
+ _By Maurice Maeterlinck_
+
+ LETTERS TO DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER 146
+ _By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant_
+
+ THE VITAL ENERGIES OF FRANCE 153
+ _By Henri Bergson_
+
+ FRANCE THROUGH ENGLISH EYES 153
+ _With Rene Bazin's Appreciation_
+
+ THE SOLDIER OF 1914 156
+ _By Rene Doumic_
+
+ GERMANY'S CIVILIZED BARBARISM 160
+ _By Emile Boutroux_
+
+ THE GERMAN RELIGION OF DUTY 170
+ _By Gabriele Reuter_
+
+ A LETTER TO GERHART HAUPTMANN 174
+ _By Romain Rolland_
+
+ A REPLY TO ROLLAND 175
+ _By Gerhart Hauptmann_
+
+ ANOTHER REPLY TO ROLLAND 176
+ _By Karl Wolfskehl_
+
+ ARE WE BARBARIANS? 178
+ _By Gerhart Hauptmann_
+
+ TO AMERICANS FROM A GERMAN FRIEND 180
+ _By Ludwig Fulda_
+
+ APPEAL TO THE CIVILIZED WORLD 185
+ _By Professors of Germany_
+
+ APPEAL OF THE GERMAN UNIVERSITIES 187
+
+ REPLY TO THE GERMAN PROFESSORS 188
+ _By British Scholars_
+
+ CONCERNING THE GERMAN PROFESSORS 192
+ _By Frederic Harrison_
+
+ THE REPLY FROM FRANCE 194
+ _By M. Yves Guyot and Prof Bellet_
+
+ TO AMERICANS IN GERMANY 198
+ _By Prof. Adolf von Harnack_
+
+ A REPLY TO PROF. HARNACK 201
+ _By Some British Theologians_
+
+ PROF. HARNACK IN REBUTTAL 203
+
+ THE CAUSES OF THE WAR 206
+ _By Theodore Niemeyer_
+
+ COMMENT BY DR. MAX WALTER 208
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER II.
+
+ WHO BEGAN THE WAR AND WHY?
+
+
+ SPEECHES BY KAISER WILHELM II. 210
+
+ THE MIGHTY FATE OF EUROPE 219
+ _As Interpreted by Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg,
+ German Imperial Chancellor._
+
+ AUSTRIA-HUNGARY'S VERSION OF THE WAR 226
+ _By Kaiser Frawz Josef and Count Berchtold_
+
+ A GERMAN REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE 228
+ _Certified by Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, German ex-Colonial
+ Secretary_
+
+ "TRUTH ABOUT GERMANY" 244
+ _Attested by Thirty-four German Dignitaries_
+
+ SPECULATIONS ABOUT PEACE, SEPTEMBER, 1914 273
+ _Report by James W. Gerard, American Ambassador at Berlin, to
+ President Wilson._
+
+ FIRST WARNINGS OF EUROPE'S PERIL 277
+ _Speeches by British Ministers_
+
+ GREAT BRITAIN'S MOBILIZATION 294
+ _Measures Taken Throughout the Empire Upon the Outbreak of War_
+
+ SUMMONS OF THE NATION TO ARMS 308
+ _British People Roused by Their Leaders_
+
+ TEACHINGS OF GEN. VON BERNHARDI 343
+ _By Viscount Bryce_
+
+ ENTRANCE OF FRANCE INTO THE WAR 350
+ _By President Poincare and Premier Viviani_
+
+ RUSSIA TO HER ENEMY 358
+
+ "THE FACTS ABOUT BELGIUM" 365
+ _Statement Issued by the Belgian Legation at Washington_
+
+ BELGO-BRITISH PLOT ALLEGED BY GERMANY 369
+ _Statement Issued by German Embassy at Washington, Oct. 13._
+
+ ATROCITIES OF THE WAR 374
+
+ BOMBARDMENT OF RHEIMS CATHEDRAL 392
+ _Protest Issued to Neutral Powers from French Foreign Office,
+ Bordeaux, Sept. 21._
+
+ THE SOCIALISTS' PART 397
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER III.
+
+ WHAT AMERICANS SAY TO EUROPE
+
+
+ IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CIVILIZATION 413
+ _Argued by James M. Beck_
+
+ CRITICS DISPUTE MR. BECK 431
+
+ DEFENSE OF THE DUAL ALLIANCE--REPLY 438
+ _By Dr. Edmund von Mach_
+
+ WHAT GLADSTONE SAID ABOUT BELGIUM 448
+ _By George Louis Beer_
+
+ FIGHT TO THE BITTER END 451
+ _An Interview with Andrew Carnegie_
+
+ WOMAN AND WAR--"Shot, Tell His Mother" (Poem) 458
+ _By W.E.P. French, Captain, U.S. Army_
+
+ THE WAY TO PEACE 459
+ _An Interview with Jacob H. Schiff_
+
+ PROF. MATHER ON MR. SCHIFF 464
+
+ THE ELIOT-SCHIFF LETTERS 465
+ _By Jacob H. Schiff and Charles W. Eliot_
+
+ LA CATHEDRALE (Poem Translated by Frances C. Fay) 472
+ _By Edmond Rostand_
+
+ PROBABLE CAUSES AND OUTCOME OF THE WAR 473
+ _Series of Five Letters by Charles W. Eliot,
+ with Related Correspondence_
+
+ THE LORD OF HOSTS (Poem) 501
+ _By Joseph B. Gilder_
+
+ A WAR OF DISHONOR 502
+ _By David Starr Jordan_
+
+ MIGHT OR RIGHT 503
+ _By John Grier Hibben_
+
+ JEANNE D'ARC--1914 (Poem) 506
+ _By Alma Durant Nicholson_
+
+ THE KAISER AND BELGIUM (With controversial letters) 507
+ _By John W. Burgess_
+
+ AMERICA'S PERIL IN JUDGING GERMANY 515
+ _By William M. Sloane_
+
+ POSSIBLE PROFITS FROM WAR 526
+ _Interview with Franklin H. Giddings_
+
+ "TO AMERICANS LEAVING GERMANY" 533
+ _A German Circular_
+
+ GERMAN DECLARATIONS 534
+ _By Rudolf Eucken and Ernst Haeckel_
+
+ THE EUCKEN AND HAECKEL CHARGES 537
+ _By John Warbeke_
+
+ CONCERNING GERMAN CULTURE 541
+ _By Brander Matthews_
+
+ CULTURE VS. KULTUR 543
+ _By Frank Jewett Mather, Jr._
+
+ THE TRESPASS IN BELGIUM 545
+ _By John Grier Hibben_
+
+ APPORTIONING THE BLAME 548
+ _By Arthur v. Briesen_
+
+ PARTING (Poem) 553
+ _By Louise von Wetter_
+
+ FRENCH HATE AND ENGLISH JEALOUSY 554
+ _By Kuno Francke_
+
+ IN DEFENSE OF AUSTRIA 559
+ _By Baron L. Hengelmuller_
+
+ RUSSIAN ATROCITIES 563
+ _By George Haven Putnam_
+
+ "THE UNITED STATES OF EUROPE" 565
+ _Interview with Nicholas Murray Butler_
+
+ A NEW WORLD MAP 571
+ _By Wilhelm Ostwald_
+
+ THE VERDICT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE 573
+ _By Newell Dwight Hillis_
+
+ TIPPERARY (Poem) 581
+ _By John B. Kennedy_
+
+ AS AMERICA SEES THE WAR 582
+ _By Harold Begbie_
+
+ TO MELOS, POMEGRANATE ISLE (Poem) 587
+ _By Grace Harriet Macurdy_
+
+ WHAT AMERICA CAN DO 588
+ _By Lord Channing of Wellingborough_
+
+ TO A COUSIN GERMAN (Poem) 593
+ _By Adeline Adams_
+
+ WHAT THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS MAY BE 594
+ _By Irving Fisher_
+
+ EFFECTS OF WAR ON AMERICA 600
+ _By Roland G. Usher_
+
+ GERMANY OF THE FUTURE 605
+ _Interview with M. de Lapredelle_
+
+ GERMANY THE AGGRESSOR 609
+ _By Albert Sauveur_
+
+ MILITARISM AND CHRISTIANITY 610
+ _By Lyman Abbott_
+
+ VIGIL (Poem) 612
+ _By Hortense Flexner_
+
+ NIETZSCHE AND GERMAN CULTURE 613
+ _By Abraham Solomon_
+
+ BELGIUM'S BITTER NEED 614
+ _By Sir Gilbert Parker_
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER IV.
+
+ THE WAR AT CLOSE QUARTERS
+
+
+ SIR JOHN FRENCH'S OWN STORY 619
+ _Famous Dispatches of the
+ British Commander in Chief to Lord Kitchener_
+
+ STORY OF THE "EYE WITNESS" 650
+ _By Col. E.D. Swinton of the Intelligence
+ Department of the British General Staff_
+
+ THE DAWN OF A NEW DAY (Poem) 678
+ _By Edward Neville Vose_
+
+ THE GERMAN ENTRY INTO BRUSSELS (With Map) 679
+ _By John Boon_
+
+ THE FALL OF ANTWERP 682
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ AS THE FRENCH FELL BACK ON PARIS 689
+ _By G.H. Perris_
+
+ THE RETREAT TO PARIS 691
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ A ZOUAVE'S STORY 704
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ WHEN WAR BURST ON ARRAS 707
+ _By a Special Correspondent_
+
+ THE BATTLES IN BELGIUM (With Map) 711
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ SEEKING WOUNDED ON BATTLE FRONT 714
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ AT THE KAISER'S HEADQUARTERS 718
+ _By Cyril Brown of The New York Times_
+
+ HOW THE BELGIANS FIGHT 725
+ _By a Correspondent of The London Daily News_
+
+ A VISIT TO THE FIRING LINE IN FRANCE 727
+ _By a Correspondent of The New York Times_
+
+ UNBURIED DEAD STREW LORRAINE (With Map) 729
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ ALONG THE GERMAN LINES NEAR METZ 731
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ THE SLAUGHTER IN ALSACE 736
+ _By John H. Cox_
+
+ RENNENKAMPF ON THE RUSSIAN BORDER 738
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ THE FIRST FIGHT AT LODZ (With Map) 740
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ THE FIRST INVASION OF SERBIA (With Map) 742
+ _By a Correspondent of The London Standard_
+
+ THE ATTACK ON TSING-TAU 745
+ _By Jefferson Jones_
+
+ THE GERMAN ATTACK ON TAHITI 748
+ _As Told by Miss Geni La France, an Eyewitness_
+
+ THE BLOODLESS CAPTURE OF GERMAN SAMOA 749
+ _By Malcolm Ross, F.R.G.S._
+
+ HOW THE CRESSY SANK 752
+ _By Edgar Rowan_
+
+ GERMAN STORY OF THE HELIGOLAND FIGHT 754
+ _By a Special Correspondent of The New York Times_
+
+ THE SINKING OF THE CRESSY AND THE HOGUE 755
+ _By the Senior Surviving Officers,
+ Commander Bertram W.L. Nicholson and
+ Commander Reginald A. Norton_
+
+ THE SINKING OF THE HAWKE 757
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ THE EMDEN'S LAST FIGHT 758
+ _By the Cable Operator at Cocos Islands_
+
+ CROWDS SEE THE NIGER SINK 760
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ LIEUTENANT WEDDIGEN'S OWN STORY 762
+ _By Herbert B. Swope and Capt. Lieut. Otto
+ Weddigen_
+
+ THE SOLILOQUY OF AN OLD SOLDIER (Poem) 764
+ _By O.C.A. Child_
+
+ THE EFFECTS OF WAR IN FOUR COUNTRIES 765
+ _By Irvin S. Cobb_
+
+ HOW PARIS DROPPED GAYETY 767
+ _By Anne Rittenhouse_
+
+ PARIS IN OCTOBER 770
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ FRANCE AND ENGLAND AS SEEN IN WAR TIME 772
+ _Interview with F. Hopkinson Smith_
+
+ THE HELPLESS VICTIMS 776
+ _By Mrs. Nina Larrey Duryee_
+
+ A NEW RUSSIA MEETS GERMANY 777
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ BELGIAN CITIES GERMANIZED 780
+ _By Cyril Brown of The New York Times_
+
+ THE BELGIAN RUIN 786
+ _By J.H. Whitehouse, M.P._
+
+ THE WOUNDED SERB 788
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ SPY ORGANIZATION IN ENGLAND 790
+ _British Home Office Communication_
+
+ CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 793
+
+ THE MEN OF THE EMDEN (Poem) 816
+ _By Thomas R. Ybarra_
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER V.
+
+ THE NEW RUSSIA SPEAKS
+
+
+ AN APPEAL BY RUSSIAN AUTHORS, ARTISTS AND ACTORS 817
+ _With Their Signatures_
+
+ RUSSIA IN LITERATURE 819
+ _By British Men of Letters_
+
+ RUSSIA AND EUROPE'S WAR 821
+ _By Paul Vinogradoff_
+
+ RUSSIAN APPEAL FOR THE POLES 825
+ _By A. Konovalov of the Russian Duma_
+
+ I AM FOR PEACE (Poem) 826
+ _By Lurana Sheldon_
+
+ UNITED RUSSIA 827
+ _By Peter Struve_
+
+ PRINCE TRUBETSKOI'S APPEAL TO RUSSIANS 830
+ _To Help the Polish Victims of War_
+
+ HOW PROHIBITION CAME TO RUSSIA 831
+ _An Interview with the Reformer Tchelisheff_
+
+ INFLUENCE OF THE WAR UPON RUSSIAN INDUSTRY 834
+ _By the Russian Ministry of Commerce_
+
+ DECLARATION OF THE RUSSIAN INDUSTRIAL INTERESTS 835
+
+ A RUSSIAN FINANCIAL AUTHORITY ON THE WAR 836
+ _By Prof. Migoulin_
+
+ PROPOSED INTERNAL LOANS OF RUSSIA 837
+ (_Prof. Migoulin's Plan_)
+
+ HOW RUSSIAN MANUFACTURERS FEEL 838
+ _Digested from Russkia Vedomosti_
+
+ NEW SOURCES OF REVENUE NEEDED 839
+ _By A. Sokolov_
+
+ OUR RUSSIAN ALLY 840
+ _By Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace_
+
+ CONFISCATION OF GERMAN PATENTS 849
+ _By the Russian Ministry of Commerce_
+
+ A RUSSIAN INCOME TAX 850
+ _Proposed by the Ministry of Finance_
+
+ TOOLS OF THE RUSSIAN JUGGERNAUT 851
+ _By M.J. Bonn_
+
+ FATE OF THE JEWS IN POLAND 854
+ _By Georg Brandes_
+
+ COMMERCIAL TREATIES AFTER THE WAR 863
+ _By P. Maslov_
+
+ PHOTOGRAPHIC REVIEW OF THE WAR 865
+ _48 War Pictures Printed in Rotogravure_
+
+ PATRIOTISM AND ENDURANCE 913
+ _The Pastoral Letter of Cardinal D.J. Mercier,
+ Archbishop of Malines_
+
+ APPEAL TO AMERICA FOR BELGIUM (Poem) 924
+ _By Thomas Hardy_
+
+ WITH THE GERMAN ARMY 925
+ _By Cyril Brown_
+
+ STORY OF THE MAN WHO FIRED ON RHEIMS CATHEDRAL 928
+
+ RICHARD HARDING DAVIS'S COMMENT 931
+
+ THE GERMAN AIRMEN 932
+
+ GERMAN GENERALS TALK OF THE WAR 934
+
+ SWIFT REVERSAL TO BARBARISM 939
+ _By Vance Thompson_
+
+ CIVIL LIFE IN BERLIN 943
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ BELGIAN BOY TELLS STORY OF AERSCHOT 945
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ THE NEUTRALS (Poem) 948
+ _By Beatrice Barry_
+
+ FIFTEEN MINUTES ON THE YSER 949
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ SEEING NIEUPORT UNDER SHELL FIRE 951
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ RAID ON SCARBOROUGH SEEN FROM A WINDOW 954
+ _By Ruth Kauffmann_
+
+ HOW THE BARONESS HID HER HUSBAND ON A VESSEL 956
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ WARSAW SWAMPED WITH REFUGEES 957
+ _By H.W. Bodkinson_
+
+ AFTER THE RUSSIAN ADVANCE IN GALICIA 958
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ OFFICER IN BATTLE HAD LITTLE FEELING 959
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ THE BATTLE OF NEW YEAR'S DAY 961
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ BASS'S STORY 963
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ THE WASTE OF GERMAN LIVES 964
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ THE FLIGHT INTO SWITZERLAND 966
+ _By Ethel Therese Hugh_
+
+ ONCE FAIR BELGRADE IS A SKELETON CITY 969
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ LETTERS AND DIARIES 971
+ _A Group of Soldiers' Letters_
+
+ "CHANT OF HATE AGAINST ENGLAND" 984
+ _How Ernst Lissauer's Lines were
+ "Sung to Pieces" in Germany_
+
+ ANSWERING THE "CHANT OF HATE" 988
+ _By Beatrice M. Barry_
+
+ ENGLAND CAUSED THE WAR 989
+ _By T. von Bethmann-Hollweg, German
+ Imperial Chancellor_
+
+ A SONG OF THE SIEGE GUN (Poem) 992
+ _By Katharine Drayton Mayrant Simons, Jr._
+
+ WHY ENGLAND FIGHTS GERMANY 993
+ _By Hilaire Belloc_
+
+ AT THE VILLA ACHILLEION, CORFU (Poem) 999
+ _By H.T. Sudduth_
+
+ GERMANY'S STRATEGIC RAILWAYS (With Map) 1000
+ _By Walter Littlefield_
+
+ GLORY OF WAR (Poem) 1004
+ _By Adeline Adams_
+
+ CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 1007
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER VI.
+
+ THE CALDRON OF THE BALKANS
+
+
+ HOW TURKEY WENT TO WAR 1025
+
+ SERBIA AND HER NEIGHBORS 1036
+
+ LITTLE MONTENEGRO SPEAKS 1043
+
+ BULGARIA'S ATTITUDE 1044
+
+ GREECE'S WATCHFUL WAITING 1050
+
+ WHERE RUMANIA STANDS IN THE CRISIS 1054
+
+ EXIT ALBANIA? 1062
+
+ THE WAR IN THE BALKANS 1068
+ _By A.T. Polyzoides_
+
+ THE EUROPEAN WAR AS SEEN BY CARTOONISTS 1073
+
+ GERMANY VS. BELGIUM 1101
+ _Case of the Secret Military Documents
+ Presented by Both Sides_
+
+ THE BIG AND THE GREAT (Poem) 1114
+ _By William Archer_
+
+ "FROM THE BODY OF THIS DEATH" (Poem) 1119
+ _By Sidney Low_
+
+ "A SCRAP OF PAPER" 1120
+ _By Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg
+ and Sir Edward Grey_
+
+ THE KAISER AT DONCHERY 1125
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ HAIL! A HYMN TO BELGIUM (Music by F.H. Cowen) 1126
+ _By John Galsworthy_
+
+ HOLLAND'S FUTURE (With Map) 1128
+ _By H.G. Wells_
+
+ FRENCH OFFICIAL REPORT ON GERMAN ATROCITIES 1133
+
+ A FRENCH MAYOR'S PUNISHMENT 1163
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ WE WILL FIGHT TO THE END 1164
+ _By Premier Viviani of France_
+
+ _NUITS BLANCHES_ 1166
+ _By H.S. Haskins_
+
+ UNCONQUERED FRANCE 1167
+ _From the Bulletin Francais_
+
+ FOUR MONTHS OF WAR (With Map) 1169
+ _From the Bulletin des Armees_
+
+ LONG LIVE THE ALLIES! 1174
+ _By Claude Monet_
+
+ UNITED STATES FAIR TO ALL 1175
+ _By William J. Bryan,
+ American Secretary of State_
+
+ THE HOUSE WITH SEALED DOORS (Poem) 1183
+ _By Edith M. Thomas_
+
+ SEIZURES OF AMERICAN CARGOES 1184
+ _By William J. Bryan,
+ American Secretary of State_
+
+ GERMAN CROWN PRINCE TO AMERICA 1187
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ THE OFFICIAL BRITISH EXPLANATION 1188
+ _By Sir Edward Grey_
+
+ ITALY AND THE WAR (With Map) 1192
+ _By William Roscoe Thayer_
+
+ HE HEARD THE BUGLES CALLING (Poem) 1198
+ _By Carey C.D. Briggs_
+
+ GERMAN SOLDIERS WRITE HOME 1199
+
+ WAR CORRESPONDENCE 1207
+
+ THE BROKEN ROSE (TO KING ALBERT) 1210
+ _By Annie Vivanti Chartres_
+
+ THE HEROIC LANGUAGE (Poem) 1216
+ _By Alice Meynell_
+
+ CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 1224
+
+ TO HIS MAJESTY KING ALBERT (Poem) 1228
+ _By William Watson_
+
+[Illustration: GEORGE BERNARD SHAW]
+
+[Illustration: ARNOLD BENNETT. _See Page_ 60]
+
+
+
+
+"Common Sense About the War"
+
+By George Bernard Shaw.
+
+
+I.
+
+ "_Let a European war break out--the war, perhaps, between the
+ Triple Alliance and the Triple Entente, which so many journalists
+ and politicians in England and Germany contemplate with criminal
+ levity. If the combatants prove to be equally balanced, it may,
+ after the first battles, smoulder on for thirty years. What will be
+ the population of London, or Manchester, or Chemnitz, or Bremen, or
+ Milan, at the end of it_?" ("The Great Society," by Graham Wallas.
+ June, 1914.)
+
+ (_Copyright, 1914, By The New York Times Company._)
+
+
+The time has now come to pluck up courage and begin to talk and write
+soberly about the war. At first the mere horror of it stunned the more
+thoughtful of us; and even now only those who are not in actual contact
+with or bereaved relation to its heartbreaking wreckage can think sanely
+about it, or endure to hear others discuss it coolly. As to the
+thoughtless, well, not for a moment dare I suggest that for the first
+few weeks they were all scared out of their wits; for I know too well
+that the British civilian does not allow his perfect courage to be
+questioned; only experienced soldiers and foreigners are allowed the
+infirmity of fear. But they certainly were--shall I say a little upset?
+They felt in that solemn hour that England was lost if only one single
+traitor in their midst let slip the truth about anything in the
+universe. It was a perilous time for me. I do not hold my tongue easily;
+and my inborn dramatic faculty and professional habit as a playwright
+prevent me from taking a one-sided view even when the most probable
+result of taking a many-sided one is prompt lynching. Besides, until
+Home Rule emerges from its present suspended animation, I shall retain
+my Irish capacity for criticising England with something of the
+detachment of a foreigner, and perhaps with a certain slightly malicious
+taste for taking the conceit out of her. Lord Kitchener made a mistake
+the other day in rebuking the Irish volunteers for not rallying faster
+to the defense of "their country." They do not regard it as their
+country yet. He should have asked them to come forward as usual and help
+poor old England through a stiff fight. Then it would have been all
+right.
+
+Having thus frankly confessed my bias, which you can allow for as a
+rifleman allows for the wind, I give my views for what they are worth.
+They will be of some use; because, however blinded I may be by prejudice
+or perversity, my prejudices in this matter are not those which blind
+the British patriot, and therefore I am fairly sure to see some things
+that have not yet struck him.
+
+And first, I do not see this war as one which has welded Governments and
+peoples into complete and sympathetic solidarity as against the common
+enemy. I see the people of England united in a fierce detestation and
+defiance of the views and acts of Prussian Junkerism. And I see the
+German people stirred to the depths by a similar antipathy to English
+Junkerism, and anger at the apparent treachery and duplicity of the
+attack made on them by us in their extremest peril from France and
+Russia. I see both nations duped, but alas! not quite unwillingly duped,
+by their Junkers and Militarists into wreaking on one another the wrath
+they should have spent in destroying Junkerism and Militarism in their
+own country. And I see the Junkers and Militarists of England and
+Germany jumping at the chance they have longed for in vain for many
+years of smashing one another and establishing their own oligarchy as
+the dominant military power in the world. No doubt the heroic remedy for
+this tragic misunderstanding is that both armies should shoot their
+officers and go home to gather in their harvests in the villages and
+make a revolution in the towns; and though this is not at present a
+practicable solution, it must be frankly mentioned, because it or
+something like it is always a possibility in a defeated conscript army
+if its commanders push it beyond human endurance when its eyes are
+opening to the fact that in murdering its neighbours it is biting off
+its nose to vex its face, besides riveting the intolerable yoke of
+Militarism and Junkerism more tightly than ever on its own neck. But
+there is no chance--or, as our Junkers would put it, no danger--of our
+soldiers yielding to such an ecstasy of common sense. They have enlisted
+voluntarily; they are not defeated nor likely to be; their
+communications are intact and their meals reasonably punctual; they are
+as pugnacious as their officers; and in fighting Prussia they are
+fighting a more deliberate, conscious, tyrannical, personally insolent,
+and dangerous Militarism than their own. Still, even for a voluntary
+professional army, that possibility exists, just as for the civilian
+there is a limit beyond which taxation, bankruptcy, privation, terror,
+and inconvenience cannot be pushed without revolution or a social
+dissolution more ruinous than submission to conquest. I mention all
+this, not to make myself wantonly disagreeable, but because military
+persons, thinking naturally that there is nothing like leather, are now
+talking of this war as likely to become a permanent institution like the
+Chamber of Horrors at Madame Tussaud's, forgetting, I think, that the
+rate of consumption maintained by modern military operations is much
+greater relatively to the highest possible rate of production
+maintainable under the restrictions of war time than it has ever been
+before.
+
+
+*The Day of Judgment.*
+
+The European settlement at the end of the war will be effected, let us
+hope, not by a regimental mess of fire-eaters sitting around an up-ended
+drum in a vanquished Berlin or Vienna, but by some sort of Congress in
+which all the Powers (including, very importantly, the United States of
+America) will be represented. Now I foresee a certain danger of our
+being taken by surprise at that Congress, and making ourselves
+unnecessarily difficult and unreasonable, by presenting ourselves to it
+in the character of Injured Innocence. We shall not be accepted in that
+character. Such a Congress will most certainly regard us as being, next
+to the Prussians (if it makes even that exception), the most quarrelsome
+people in the universe. I am quite conscious of the surprise and scandal
+this anticipation may cause among my more highminded (_hochnaesig_, the
+Germans call it) readers. Let me therefore break it gently by
+expatiating for a while on the subject of Junkerism and Militarism
+generally, and on the history of the literary propaganda of war between
+England and Potsdam which has been going on openly for the last forty
+years on both sides. I beg the patience of my readers during this
+painful operation. If it becomes unbearable, they can always put the
+paper down and relieve themselves by calling the Kaiser Attila and Mr.
+Keir Hardie a traitor twenty times or so. Then they will feel, I hope,
+refreshed enough to resume. For, after all, abusing the Kaiser or Keir
+Hardie or me will not hurt the Germans, whereas a clearer view of the
+political situation will certainly help us. Besides, I do not believe
+that the trueborn Englishman in his secret soul relishes the pose of
+Injured Innocence any more than I do myself. He puts it on only because
+he is told that it is respectable.
+
+
+*Junkers All.*
+
+What is a Junker? Is it a German officer of twenty-three, with offensive
+manners, and a habit of cutting down innocent civilians with his sabre?
+Sometimes; but not at all exclusively that or anything like that. Let us
+resort to the dictionary. I turn to the _Encyclopaedisches Woerterbuch_
+of Muret Sanders. Excuse its quaint German-English.
+
+*Junker* = Young nobleman, younker, lording, country squire, country
+gentleman, squirearch. *Junkerberrschaft* = squirearchy, landocracy.
+*Junkerleben* = life of a country gentleman, (_figuratively_) a jolly
+life. *Junkerpartei* = country party. *Junkerwirtschaft* = doings of the
+country party.
+
+Thus we see that the Junker is by no means peculiar to Prussia. We may
+claim to produce the article in a perfection that may well make Germany
+despair of ever surpassing us in that line. Sir Edward Grey is a Junker
+from his topmost hair to the tips of his toes; and Sir Edward is a
+charming man, incapable of cutting down even an Opposition front
+bencher, or of telling a German he intends to have him shot. Lord Cromer
+is a Junker. Mr. Winston Churchill is an odd and not disagreeable
+compound of Junker and Yankee: his frank anti-German pugnacity is
+enormously more popular than the moral babble (Milton's phrase) of his
+sanctimonious colleagues. He is a bumptious and jolly Junker, just as
+Lord Curzon is an uppish Junker. I need not string out the list. In
+these islands the Junker is literally all over the shop.
+
+It is very difficult for anyone who is not either a Junker or a
+successful barrister to get into an English Cabinet, no matter which
+party is in power, or to avoid resigning when we strike up the drum. The
+Foreign Office is a Junker Club. Our governing classes are
+overwhelmingly Junker: all who are not Junkers are riff-raff whose only
+claim to their position is the possession of ability of some sort:
+mostly ability to make money. And, of course, the Kaiser is a Junker,
+though less true-blue than the Crown Prince, and much less autocratic
+than Sir Edward Grey, who, without consulting us, sends us to war by a
+word to an ambassador and pledges all our wealth to his foreign allies
+by a stroke of his pen.
+
+
+*What Is a Militarist?*
+
+Now that we know what a Junker is, let us have a look at the
+Militarists. A Militarist is a person who believes that all real power
+is the power to kill, and that Providence is on the side of the big
+battalions. The most famous Militarist at present, thanks to the zeal
+with which we have bought and quoted his book, is General Friedrich von
+Bernhardi. But we cannot allow the General to take precedence of our own
+writers as a Militarist propagandist. I am old enough to remember the
+beginning of the anti-German phase of that very ancient propaganda in
+England. The Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left Europe very much
+taken aback. Up to that date nobody was afraid of Prussia, though
+everybody was a little afraid of France; and we were keeping "buffer
+States" between ourselves and Russia in the east. Germany had indeed
+beaten Denmark; but then Denmark was a little State, and was abandoned
+in her hour of need by those who should have helped her, to the great
+indignation of Ibsen. Germany had also beaten Austria; but somehow
+everybody seems able to beat Austria, though nobody seems able to draw
+the moral that defeats do not matter as much as the Militarists think,
+Austria being as important as ever. Suddenly Germany beat France right
+down into the dust, by the exercise of an organized efficiency in war of
+which nobody up to then had any conception. There was not a State in
+Europe that did not say to itself: "Good Heavens! what would happen if
+she attacked _us_?" We in England thought of our old-fashioned army and
+our old-fashioned commander George Ranger (of Cambridge), and our War
+Office with its Crimean tradition of imbecility; and we shook in our
+shoes. But we were not such fools as to leave it at that. We soon
+produced the first page of the Bernhardian literature: an anonymous
+booklet entitled _The Battle of Dorking_. It was not the first page of
+English Militarist literature: you have only to turn back to the burst
+of glorification of war which heralded the silly Crimean campaign
+(Tennyson's _Maud_ is a surviving sample) to find paeans to Mars which
+would have made Treitschke blush (perhaps they did); but it was the
+first page in which it was assumed as a matter of course that Germany
+and not France or Russia was England's natural enemy. _The Battle of
+Dorking_ had an enormous sale; and the wildest guesses were current as
+to its authorship. And its moral was "To arms; or the Germans will
+besiege London as they besieged Paris." From that time until the
+present, the British propaganda of war with Germany has never ceased.
+The lead given by _The Battle of Dorking_ was taken up by articles in
+the daily press and the magazines. Later on came the Jingo fever
+(anti-Russian, by the way; but let us not mention that just now),
+Stead's _Truth About the Navy_, Mr. Spenser Wilkinson, the suppression
+of the Channel Tunnel, Mr. Robert Blatchford, Mr. Garvin, Admiral Maxse,
+Mr. Newbolt, Mr. Rudyard Kipling, _The National Review_, Lord Roberts,
+the Navy League, the imposition of an Imperialist Foreign Secretary on
+the Liberal Cabinet, Mr. Wells's _War in the Air_ (well worth re-reading
+just now), and the Dreadnoughts. Throughout all these agitations the
+enemy, the villain of the piece, the White Peril, was Prussia and her
+millions of German conscripts. At first, in _The Battle of Dorking_
+phase, the note was mainly defensive. But from the moment when the
+Kaiser began to copy our Armada policy by building a big fleet, the
+anti-German agitation became openly aggressive; and the cry that the
+German fleet or ours must sink, and that a war between England and
+Germany was bound to come some day, speedily ceased to be merely a cry
+with our Militarists and became an axiom with them. And what our
+Militarists said our Junkers echoed; and our Junker diplomatists played
+for. The story of how they manoeuvred to hem Germany and Austria in with
+an Anglo-Franco-Russian combination will be found told with soldierly
+directness and with the proud candor of a man who can see things from
+his own side only in the article by Lord Roberts in the current number
+of _The Hibbert Journal_ (October, 1914). There you shall see also,
+after the usual nonsense about Nietzsche, the vision of "British
+administrators bearing the White Man's Burden," of "young men, fresh
+from the public schools of Britain, coming eagerly forward to carry on
+the high traditions of Imperial Britain in each new dependency which
+comes under our care," of "our fitness as an Imperial race," of "a great
+task committed to us by Providence," of "the will to conquer that has
+never failed us," of our task of "assuming control of one-fifth of the
+earth's surface and the care of one in five of all the inhabitants of
+the world." Not a suggestion that the inhabitants of the world are
+perhaps able to take care of themselves. Not even a passing recollection
+when that White Man's Burden is in question that the men outside the
+British Empire, and even inside the German Empire, are by no means
+exclusively black. Only the _sancta simplicitas_ that glories in "the
+proud position of England," the "sympathy, tolerance, prudence and
+benevolence of our rule" in the east (as shown, the Kaiser is no doubt
+sarcastically remarking, in the Delhi sedition trial), the chivalrous
+feeling that it is our highest duty to save the world from the horrible
+misfortune of being governed by anybody but those young men fresh from
+the public schools of Britain. Change the words Britain and British to
+Germany and German, and the Kaiser will sign the article with
+enthusiasm. _His_ opinion, _his_ attitude (subject to that merely verbal
+change) word for word.
+
+
+*Six of One: Half-a-Dozen of The Other.*
+
+Now, please observe that I do not say that the agitation was
+unreasonable. I myself steadily advocated the formation of a formidable
+armament, and ridiculed the notion that, we, who are wasting hundreds of
+millions annually on idlers and wasters, could not easily afford double,
+treble, quadruple our military and naval expenditure. I advocated the
+compulsion of every man to serve his country, both in war and peace. The
+idlers and wasters perceiving dimly that I meant the cost to come out of
+their pockets and meant to use the admission that riches should not
+exempt a man from military service as an illustration of how absurd it
+is to allow them to exempt him from civil service, did not embrace my
+advocacy with enthusiasm; so I must reaffirm it now lest it should be
+supposed that I am condemning those whose proceedings I am describing.
+Though often horribly wrong in principle, they were quite right in
+practice as far as they went. But they must stand to their guns now that
+the guns are going off. They must not pretend that they were harmless
+Radical lovers of peace, and that the propaganda of Militarism and of
+inevitable war between England and Germany is a Prussian infamy for
+which the Kaiser must be severely punished. That is not fair, not true,
+not gentlemanly. We began it; and if they met us half-way, as they
+certainly did, it is not for us to reproach them. When the German
+fire-eaters drank to The Day (of Armageddon) they were drinking to the
+day of which our Navy League fire-eaters had first said "It's bound to
+come." Therefore, let us have no more nonsense about the Prussian Wolf
+and the British Lamb, the Prussian Machiavelli and the English
+Evangelist. We cannot shout for years that we are boys of the bulldog
+breed, and then suddenly pose as gazelles. No. When Europe and America
+come to settle the treaty that will end this business (for America is
+concerned in it as much as we are), they will not deal with us as the
+lovable and innocent victims of a treacherous tyrant and a savage
+soldiery. They will have to consider how these two incorrigibly
+pugnacious and inveterately snobbish peoples, who have snarled at one
+another for forty years with bristling hair and grinning fangs, and are
+now rolling over with their teeth in one another's throats, are to be
+tamed into trusty watch-dogs of the peace of the world. I am sorry to
+spoil the saintly image with a halo which the British Jingo journalist
+sees just now when he looks in the glass; but it must be done if we are
+to behave reasonably in the imminent day of reckoning.
+
+And now back to Friedrich von Bernhardi.
+
+
+*General Von Bernhardi.*
+
+Like many soldier-authors, Friedrich is very readable; and he maintains
+the good and formidable part of the Bismarck tradition: that is, he is
+not a humbug. He looks facts in the face; he deceives neither himself
+nor his readers; and if he were to tell lies--as he would no doubt do as
+stoutly as any British, French, or Russian officer if his country's
+safety were at stake--he would know that he was telling them. Which last
+we think very bad taste on his part, if not downright wickedness.
+
+It is true that he cites Frederick the Great as an exemplary master of
+war and of _Weltpolitik_. But his chief praise in this department is
+reserved for England. It is from our foreign policy, he says, that he
+has learnt what our journalists denounce as "the doctrine of the bully,
+of the materialist, of the man with gross ideals: a doctrine of
+diabolical evil." He frankly accepts that doctrine from us (as if our
+poor, honest muddle-heads had ever formulated anything so intellectual
+as a doctrine), and blames us for nothing but for allowing the United
+States to achieve their solidarity and become formidable to us when we
+might have divided them by backing up the South in the Civil War. He
+shows in the clearest way that if Germany does not smash England,
+England will smash Germany by springing at her the moment she can catch
+her at a disadvantage. In a word he prophesies that we, his great
+masters in _Realpolitik_, will do precisely what our Junkers have just
+made us do, It is we who have carried out the Bernhardi programme: it is
+Germany who has neglected it. He warned Germany to make an alliance with
+Italy, Austria, Turkey, and America, before undertaking the subjugation,
+first of France, then of England. But a prophet is not without honour
+save in his own country; and Germany has allowed herself to be caught
+with no ally but Austria between France and Russia, and thereby given
+the English Junkers their opportunity. They have seized it with a
+punctuality that must flatter Von Bernhardi, even though the compliment
+be at the expense of his own country. The Kaiser did not give them
+credit for being keener Junkers than his own. It was an unpleasant,
+indeed an infuriating surprise. All that a Kaiser could do without
+unbearable ignominy to induce them to keep their bulldogs off and give
+him fair play with his two redoubtable foes, he did. But they laughed
+Frederick the Great's laugh and hurled all our forces at him, as he
+might have done to us, on Bernhardian principles, if he had caught us at
+the same disadvantage. Officially, the war is Junker-cut-Junker,
+militarist-cut-Militarist; and we must fight it out, not
+_Heuchler_-cut-Hypocrite, but hammer and tongs.
+
+
+*Militarist Myopia.*
+
+Unofficially, it is quite another matter. Democracy, even
+Social-Democracy, though as hostile to British Junkers as to German
+ones, and under no illusion as to the obsolescence and colossal
+stupidity of modern war, need not lack enthusiasm for the combat, which
+may serve their own ends better than those of their political opponents.
+For Bernhardi the Brilliant and our own very dull Militarists are alike
+mad: the war will not do any of the things for which they rushed into
+it. It is much more likely to do the things they most dread and
+deprecate: in fact, it has already swept them into the very kind of
+organization they founded an Anti-Socialist League to suppress. To shew
+how mad they are, let us suppose the war carries out their western
+program to the last item. Suppose France rises from the war victorious,
+happy and glorious, with Alsace and Lorraine regained, Rheims cathedral
+repaired in the best modern trade style, and a prodigious indemnity in
+her pocket! Suppose we tow the German fleet into Portsmouth, and leave
+Hohenzollern metaphorically under the heel of Romanoff and actually in a
+comfortable villa in Chislehurst, the hero of all its tea parties and
+the judge of all its gymkhanas! Well, cry the Militarists, suppose it by
+all means: could we desire anything better? Now I happen to have a
+somewhat active imagination; and it flatly refuses to stop at this
+convenient point. I must go on supposing. Suppose France, with its
+military prestige raised once more to the Napoleonic point, spends its
+indemnity in building an invincible Armada, stronger and nearer to us
+than the German one we are now out to destroy! Suppose Sir Edward Grey
+remonstrates, and Monsieur Delcasse replies, "Russia and France have
+humbled one Imperial Bully, and are prepared to humble another. I have
+not forgotten Fashoda. Stop us if you can; or turn, if you like, for
+help to the Germany we have smashed and disarmed!" Of what use will all
+this bloodshed be then, with the old situation reproduced in an
+aggravated form, the enemy closer to our shores, a raid far more
+feasible, the tradition of "natural enmity" to steel the foe, and
+Waterloo to be wiped out like Sedan? A child in arms should be able to
+see that this idiotic notion of relaxing the military pressure on us by
+smashing this or that particular Power is like trying to alter the
+pressure of the ocean by dipping up a bucket of water from the North Sea
+and pouring it into the Bay of Biscay.
+
+I purposely omit more easterly supposings as to what victorious Russia
+might do. But a noble emancipation of Poland and Finland at her own
+expense, and of Bosnia and Harzegovina at Austria's, might easily
+suggest to our nervous Militarists that a passion for the freedom of
+Egypt and India might seize her, and remind her that we were Japan's
+ally in the day of Russia's humiliation in Manchuria. So there at once
+is your Balance of Power problem in Asia enormously aggravated by
+throwing Germany out of the anti-Russian scale and grinding her to
+powder. Even in North Africa--but enough is enough. You can _durchhauen_
+your way out of the frying pan, but only into the fire. Better take
+Nietzsche's brave advice, and make it your point of honour to "live
+dangerously." History shews that it is often the way to live long.
+
+
+*Learning Nothing: Forgetting Everything.*
+
+But let me test the Militarist theory, not by a hypothetical future, but
+by the accomplished and irrevocable past. Is it true that nations must
+conquer or go under, and that military conquest means prosperity and
+power for the victor and annihilation for the vanquished? I have already
+alluded in passing to the fact that Austria has been beaten repeatedly:
+by France, by Italy, by Germany, almost by everybody who has thought it
+worth while to have a whack at her; and yet she is one of the Great
+Powers; and her alliance has been sought by invincible Germany. France
+was beaten by Germany in 1870 with a completeness that seemed
+impossible; yet France has since enlarged her territory whilst Germany
+is still pleading in vain for a place in the sun. Russia was beaten by
+the Japanese in Manchuria on a scale that made an end forever of the old
+notion that the West is the natural military superior of the East; yet
+it is the terror of Russia that has driven Germany into her present
+desperate onslaught on France; and it is the Russian alliance on which
+France and England are depending for their assurance of ultimate
+success. We ourselves confess that the military efficiency with which we
+have so astonished the Germans is the effect, not of Waterloo and
+Inkerman, but of the drubbing we got from the Boers, who we aid probably
+have beaten us if we had been anything like their own size. Greece has
+lately distinguished herself in war within a few years by a most
+disgraceful beating of the Turks. It would be easy to multiply instances
+from remoter history: for example, the effect on England's position of
+the repeated defeats of our troops by the French under Luxembourg in the
+Balance of Power War at the end of the seventeenth century differed
+surprisingly little, if at all, from the effect of our subsequent
+victories under Marlborough. And the inference from the Militarist
+theory that the States which at present count for nothing as military
+Powers necessarily count for nothing at all is absurd on the face of it.
+Monaco seems to be, on the whole, the most prosperous and comfortable
+State in Europe.
+
+In short, Militarism must be classed as one of the most inconsiderately
+foolish of the bogus "sciences" which the last half century has produced
+in such profusion, and which have the common characteristic of revolting
+all sane souls, and being stared out of countenance by the broad facts
+of human experience. The only rule of thumb that can be hazarded on the
+strength of actual practice is that wars to maintain or upset the
+Balance of Power between States, called by inaccurate people Balance of
+Power wars, and by accurate people Jealousy of Power wars, never
+establish the desired peaceful and secure equilibrium. They may exercise
+pugnacity, gratify spite, assuage a wound to national pride, or enhance
+or dim a military reputation; but that is all. And the reason is, as I
+shall shew very conclusively later on, that there is only one way in
+which one nation can really disable another, and that is a way which no
+civilized nation dare even discuss.
+
+*Are We Hypocrites?*
+
+And now I proceed from general considerations to the diplomatic history
+of the present case, as I must in order to make our moral position
+clear. But first, lest I should lose all credit by the startling
+incompatibility between the familiar personal character of our statesmen
+and the proceedings for which they are officially responsible, I must
+say a word about the peculiar psychology of English statesmanship, not
+only for the benefit of my English readers (who do not know that it is
+peculiar just as they do not know that water has any taste because it is
+always in their mouths), but as a plea for a more charitable
+construction from the wider world.
+
+We know by report, however unjust it may seem to us, that there is an
+opinion abroad, even in the quarters most friendly to us, that our
+excellent qualities are marred by an incorrigible hypocrisy. To France
+we have always been Perfidious Albion. In Germany, at this moment, that
+epithet would be scorned as far too flattering to us. Victor Hugo
+explained the relative unpopularity of _Measure for Measure_ among
+Shakespeare's plays on the ground that the character of the hypocrite
+Angelo was a too faithful dramatization of our national character.
+Pecksniff is not considered so exceptional an English gentleman in
+America as he is in England.
+
+Now we have not acquired this reputation for nothing. The world has no
+greater interest in branding England with this particular vice of
+hypocrisy than in branding France with it; yet the world does not cite
+Tartuffe as a typical Frenchman as it cites Angelo and Pecksniff as
+typical Englishmen. We may protest against it as indignantly as the
+Prussian soldiers protest against their equally universal reputation for
+ferocity in plunder and pillage, sack and rapine; but there is something
+in it. If you judge an English statesman, by his conscious intentions,
+his professions, and his personal charm, you will often find him an
+amiable, upright, humane, anxiously truthful man. If you judge him, as a
+foreigner must, solely on the official acts for which he is responsible,
+and which he has to defend in the House of Commons for the sake of his
+party, you will often be driven to conclude that this estimable
+gentleman is, in point of being an unscrupulous superprig and fool,
+worse than Caesar Borgia and General Von Bernhardi rolled into one, and
+in foreign affairs a Bismarck in everything except commanding ability,
+blunt common sense, and freedom from illusion as to the nature and
+object of his own diplomacy. And the permanent officials in whose hands
+he is will probably deserve all that and something to spare. Thus you
+will get that amazing contrast that confronts us now between the
+Machiavellian Sir Edward Grey of the Berlin newspapers and the amiable
+and popular Sir Edward Grey we know in England. In England we are all
+prepared to face any World Congress and say, "We know that Sir Edward
+Grey is an honest English gentleman, who meant well as a true patriot
+and friend of peace; we are quite sure that what he did was fair and
+right; and we will not listen to any nonsense to the contrary." The
+Congress will reply, "We know nothing about Sir Edward Grey except what
+he did; and as there is no secret and no question as to what he did, the
+whole story being recorded by himself, we must hold England responsible
+for his conduct, whilst taking your word for the fact, which has no
+importance for us, that his conduct has nothing to do with his
+character."
+
+
+*Our Intellectual Laziness.*
+
+The general truth of the situation is, as I have spent so much of my
+life in trying to make the English understand, that we are cursed with a
+fatal intellectual laziness, an evil inheritance from the time when our
+monopoly of coal and iron made it possible for us to become rich and
+powerful without thinking or knowing how; a laziness which is becoming
+highly dangerous to us now that our monopoly is gone or superseded by
+new sources of mechanical energy. We got rich by pursuing our own
+immediate advantage instinctively; that is, with a natural childish
+selfishness; and when any question of our justification arose, we found
+it easy to silence it with any sort of plausible twaddle (provided it
+flattered us, and did not imply any trouble or sacrifice) provided by
+our curates at £70 a year, or our journalists at a penny a line, or
+commercial moralists with axes to grind. In the end we became fatheaded,
+and not only lost all intellectual consciousness of what we were doing,
+and with it all power of objective self-criticism, but stacked up a
+lumber of pious praises for ourselves which not only satisfied our
+corrupted and half atrophied consciences, but gave us a sense that there
+is something extraordinarily ungentlemanly and politically dangerous in
+bringing these pious phrases to the test of conduct. We carried Luther's
+doctrine of Justification by Faith to the insane point of believing that
+as long as a man says what we have agreed to accept as the right thing
+it does not matter in the least what he actually does. In fact, we do
+not clearly see why a man need introduce the subject of morals at all,
+unless there is something questionable to be whitewashed. The
+unprejudiced foreigner calls this hypocrisy: that is why we call him
+prejudiced. But I, who have been a poor man in a poor country,
+understand the foreigner better.
+
+Now from the general to the particular. In describing the course of the
+diplomatic negotiations by which our Foreign Office achieved its design
+of at last settling accounts with Germany at the most favourable moment
+from the Militarist point of view, I shall have to exhibit our Secretary
+of State for Foreign Affairs as behaving almost exactly as we have
+accused the Kaiser of behaving. Yet I see him throughout as an honest
+gentleman, "perplexed in the extreme," meaning well, revolted at the
+last moment by the horror of war, clinging to the hope that in some
+vague way he could persuade everybody to be reasonable if they would
+only come and talk to him as they did when the big Powers were kept out
+of the Balkan war, but hopelessly destitute of a positive policy of any
+kind, and therefore unable to resist those who had positive business in
+hand. And do not for a moment imagine that I think that the conscious
+Sir Edward Grey was Othello, and the subconscious, Iago. I do think that
+the Foreign Office, of which Sir Edward is merely the figure head, was
+as deliberately and consciously bent on a long deferred Militarist war
+with Germany as the Admiralty was; and that is saying a good deal. If
+Sir Edward Grey did not know what he wanted, Mr. Winston Churchill was
+in no such perplexity. He was not an "ist" of any sort, but a
+straightforward holder of the popular opinion that if you are threatened
+you should hit out, unless you are afraid to. Had he had the conduct of
+the affair he might quite possibly have averted the war (and thereby
+greatly disappointed himself and the British public) by simply
+frightening the Kaiser. As it was, he had arranged for the co-operation
+of the French and British fleets; was spoiling for the fight; and must
+have restrained himself with great difficulty from taking off his coat
+in public whilst Mr. Asquith and Sir Edward Grey were giving the country
+the assurances which were misunderstood to mean that we were not bound
+to go to war, and not more likely to do so than usual. But though Sir
+Edward did not clear up the misunderstanding, I think he went to war
+with the heavy heart of a Junker Liberal (such centaurs exist) and not
+with the exultation of a Junker Jingo.
+
+I may now, without more than the irreducible minimum of injustice to Sir
+Edward Grey, proceed to tell the story of the diplomatic negotiations as
+they will appear to the Congress which, I am assuming, will settle the
+terms on which Europe is to live more or less happily ever after.
+
+*Diplomatic History of the War.*
+
+The evidence of how the Junker diplomatists of our Foreign Office let us
+in for the war is in the White Paper, Miscellaneous No. 6 (1914),
+containing correspondence respecting the European crisis, and since
+reissued, with a later White Paper and some extra matter, as a penny
+bluebook in miniature. In these much-cited and little-read documents we
+see the Junkers of all the nations, the men who have been saying for
+years "It's bound to come," and clamouring in England for compulsory
+military service and expeditionary forces, momentarily staggered and not
+a little frightened by the sudden realization that it has come at last.
+They rush round from foreign office to embassy, and from embassy to
+palace, twittering "This is awful. Can't you stop it? Won't you be
+reasonable? Think of the consequences," etc., etc. One man among them
+keeps his head and looks the facts in the face. That man is Sazonoff,
+the Russian Secretary for Foreign Affairs. He keeps steadily trying to
+make Sir Edward Grey face the inevitable. He says and reiterates, in
+effect, "You know very well that you cannot keep out of a European war.
+You know you are pledged to fight Germany if Germany attacks France. You
+know that your arrangments for the fight are actually made; that already
+the British army is commanded by a Franco-British Council of War; that
+there is no possible honourable retreat for you. You know that this old
+man in Austria, who would have been superannuated years ago if he had
+been an exciseman, is resolved to make war on Servia, and sent that
+silly forty-eight hours ultimatum when we were all out of town so that
+he could begin fighting before we could get back to sit on his head. You
+know that he has the Jingo mob of Vienna behind him. You know that if he
+makes war, Russia must mobilize. You know that France is bound to come
+in with us as you are with France. You know that the moment we mobilize,
+Germany, the old man's ally, will have only one desperate chance of
+victory, and that is to overwhelm our ally, France, with one superb rush
+of her millions, and then sweep back and meet us on the Vistula. You
+know that nothing can stop this except Germany remonstrating with
+Austria, and insisting on the Servian case being dealt with by an
+international tribunal and not by war. You know that Germany dares not
+do this, because her alliance with Austria is her defence against the
+Franco-Russian alliance, and that she does not want to do it in any
+case, because the Kaiser naturally has a strong class prejudice against
+the blowing up of Royal personages by irresponsible revolutionists, and
+thinks nothing too bad for Servia after the assassination of the
+Archduke. There is just one chance of avoiding Armageddon: a slender
+one, but worth trying. You averted war in the Algeciras crisis, and
+again in the Agadir crisis, by saying you would fight. Try it again. The
+Kaiser is stiffnecked because he does not believe you are going to fight
+this time. Well, convince him that you are. The odds against him will
+then be so terrible that he may not dare to support the Austrian
+ultimatum to Servia at such a price. And if Austria is thus forced to
+proceed judicially against Servia, we Russians will be satisfied; and
+there will be no war."
+
+Sir Edward could not see it. He is a member of a Liberal Government, in
+a country where there is no political career for the man who does not
+put his party's tenure of office before every other consideration. What
+would _The Daily News_ and _The Manchester Guardian_ have said had he,
+Bismarck-like, said bluntly: "If war once breaks out, the old score
+between England and Prussia will be settled, not by ambassadors' tea
+parties and Areopaguses, but by blood and iron?" In vain did Sazonoff
+repeat, "But if you are going to fight, as you know you are, why not say
+so?" Sir Edward, being Sir Edward and not Winston Churchill or Lloyd
+George, could not admit that he was going to fight. He might have
+forestalled the dying Pope and his noble Christian "I bless peace" by a
+noble, if heathen, "I fight war." Instead, he persuaded us all that he
+was under no obligation whatever to fight. He persuaded Germany that he
+had not the slightest serious intention of fighting. Sir Owen Seaman
+wrote in _Punch_ an amusing and witty No-Intervention poem. Sporting
+Liberals offered any odds that there would be no war for England. And
+Germany, confident that with Austria's help she could break France with
+one hand and Russia with the other if England held aloof, let Austria
+throw the match into the magazine.
+
+
+*The Battery Unmasked.*
+
+Then the Foreign Office, always acting through its amiable and popular
+but confused instrument Sir Edward, unmasked the Junker-Militarist
+battery. He suddenly announced that England must take a hand in the war,
+though he did not yet tell the English people so, it being against the
+diplomatic tradition to tell them anything until it is too late for them
+to object. But he told the German Ambassador, Prince Lichnowsky, caught
+in a death trap, pleaded desperately for peace with Great Britain. Would
+we promise to spare Germany if Belgium were left untouched? No. Would we
+say on what conditions we would spare Germany? No. Not if the Germans
+promised not to annex French territory? No. Not even if they promised
+not to touch the French colonies? No. Was there no way out? Sir Edward
+Grey was frank. He admitted there was just one chance; that Liberal
+opinion might not stand the war if the neutrality of Belgium were not
+violated. And he provided against that chance by committing England to
+the war the day before he let the cat out of the bag in Parliament.
+
+All this is recorded in the language of diplomacy in the White Paper on
+or between the lines. That language is not so straightforward as my
+language; but at the crucial points it is clear enough. Sazonoff's tone
+is politely diplomatic in No. 6; but in No. 17 he lets himself go. "I do
+not believe that Germany really wants war; but her attitude is decided
+by yours. If you take your stand firmly with France and Russia there
+will be no war. If you fail them now, rivers of blood will flow, and you
+will in the end be dragged into war." He was precisely right; but he did
+not realize that war was exactly what our Junkers wanted. They did not
+dare to tell themselves so; and naturally they did not dare to tell him
+so. And perhaps his own interest in war was too strong to make him
+regret the rejection of his honest advice. To break up the Austrian
+Empire and achieve for Russia the Slav Caliphate of South-East Europe
+whilst defeating Prussia with the help of France and of Russia's old
+enemy and Prussia's old ally England, was a temptation so enormous that
+Sazonoff, in resisting it so far as to shew Sir Edward Grey frankly the
+only chance of preventing it, proved himself the most genuine
+humanitarian in the diplomatic world.
+
+
+*Number 123.*
+
+The decisive communication between Sir Edward Grey and Prince Lichnowsky
+is recorded in the famous No. 123. With the rather childish subsequent
+attempt to minimize No. 123 on the ground that the Prince was merely an
+amiable nincompoop who did not really represent his fiendish sovereign,
+neither I nor any other serious person need be concerned. What is beyond
+all controversy is that after that conversation Prince Lichnowsky could
+do nothing but tell the Kaiser that the _Entente_, having at last got
+his imperial head in chancery, was not going to let him off on any
+terms, and that it was now a fight to a finish between the British and
+German empires. Then the Kaiser said: "We are Germans. God help us!"
+When a crowd of foolish students came cheering for the war under his
+windows, he bade them go to the churches and pray. His telegrams to the
+Tsar (the omission of which from the penny bluebook is, to say the
+least, not chivalrous) were dignified and pathetic. And when the
+Germans, taking a line from the poet they call "unser Shakespeare,"
+said: "Come the four quarters of the world in arms and we shall shock
+them," it was, from the romantic militarist point of view, fine. What
+Junker-led men could do they have since done to make that thrasonical
+brag good. But there is no getting over the fact that, in Tommy Atkins's
+phrase, they had asked for it. Their Junkers, like ours, had drunk to
+The Day; and they should not have let us choose it after riling us for
+so many years. And that is why Sir Edward had a great surprise when he
+at last owned up in Parliament.
+
+
+*How the Nation Took It.*
+
+The moment he said that we could not "stand aside with our arms folded"
+and see our friend and neighbour France "bombarded and battered," the
+whole nation rose to applaud him. All the Foreign Office distrust of
+public opinion, the concealment of the Anglo-French plan of campaign,
+the disguise of the _Entente_ in a quaker's hat, the duping of the
+British public and the Kaiser with one and the same prevarication, had
+been totally unnecessary and unpopular, like most of these ingenuities
+which diplomatists think subtle and Machiavellian. The British Public
+had all along been behind Mr. Winston Churchill. It had wanted Sir
+Edward to do just what Sazonoff wanted him to do, and what I, in the
+columns of _The Daily News_ proposed he should do nine months ago (I
+must really be allowed to claim that I am not merely wise after the
+event), which was to arm to the teeth regardless of an expense which to
+us would have been a mere fleabite, and tell Germany that if she, laid a
+finger on France we would unite with France to defeat her, offering her
+at the same time as consolation for that threat, the assurance that we
+would do as much to France if she wantonly broke the peace in the like
+fashion by attacking Germany. No unofficial Englishman worth his salt
+wanted to snivel hypocritically about our love of peace and our respect
+for treaties and our solemn acceptance of a painful duty, and all the
+rest of the nauseous mixture of school-master's twaddle, parish magazine
+cant, and cinematograph melodrama with which we were deluged. We were
+perfectly ready to knock the Kaiser's head off just to teach him that if
+he thought he was going to ride roughshod over Europe, including our new
+friends the French, and the plucky little Belgians, he was reckoning
+without old England. And in this pugnacious but perfectly
+straightforward and human attitude the nation needed no excuses because
+the nation honestly did not know that we were taking the Kaiser at a
+disadvantage, or that the Franco-Russian alliance had been just as much
+a menace to peace as the Austro-German one. But the Foreign Office knew
+that very well, and therefore began to manufacture superfluous,
+disingenuous, and rather sickening excuses at a great rate. The nation
+had a clean conscience, and was really innocent of any aggressive
+strategy: the Foreign Office was redhanded, and did not want to be found
+out. Hence its sermons.
+
+
+*Mr. H.G. Wells Hoists the Country's Flag.*
+
+It was Mr. H.G. Wells who at the critical moment spoke with the nation's
+voice. When he uttered his electric outburst of wrath against "this
+drilling, trampling foolery in the heart of Europe" he gave expression
+to the pent-up exasperation of years of smouldering revolt against swank
+and domineer, guff and bugaboo, calling itself blood and iron, and
+mailed fist, and God and conscience and anything else that sounded
+superb. Like Nietzsche, we were "fed up" with the Kaiser's imprisonments
+of democratic journalists for _Majestaetsbeleidigung_ (monarch
+disparagement), with his ancestors, and his mission, and his gospel of
+submission and obedience for poor men, and of authority, tempered by
+duelling, for rich men. The world had become sore-headed, and desired
+intensely that they who clatter the sword shall perish by the sword.
+Nobody cared twopence about treaties: indeed, it was not for us, who had
+seen the treaty of Berlin torn up by the brazen seizure of Bosnia and
+Herzegovina by Austria in 1909, and taken that lying down, as Russia
+did, to talk about the sacredness of treaties, even if the wastepaper
+baskets of the Foreign Offices were not full of torn up "scraps of
+paper," and a very good thing too; for General von Bernhardi's
+assumption that circumstances alter treaties is not a page from
+Machiavelli: it is a platitude from the law books. The man in the street
+understood little or nothing about Servia or Russia or any of the cards
+with which the diplomatists were playing their perpetual game of Beggar
+my Neighbour. We were rasped beyond endurance by Prussian Militarism and
+its contempt for us and for human happiness and common sense; and we
+just rose at it and went for it. We have set out to smash the Kaiser
+exactly as we set out to smash the Mahdi. Mr. Wells never mentioned a
+treaty. He said, in effect: "There stands the monster all freedom-loving
+men hate; and at last we are going to fight it." And the public, bored
+by the diplomatists, said: "Now you're talking!" We did not stop to ask
+our consciences whether the Prussian assumption that the dominion of the
+civilized earth belongs to German culture is really any more bumptious
+than the English assumption that the dominion of the sea belongs to
+British commerce. And in our island security we were as little able as
+ever to realize the terrible military danger of Germany's geographical
+position between France and England on her west flank and Russia on her
+east: all three leagued for her destruction; and how unreasonable it was
+to ask Germany to lose the fraction of a second (much less Sir Maurice
+de Runsen's naïve "a few days' delay") in dashing at her Western foe
+when she could obtain no pledge as to Western intentions. "We are now in
+a state of necessity; and Necessity knows no law," said the Imperial
+Chancellor in the Reichstag. "It is a matter of life and death to us,"
+said the German Minister for Foreign Affairs to our Ambassador in
+Berlin, who had suddenly developed an extraordinary sense of the
+sacredness of the Treaty of London, dated 1839, and still, as it
+happened, inviolate among the torn fragments of many subsequent and
+similar "scraps of paper." Our Ambassador seems to have been of Sir
+Maurice's opinion that there could be no such tearing hurry. The Germans
+could enter France through the line of forts between Verdun and Toul if
+they were really too flustered to wait a few days on the chance of Sir
+Edward Grey's persuasive conversation and charming character softening
+Russia and bringing Austria to conviction of sin. Thereupon the Imperial
+Chancellor, not being quite an angel, asked whether we had counted the
+cost of crossing the path of an Empire fighting for its life (for these
+Militarist statesmen do really believe that nations can be killed by
+cannon shot). That was a threat; and as we cared nothing about Germany's
+peril, and wouldn't stand being threatened any more by a Power of which
+we now had the inside grip, the fat remained in the fire, blazing more
+fiercely than ever. There was only one end possible to such a clash of
+high tempers, national egotisms, and reciprocal ignorances.
+
+
+*Delicate Position of Mr. Asquith.*
+
+It seemed a splendid chance for the Government to place itself at the
+head of the nation. But no British Government within my recollection has
+ever understood the nation. Mr. Asquith, true to the Gladstonian
+tradition (hardly just to Gladstone, by the way) that a Liberal Prime
+Minister should know nothing concerning foreign politics and care less,
+and calmly insensible to the real nature of the popular explosion, fell
+back on 1839, picking up the obvious barrister's point about the
+violation of the neutrality of Belgium, and tried the equally obvious
+barrister's claptrap about "an infamous proposal" on the jury. He
+assured us that nobody could have done more for peace than Sir Edward
+Grey, though the rush to smash the Kaiser was the most popular thing Sir
+Edward had ever done.
+
+Besides, there was another difficulty. Mr. Asquith himself, though
+serenely persuaded that he is a Liberal statesman, is, in effect, very
+much what the Kaiser would have been if he had been a Yorkshireman and a
+lawyer, instead of being only half English and the other half
+Hohenzollern, and an anointed emperor to boot. As far as popular
+liberties are concerned, history will make no distinction between Mr.
+Asquith and Metternich. He is forced to keep on the safe academic ground
+of Belgium by the very obvious consideration that if he began to talk of
+the Kaiser's imprisonments of editors and democratic agitators and so
+forth, a Homeric laughter, punctuated with cries of, "How about
+Denshawai?" "What price Tom Mann?" "Votes for women!" "Been in India
+lately?" "Make McKenna Kaiser," "Or dear old Herbert Gladstone," etc.,
+etc., would promptly spoil that pose. The plain fact is that, Militarism
+apart, Germany is in many ways more democratic in practice than England;
+indeed the Kaiser has been openly reviled as a coward by his Junkers
+because he falls short of Mr. Asquith in calm indifference to Liberal
+principles and blank ignorance of working-class sympathies, opinions,
+and interests.
+
+Mr. Asquith had also to distract public attention from the fact that
+three official members of his Government, all men of unquestioned and
+conspicuous patriotism and intellectual honesty, walked straight out
+into private life on the declaration of war. One of them, Mr. John
+Burns, did so at an enormous personal sacrifice, and has since
+maintained a grim silence far more eloquent than the famous speech
+Germany invented for him. It is not generally believed that these three
+statesmen were actuated by a passion for the violation of Belgian
+neutrality.
+
+On the whole, it was impossible for the Government to seize its grand
+chance and put itself at the head of the popular movement that responded
+to Sir Edward Grey's declaration: the very simple reason being that the
+Government does not represent the nation, and is in its sympathies just
+as much a Junker government as the Kaiser's. And so, what the Government
+cannot do has to be done by unofficial persons with clean and brilliant
+anti-Junker records like Mr. Wells, Mr. Arnold Bennett, Mr. Neil Lyons,
+and Mr. Jerome K. Jerome. Neither Mr. Asquith nor Sir Edward Grey can
+grasp, as these real spokesmen of their time do, the fact that we just
+simply want to put an end to Potsdamnation, both at home and abroad.
+Both of them probably think Potsdam a very fine and enviable
+institution, and want England to out-Potsdam Potsdam and to monopolize
+the command of the seas; a monstrous aspiration. We, I take it, want to
+guarantee that command of the sea which is the common heritage of
+mankind to the tiniest State and the humblest fisherman that depends on
+the sea for a livelihood. We want the North Sea to be as safe for
+everybody, English or German, as Portland Place.
+
+
+*The Need for Recrimination.*
+
+And now somebody who would rather I had not said all this (having
+probably talked dreadful nonsense about Belgium and so forth for a month
+past) is sure to ask: "Why all this recrimination? What is done is done.
+Is it not now the duty of every Englishman to sink all differences in
+the face of the common peril?" etc., etc. To all such prayers to be
+shielded from that terrible thing, the truth, I must reply that history
+consists mainly of recrimination, and that I am writing history because
+an accurate knowledge of what has occurred is not only indispensable to
+any sort of reasonable behaviour on our part in the face of Europe when
+the inevitable day of settlement comes, but because it has a practical
+bearing on the most perilously urgent and immediate business before us:
+the business of the appeal to the nation for recruits and for enormous
+sums of money. It has to decide the question whether that appeal shall
+be addressed frankly to our love of freedom, and our tradition (none the
+less noble and moving because it is so hard to reconcile with the
+diplomatic facts) that England is a guardian of the world's liberty, and
+not to bad law about an obsolete treaty, and cant about the diabolical
+personal disposition of the Kaiser, and the wounded propriety of a
+peace-loving England, and all the rest of the slosh and tosh that has
+been making John Bull sick for months past. No doubt at first, when we
+were all clasping one another's hands very hard and begging one another
+not to be afraid, almost anything was excusable. Even the war notes of
+Mr. Garvin, which stood out as the notes of a gentleman amid a welter of
+scurrilous rubbish and a rather blackguardly _Punch_ cartoon mocking the
+agony of Berlin (_Punch_ having turned its non-interventionist coat very
+promptly), had sometimes to run: "We know absolutely nothing of what is
+happening at the front, except that the heroism of the British troops
+will thrill the ages to the last syllable of recorded time," or words to
+that effect. But now it is time to pull ourselves together; to feel our
+muscle; to realize the value of our strength and pluck; and to tell the
+truth unashamed like men of courage and character, not to shirk it like
+the official apologists of a Foreign Office plot.
+
+
+*What Germany Should Have Done.*
+
+And first, as I despise critics who put people in the wrong without
+being able to set them right, I shall, before I go any further with my
+criticism of our official position, do the Government and the Foreign
+Office the service of finding a correct official position for them; for
+I admit that the popular position, though sound as far as it goes, is
+too crude for official use. This correct official position can be found
+only by considering what Germany should have done, and might have done
+had she not been, like our own Junkers, so fascinated by the Militarist
+craze, and obsessed by the chronic Militarist panic, that she was "in
+too great hurry to bid the devil good morning." The matter is simple
+enough: she should have entrusted the security of her western frontier
+to the public opinion of the west of Europe and to America, and fought
+Russia, if attacked, with her rear not otherwise defended. The
+Militarist theory is that we, France and England, would have immediately
+sprung at her from behind; but that is just how the Militarist theory
+gets its votaries into trouble by assuming that Europe is a chess board.
+Europe is not a chess board; but a populous continent in which only a
+very few people are engaged in military chess; and even those few have
+many other things to consider besides capturing their adversary's king.
+Not only would it have been impossible for England to have attacked
+Germany under such circumstances; but if France had done so England
+could not have assisted her, and might even have been compelled by
+public opinion to intervene by way of a joint protest from England and
+America, or even by arms, on her behalf if she were murderously pressed
+on both flanks. Even our Militarists and diplomatists would have had
+reasons for such an intervention. An aggressive Franco-Russian hegemony,
+if it crushed Germany, would be quite as disagreeable to us as a German
+one. Thus Germany would at worst have been fighting Russia and France
+with the sympathy of all the other Powers, and a chance of active
+assistance from some of them, especially those who share her hostility
+to the Russian Government. Had France not attacked her--and though I am
+as ignorant of the terms of the Franco-Russian alliance as Sir Edward
+Grey is strangely content to be, I cannot see how the French Government
+could have justified to its own people a fearfully dangerous attack on
+Germany had Russia been the aggressor--Germany would have secured fair
+play for her fight with Russia. But even the fight with Russia was not
+inevitable. The ultimatum to Servia was the escapade of a dotard: a
+worse crime than the assassination that provoked it. There is no reason
+to doubt the conclusion in Sir Maurice de Bunsen's despatch (No. 161)
+that it could have been got over, and that Russia and Austria would have
+thought better of fighting and come to terms. Peace was really on the
+cards; and the sane game was to play for it.
+
+
+*The Achilles Heel of Militarism.*
+
+Instead, Germany flew at France's throat, and by incidentally invading
+Belgium gave us the excuse our Militarists wanted to attack her with the
+full sympathy of the nation. Why did she do this stupid thing? Not
+because of the counsels of General von Bernhardi. On the contrary, he
+had warned her expressly against allowing herself to be caught between
+Russia and a Franco-British combination until she had formed a
+counterbalancing alliance with America, Italy, and Turkey. And he had
+most certainly not encouraged her to depend on England sparing her: on
+the contrary, he could not sufficiently admire the wily ruthlessness
+with which England watches her opportunity and springs at her foe when
+the foe is down. (He little knew, poor man, how much he was flattering
+our capacity for Realpolitik!) But he had reckoned without his creed's
+fatal and fundamental weakness, which is, that as Junker-Militarism
+promotes only stupid people and snobs, and suppresses genuine realists
+as if they were snakes, it always turns out when a crisis arrives that
+"the silly people don't know their own silly business." The Kaiser and
+his ministers made an appalling mess of their job. They were inflamed by
+Bernhardi; but they did not understand him. They swallowed his flattery,
+but did not take in his strategy or his warnings. They knew that when
+the moment came to face the Franco-Russian alliance, they were to make a
+magnificient dash at France and sweep her pieces off the great chess
+board before the Russians had time to mobilize; and then return and
+crush Russia, leaving the conquest of England for another day. This was
+honestly as much as their heads could hold at one time; and they were
+helplessly unable to consider whether the other conditions postulated by
+Bernhardi were present, or indeed, in the excitement of their
+schoolboyish imaginations, to remember whether he had postulated any at
+all. And so they made their dash and put themselves in the wrong at
+every point morally, besides making victory humanly impossible for
+themselves militarily. That is the nemesis of Militarism: the Militarist
+is thrown into a big game which he is too stupid to be able to play
+successfully. Philip of Spain tried it 300 years ago; and the ruin he
+brought on his empire has lasted to this day. He was so stupid that
+though he believed himself to be the chosen instrument of God (as sure a
+sign of a hopeless fool in a man who cannot see that every other man is
+equally an instrument of that Power as it is a guarantee of wisdom and
+goodwill in the man who respects his neighbor as himself) he attempted
+to fight Drake on the assumption that a cannon was a weapon that no real
+gentleman and good Catholic would condescend to handle. Louis XIV. tried
+again two centuries ago, and, being a more frivolous fool, got beaten by
+Marlborough and sent his great-grandson from the throne to the
+guillotine. Napoleon tried it 100 years ago. He was more dangerous,
+because he had prodigious personal ability and technical military skill;
+and he started with the magnificent credential of the French Revolution.
+All that carried him farther than the Spanish bigot or the French fop;
+but he, too, accreted fools and knaves, and ended defeated in St. Helena
+after pandering for twenty years to the appetite of idiots for glory and
+bloodshed; waging war as "a great game"; and finding in a field strewn
+with corpses "un beau spectacle." In short, as strong a magnet to fools
+as the others, though so much abler.
+
+
+*Our Own True Position*.
+
+Now comes the question, in what position did this result of a mad theory
+and a hopelessly incompetent application of it on the part of Potsdam
+place our own Government? It left us quite clearly in the position of
+the responsible policeman of the west. There was nobody else in Europe
+strong enough to chain "the mad dog." Belgium and Holland, Norway and
+Sweden, Denmark and Switzerland could hardly have been expected to take
+that duty on themselves, even if Norway and Sweden had not good reason
+to be anti-Russian, and the Dutch capitalists were not half convinced
+that their commercial prosperity would be greater under German than
+under native rule. It will not be contended that Spain could have done
+anything; and as to Italy, it was doubtful whether she did not consider
+herself still a member of the Triple Alliance. It was evidently England
+or nobody. For England to have refrained, from hurling herself into the
+fray, horse, foot, and artillery, was impossible from every point of
+view. From the democratic point of view it would have meant an
+acceptance of the pretension of which Potsdam, by attacking the French
+Republic, had made itself the champion: that is, the pretension of the
+Junker class to dispose of the world on Militarist lines at the expense
+of the lives and limbs of the masses. From the international Socialist
+point of view, it would have been the acceptance of the extreme
+nationalist view that the people of other countries are foreigners, and
+that it does not concern us if they choose to cut one another's throats.
+Our Militarist Junkers cried "If we let Germany conquer France it will
+be our turn next." Our romantic Junkers added "and serve us right too:
+what man will pity us when the hour strikes for us, if we skulk now?"
+Even the wise, who loathe war, and regard it as such a dishonour and
+disgrace in itself that all its laurels cannot hide its brand of Cain,
+had to admit that police duty is necessary and that war must be made on
+such war as the Germans had made by attacking France in an avowed
+attempt to substitute a hegemony of cannon for the comity of nations.
+There was no alternative. Had the Foreign Office been the International
+Socialist Bureau, had Sir Edward Grey been Jaures, had Mr. Ramsay
+MacDonald been Prime Minister, had Russia been Germany's ally instead of
+ours, the result would still have been the same: we must have drawn the
+sword to save France and smash Potsdam as we smashed and always must
+smash Philip, Louis, Napoleon, _et hoc genus omne_.
+
+The case for our action is thus as complete as any _casus belli_ is ever
+likely to be. In fact its double character as both a democratic and
+military (if not Militarist) case makes it too complete; for it enables
+our Junkers to claim it entirely for themselves, and to fake it with
+pseudo-legal justifications which destroy nine-tenths of our credit, the
+military and legal cases being hardly a tenth of the whole: indeed, they
+would not by themselves justify the slaughter of a single Pomeranian
+grenadier. For instance, take the Militarist view that we must fight
+Potsdam because if the Kaiser is victorious, it will be our turn next!
+Well: are we not prepared to fight always when our turn comes? Why
+should not we also depend on our navy, on the extreme improbability of
+Germany, however triumphant, making two such terrible calls on her
+people in the same generation as a war involves, on the sympathy of the
+defeated, and on the support of American and European public opinion
+when our turn comes, if there is nothing at stake now but the difference
+between defeat and victory in an otherwise indifferent military
+campaign? If the welfare of the world does not suffer any more by an
+English than by a German defeat who cares whether we are defeated or
+not? As mere competitors in a race of armaments and an Olympic game
+conducted with ball cartridge, or as plaintiffs in a technical case of
+international law (already decided against us in 1870, by the way, when
+Gladstone had to resort to a new treaty made _ad hoc_ and lapsing at the
+end of the war) we might as well be beaten as not, for all the harm that
+will ensue to anyone but ourselves, or even to ourselves apart from our
+national vanity. It is as the special constables of European life that
+we are important, and can send our men to the trenches with the
+assurance that they are fighting in a worthy cause. In short, the Junker
+case is not worth twopence: the Democratic case, the Socialist case, the
+International case is worth all it threatens to cost.
+
+
+*The German Defence to Our Indictment.*
+
+What is the German reply to this case? Or rather, how would the Germans
+reply to it if their official Militarist and Kaiserist panjandrums had
+the wit to find the effective reply? Undoubtedly they would say that our
+Social-Democratic professions are all very fine, but that our conversion
+to them is suspiciously sudden and recent. They would remark that it is
+a little difficult for a nation in deadly peril to trust its existence
+to a foreign public opinion which has not only never been expressed by
+the people who really control England's foreign policy, but is flatly
+opposed to all their known views and prejudices. They would ask why,
+instead of making an _Entente_ with France and Russia and refusing to
+give Germany any assurance concerning its object except that we would
+not pledge ourselves to remain neutral if the Franco-Russian _Entente_
+fell on Germany, we did not say straight out in 1912 (when they put the
+question flatly to us), and again last July when Sazonoff urged us so
+strongly to shew our hand, that if Germany attacked France we should
+fight her, Russia or no Russia (a far less irritating and provocative
+attitude), although we knew full well that an attack on France through
+Belgium would be part of the German program if the Russian peril became
+acute. They would point out that if our own Secretary for Foreign
+Affairs openly disclaimed any knowledge of the terms of the
+Franco-Russian alliance, it was hard for a German to believe that they
+were wholly fit for publication. In short, they would say "If you were
+so jolly wise and well intentioned before the event, why did not your
+Foreign Minister and your ambassadors in Berlin and Vienna and St.
+Petersburg--we beg pardon, Petrograd--invite us to keep the peace and
+rely on western public opinion instead of refusing us every pledge
+except the hostile one to co-operate with France against us in the North
+Sea, and making it only too plain to us that your policy was a Junker
+policy as much as ours, and that we had nothing to hope from your
+goodwill? What evidence had we that you were playing any other game than
+this Militarist chess of our own, which you now so piously renounce, but
+which none of you except a handful of Socialists whom you despise and
+Syndicalists whom you imprison on Militarist pretexts has opposed for
+years past, though it has been all over your Militarist anti-German
+platforms and papers and magazines? Are your Social-Democratic
+principles sincere, or are they only a dagger you keep up your sleeve to
+stab us in the back when our two most formidable foes are trying to
+garotte us? If so, where does your moral superiority come in, hypocrites
+that you are? If not, why, we repeat, did you not make them known to all
+the world, instead of making an ambush for us by your senseless
+silence?"
+
+I see no reply to that except a frank confession that we did not know
+our own minds; that we came to a knowledge of them only when Germany's
+attack on France forced us to make them up at last; that though
+doubtless a chronic state of perfect lucidity and long prevision on our
+part would have been highly convenient, yet there is a good deal to be
+said for the policy of not fording a stream until you come to it; and
+that in any case we must entirely decline to admit that we are more
+likely than other people to do the wrong thing when circumstances at
+last oblige us to think and act. Also that the discussion is idle on the
+shewing of the German case itself; for whether the Germans assumed us to
+be unscrupulous Militarists or conscientious Democrats they were bound
+to come to the same conclusion: namely, that we should attack them if
+they attacked France; consequently their assumption that we would not
+interfere must have been based on the belief that we are simply
+"contemptible," which is the sort of mistake people have to pay for in
+this wicked world.
+
+On the whole, we can hector our way in the Prussian manner out of that
+discussion well enough, provided we hold our own in the field. But the
+Prussian manner hardly satisfies the conscience. True, the fact that our
+diplomatists were not able to discover the right course for Germany does
+not excuse Germany for being unable to find it for herself. Not that it
+was more her business than ours: it was a European question, and should
+have been solved by the united counsels of all the ambassadors and
+Foreign Offices and chanceries. Indeed it could not have been stably
+solved without certain assurances from them. But it was, to say the
+least, as much Germany's business as anyone else's, and terribly urgent
+for her: "a matter of life and death," the Imperial Chancellor thought.
+Still, it is not for us to claim moral superiority to Germany. It was
+for us a matter of the life and death of many Englishmen; and these
+Englishmen are dead because our diplomatists were as blind as the
+Prussians. The war is a failure for secret Junker diplomacy, ours no
+less than the enemy's. Those of us who have still to die must be
+inspired, not by devotion to the diplomatists, but, like the Socialist
+hero of old on the barricade, by the vision of "human solidarity." And
+if he purchases victory for that holy cause with his blood, I submit
+that we cannot decently allow the Foreign Office to hang up his martyr's
+palm over the War Office Mantelpiece.
+
+
+*The First Penalty of Disingenuousness.*
+
+The Foreign Office, however, can at lease shift its ground, and declare
+for the good cause instead of belittling it with quibbling excuses. For
+see what the first effect of the nonsense about Belgium has been! It
+carried with it the inevitable conclusion that when the last German was
+cleared off Belgian soil, peace-loving England, her reluctant work in
+this shocking war done, would calmly retire from the conflict, and leave
+her Allies to finish the deal with Potsdam. Accordingly, after Mr.
+Asquith's oration at the Mansion House, the Allies very properly
+insisted on our signing a solemn treaty between the parties that they
+must all stand together to the very end. A pitifully thin attempt has
+been made to represent that the mistrusted party was France, and that
+the Kaiser was trying to buy her off. All one can say to that is that
+the people who believe that any French Government dare face the French
+people now with anything less than Alsace and Lorraine as the price of
+peace, or that an undefeated and indeed masterfully advancing German
+Kaiser (as he seemed then) dare offer France such a price, would believe
+anything. Of course we had to sign; but if the Prime Minister had not
+been prevented by his own past from taking the popular line, we should
+not have been suspected of a possible backing-out when the demands of
+our sanctimoniousness were satisfied. He would have known that we are
+not vindicating a treaty which by accident remains among the fragments
+of treaties of Paris, of Prague, of Berlin, of all sorts of places and
+dates, as the only European treaty that has hitherto escaped flat
+violation: we are supporting the war as a war on war, on military
+coercion, on domineering, on bullying, on brute force, on military law,
+on caste insolence, on what Mrs. Fawcett called insensable deviltry
+(only to find the papers explaining apologetically that she, as a lady,
+had of course been alluding to war made by foreigners, not by England).
+Some of us, remembering the things we have ourselves said and done, may
+doubt whether Satan can cast out Satan; but as the job is not exactly
+one for an unfallen angel, we may as well let him have a try.
+
+
+*The Blank Cheque.*
+
+In the meantime behold us again hopelessly outwitted by Eastern
+diplomacy as a direct consequence of this ill-starred outburst of
+hypocrisy about treaties! Everybody has said over and over again that
+this war is the most tremendous war ever waged. Nobody has said that
+this new treaty is the most tremendous blank cheque we have ever been
+forced to sign by our Parliamentary party trick of striking moral
+attitudes. It is true that Mr. J.A. Hobson realised the situation at
+once, and was allowed to utter a little croak in a corner; but where was
+the trumpet note of warning that should have rung throughout the whole
+Press? Just consider what the blank cheque means. France's draft on it
+may stop at the cost of recovering Alsace and Lorraine. We shall have to
+be content with a few scraps of German colony and the heavy-weight
+championship. But Russia? When will she say "Hold! Enough!" Suppose she
+wants not only Poland, but Baltic Prussia? Suppose she wants
+Constantinople as her port of access to the unfrozen seas, in addition
+to the dismemberment of Austria? Suppose she has the brilliant idea of
+annexing all Prussia, for which there is really something to be said by
+ethnographical map-makers, Militarist madmen, and Pan-Slavist
+megalomaniacs? It may be a reasonable order; but it is a large one; and
+the fact that we should have been committed to it without the knowledge
+of Parliament, without discussion, without warning, without any sort of
+appeal to public opinion or democratic sanction, by a stroke of Sir
+Edward Grey's pen within five weeks of his having committed us in the
+same fashion to an appalling European war, shews how completely the
+Foreign Office has thrown away all pretence of being any less absolute
+than the Kaiser himself. It simply offers _carte blanche_ to the armies
+of the Allies without a word to the nation until the cheque is signed.
+The only limit there is to the obligation is the certainty that the
+cheque will be dishonoured the moment the draft on it becomes too heavy.
+And that may furnish a virtuous pretext for another war between the
+Allies themselves. In any case no treaty can save each Ally from the
+brute necessity of surrendering and paying up if beaten, whether the
+defeat is shared by the others or not. Did I not say that the sooner we
+made up our minds to the terms of the treaty of peace, so that we might
+know what we were fighting for, and how far we were bound to go, the
+better? Instead of which we sign a ridiculous "scrap of paper" to save
+ourselves the intolerable fatigue of thought.
+
+
+*Belgium Crucified Between the European Powers.*
+
+And now, before I leave the subject of Belgium, what have we done for
+Belgium? Have we saved her soil from invasion? Were we at her side with
+half a million men when the avalanche fell on her? Or were we safe in
+our own country praising her heroism in paragraphs which all contrived
+to convey an idea that the Belgian soldier is about four feet high, but
+immensely plucky for his size? Alas, when the Belgian soldier cried:
+"Where are the English?" the reply was "a mass of concrete as large as a
+big room," blown into the air by a German siege gun, falling back and
+crushing him into the earth we had not succeeded in saving from the
+worst of the horrors of war. We have not protected Belgium: Belgium has
+protected us at the cost of being conquered by Germany. It is now our
+sacred duty to drive the Germans out of Belgium. Meanwhile we might at
+least rescue her refugees by a generous grant of public money from the
+caprices of private charity. We need not press our offer to lend her
+money: German capitalists will do that for her with the greatest
+pleasure when the war is over. I think the Government realizes that now;
+for I note the after-thought that a loan from us need not bear interest.
+
+Now that we begin to see where we really are, what practical morals can
+we draw?
+
+
+*Unpreparedness the Price of Secrecy.*
+
+First, that our autocratic foreign policy, in which the Secretary for
+Foreign Affairs is always a Junker, and makes war and concludes war
+without consulting the nation, or confiding in it, or even refraining
+from deceiving it as to his intentions, leads inevitably to a disastrous
+combination of war and unpreparedness for war. Wars are planned which
+require huge expeditionary armies trained and equipped for war. But as
+such preparation could not be concealed from the public, it is simply
+deferred until the war is actually declared and begun, at the most
+frightful risk of such an annihilation of our little peace army as we
+escaped by the skin of our teeth at Mons and Cambrai. The military
+experts tell us that it takes four months to make an infantry and six to
+make a cavalry soldier. And our way of getting an army able to fight the
+German army is to declare war on Germany just as if we had such an army,
+and then trust to the appalling resultant peril and disaster to drive us
+into wholesale enlistment, voluntary or (better still from the Junker
+point of view) compulsory. It seems to me that a nation which tolerates
+such insensate methods and outrageous risks must shortly perish from
+sheer lunacy. And it is all pure superstition: the retaining of the
+methods of Edward the First in the reign of George the Fifth. I
+therefore suggest that the first lesson of the war is that the Secretary
+of State for Foreign Affairs be reduced to the level of a simple Prime
+Minister, or even of a constitutional monarch, powerless to fire a
+single shot or sign a treaty without the authority of the House of
+Commons, all diplomatic business being conducted in a blaze of
+publicity, and the present regulation which exacts the qualification of
+a private income of at least £400 a year for a position in the
+Diplomatic Service replaced by a new regulation that at least half the
+staff shall consist of persons who have never dined out at the houses of
+hosts of higher rank than unfashionable solicitors or doctors.
+
+In these recommendations I am not forgetting that an effective check on
+diplomacy is not easy to devise, and that high personal character and
+class disinterestedness (the latter at present unattainable) on the part
+of our diplomatists will be as vital as ever. I well know that diplomacy
+is carried on at present not only by official correspondence meant for
+possible publication and subject to an inspection which is in some
+degree a responsible inspection, but by private letters which the King
+himself has no right to read. I know that even in the United States,
+where treaties and declarations of war must be made by Parliament, it is
+nevertheless possible for the President to bring about a situation in
+which Congress, like our House of Commons in the present instance, has
+no alternative but to declare war. But though complete security is
+impracticable, it does not follow that no precautions should be taken,
+or that a democratic tradition is no safer than a feudal tradition. A
+far graver doubt is raised by the susceptibility of the masses to war
+fever, and the appalling danger of a daily deluge of cheap newspapers
+written by nameless men and women whose scandalously low payment is a
+guarantee of their ignorance and their servility to the financial
+department, controlled by a moneyed class which not only curries favour
+with the military caste for social reasons, but has large direct
+interests in war as a method of raising the price of money, the only
+commodity the moneyed class has to sell. But I am quite unable to see
+that our Junkers are less susceptible to the influence of the Press than
+the people educated by public elementary schools. On the contrary, our
+Democrats are more fool-proof than our Plutocrats; and the ravings our
+Junkers send to the papers for nothing in war time would be dear at a
+halfpenny a line. Plutocracy makes for war because it offers prizes to
+Plutocrats: Socialism makes for peace because the interests it serves
+are international. So, as the Socialist side is the democratic side, we
+had better democratize our diplomacy if we desire peace.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+*RECRUITING.*
+
+
+And now as to the question of recruiting. This is pressing, because it
+is not enough for the Allies to win: we and not Russia must be the
+decisive factor in the victory, or Germany will not be fairly beaten,
+and we shall be only rescued _proteges_ of Russia instead of the
+saviours of Western Europe. We must have the best army in Europe; and we
+shall not get it under existing arrangements. We are passing out of the
+first phase of the war fever, in which men flock to the colours by
+instinct, by romantic desire for adventure, by the determination not, as
+Wagner put it, "to let their lives be governed by fear of the end," by
+simple destitution through unemployment, by rancour and pugnacity
+excited by the inventions of the Press, by a sense of duty inculcated in
+platform orations which would not stand half an hour's discussion, by
+the incitements and taunts of elderly non-combatants and maidens with a
+taste for mischief, and by the verses of poets jumping at the cheapest
+chance in their underpaid profession. The difficulty begins when all the
+men susceptible to these inducements are enlisted, and we have to draw
+on the solid, sceptical, sensible residuum who know the value of their
+lives and services and liberties, and will not give them except on
+substantial and honourable conditions. These Ironsides know that it is
+one thing to fight for your country, and quite another to let your wife
+and children starve to save our rich idlers from a rise in the supertax.
+They also know that it is one thing to wipe out the Prussian drill
+sergeant and snob officer as the enemies of manhood and honour, and
+another to let that sacred mission be made an excuse for subjecting us
+to exactly the same tyranny in England. They have not forgotten the "On
+the knee" episode, nor the floggings in our military prisons, nor the
+scandalous imprisonment of Tom Mann, nor the warnings as to military law
+and barrack life contained even in Robert Blatchford's testimony that
+the army made a man of him.
+
+
+*What the Labour Party Owes to the Army.*
+
+And here is where the Labour Party should come in. The Labour Party's
+business is to abolish the Militarist soldier, who is only a quaint
+survival of the King's footman (himself a still quainter survival of the
+medieval baron's retainer), and substitute for him a trained combatant
+with full civil rights, receiving the Trade Union rate of wages proper
+to a skilled worker at a dangerous trade. It must co-operate with the
+Trade Unions in fixing this moral minimum wage for the citizen soldier,
+and in obtaining for him a guarantee that the wage shall continue until
+he obtains civil employment on standard terms at the conclusion of the
+war. It must make impossible the scandal of a monstrously rich peer (his
+riches, the automatic result of ground land-landlordism, having "no
+damned nonsense of merit about them") proclaiming the official weekly
+allowance for the child of the British soldier in the trenches. That
+allowance is eighteenpence, being less than one third of the standard
+allowance for an illegitimate child under an affiliation order. And the
+Labour Party must deprive the German bullet of its present double effect
+in killing an Englishman in France and simultaneously reducing his
+widow's subsistence from a guinea a week to five shillings. Until this
+is done we are simply provoking Providence to destroy us.
+
+I wish I could say that it is hardly necessary to add that Trade
+Unionism must be instituted in the Army, so that there shall be
+accredited secretaries in the field to act as a competent medium of
+communication between the men on service and the political
+representatives of their class at the War Office (for I shall propose
+this representative innovation presently). It will shock our colonels;
+but I know of no bodies of men for whom repeated and violent shocking is
+more needed and more likely to prove salutary than the regimental masses
+of the British army. One rather pleasant shock in store for them is the
+discovery that an officer and a gentleman, whose sole professional
+interest is the honour and welfare of his country, and who is bound to
+the mystical equality of life-and-death duty for all alike, will get on
+much more easily with a Trade Union secretary than a commercial employer
+whose aim is simply private profit and who regards every penny added to
+the wages of his employees as a penny taken off his own income. Howbeit,
+whether the colonels like it or not--that is, whether they have become
+accustomed to it or not--it has to come, and its protection from Junker
+prejudice is another duty of the Labour Party. The Party as a purely
+political body must demand that the defender of his country shall retain
+his full civil rights unimpaired; that, the unnecessary, mischievous,
+dishonourable and tyrannical slave code called military law, which at
+its most savagely stern point produced only Wellington's complaint that
+"it is impossible to get a command obeyed in the British Army," be
+carted away to the rubbish heap of exploded superstitions; and that if
+Englishmen are not to be allowed to serve their country in the field as
+freely as they do in the numerous civil industries in which neglect and
+indiscipline are as dangerous as they are in war, their leaders and
+Parliamentary representatives will not recommend them to serve at all.
+In wartime these things may not matter: discipline either goes by the
+board or keeps itself under the pressure of the enemy's cannon; and
+bullying sergeants and insolent officers have something else to do than
+to provoke men they dislike into striking them and then reporting them
+for two years' hard labour without trial by jury. In battle such
+officers are between two fires. But soldiers are not always, or even
+often, at war; and the dishonour of abdicating dearly-bought rights and
+liberties is a stain both on war and peace. Now is the time to get rid
+of that stain. If any officer cannot command men without it, as
+civilians and police inspectors do, that officer has mistaken his
+profession and had better come home.
+
+
+*Obsolete Tests in the Army.*
+
+Another matter needs to be dealt with at the same time. There are
+immense numbers of atheists in this country; and though most of them,
+like the Kaiser, regard themselves as devout Christians, the best are
+intellectually honest enough to object to profess beliefs they do not
+hold, especially in the solemn act of dedicating themselves to death in
+the service of their country. Army form E 501 A (September, 1912)
+secured to these the
+
+[Illustration: JOHN GALSWORTHY. (_Photo by E.O. Hoppe_.) _See Page_
+102]
+
+[Illustration: RUDYARD KIPLING _(Photo by E.O. Hoppe_.) _See Page_ 106]
+
+benefit of the Bradlaugh Affirmation Act of 1888, as the enlisting
+soldier said simply "I, So and So, do make Oath, &c." But recruits are
+now confronted with another form (E 501, June, 1914) running "I, So and
+So, swear by Almighty God, &c." On September 1st, at Lord Kitchener's
+call, a civil servant obtained leave to enlist and had the oath put to
+him, in this form by the attesting officer. He offered to swear in the
+1912 form. This was refused; and we accordingly lost a recruit of just
+that sturdily conscientious temper which has made the most formidable
+soldiers known to history. I am bound to add, however, that the
+attesting officer, on being told that the oath would be a blasphemous
+farce to the conscience of the recruit, made no difficulty about that,
+and was quite willing to accept him if he, on his part, would oblige by
+professing what he did not believe. Thus a Ghoorka's religious
+conscience is respected: an Englishman's is insulted and outraged.
+
+But, indeed, all these oaths are obstructive and useless superstitions.
+No recruit will hesitate to pledge his word of honour to fight to the
+death for his country or for a cause with which he sympathizes; and that
+is all we require. There is no need to drag in Almighty God and no need
+to drag in the King. Many an Irishman, many a colonial Republican, many
+an American volunteer who would fight against the Prussian monarchy
+shoulder to shoulder with the French Republicans with a will, would
+rather not pretend to do it out of devotion to the British throne. To
+vanquish Prussia in this war we need the active aid or the sympathy of
+every Republican in the world. America, for instance, sympathizes with
+England, but classes the King with the Kaiser as an obsolete
+institution. Besides, even from the courtly point of view the situation
+is a delicate one. Why emphasize the fact that, formally speaking, the
+war is between two grandsons of Albert the Good, that thoroughbred
+German whose London monument is so much grander than Cromwell's?
+
+The Labour Party should also set its face firmly against the abandonment
+of Red Cross work and finance, or the support of soldiers' families, or
+the patrolling of the streets, to amateurs who regard the war as a
+wholesome patriotic exercise, or as the latest amusement in the way of
+charity bazaars, or as a fountain of self-righteousness. Civil
+volunteering is needed urgently enough: one of the difficulties of war
+is that it creates in certain departments a demand so abnormal that no
+peace establishment can cope with it. But the volunteers should be
+disciplined and paid: we are not so poor that we need spunge on anyone.
+And in hospital and medical service war ought not at present to cost
+more than peace would if the victims of our commercial system were
+properly tended, and our Public Health service adequately extended and
+manned. We should therefore treat our Red Cross department as if it were
+destined to become a permanent service. No charity and no amateur
+anarchy and incompetence should be tolerated. As to allowing that
+admirable detective agency for the defence of the West End against
+begging letter writers, the Charity Organization Society to touch the
+soldier's home, the very suggestion is an outrage. The C.O.S., the Poor
+Law, and the charitable amateur, whether of the patronizing or prying or
+gushing variety, must be kept as far from the army and its folk as if
+they were German spies. The business of our fashionable amateurs is to
+pay Income Tax and Supertax. This time they will have to pay through the
+nose, vigorously wrung for that purpose by the House of Commons; so they
+had better set their own houses in order and leave the business of the
+war to be officially and responsibly dealt with and paid for at full
+standard rates.
+
+
+*Wanted: Labour Representation in the War Office.*
+
+But parliamentary activity is not sufficient. There must be a more
+direct contact between representative Labour and the Army, because
+Parliament can only remedy grievances, and that not before years of
+delay and agitation elapse. Even then the grievances are not dealt with
+on their merits; for under our party system, which is the most
+abominable engine for the perversion and final destruction of all
+political conscience ever devized by man, the House of Commons never
+votes on any question but whether the Government shall remain in office
+or give the Opposition a turn, no matter what the pretext for the
+division may be. Only in such emergencies as the present, when the
+Government is forced to beg the Labour members to help them to recruit,
+is there a chance of making reasonable conditions for the soldier.
+
+
+*The Four Inoculations.*
+
+It is therefore necessary that the War Office should have working class
+representatives on all committees and councils which issue notices to
+the public. There is at present, it would seem, not a single person in
+authority there who has the faintest notion of what the immense majority
+of possible British recruits are thinking about. The results have been
+beyond description ludicrous and dangerous. Every proclamation is
+urgently worded so as to reassure recruits with £5,000 a year and repel
+recruits with a pound a week. On the very day when the popular Lord
+Kitchener, dropping even the _et rex meus_ of Wolsey, frankly asked the
+nation for 100,000 men for his army, and when it was a matter of life
+and death that every encouragement should be held out to working men to
+enlist, the War Office decided that this was the psychological moment to
+remind everybody that soldiers on active service often die of typhoid
+fever, and to press inoculation on the recruits pending the officially
+longed-for hour when Sir Almroth Wright's demand for compulsion can be
+complied with. I say nothing here about the efficacy of inoculation.
+Efficacious or not, Sir Almroth Wright himself bases his demand for
+compulsion on the ground that it is hopeless to expect the whole army to
+submit to it voluntarily. That being so, it seems to me that when men
+are hesitating on the threshold of the recruiting station, only a German
+spy or our War Office (always worth ten thousand men to our enemies)
+would seize that moment to catch the nervous postulant by the sleeve and
+say, "Have you thought of the danger of dysentery?" The fact that the
+working class forced the Government, very much against its doctor-ridden
+will, to abolish compulsory vaccination, shews the extent to which its
+households loathe and dread these vaccines (so called, but totally
+unconnected with cows or Jenner) which, as they are continually reminded
+by energetic anti-inoculation propagandists in largely circulated
+journals and pamphlets, not to mention ghastly photographs of disfigured
+children, sometimes produce worse effects than the diseases they are
+supposed to prevent. Indifferent or careless recruits are easily induced
+to submit to inoculation by little privileges during the ensuing
+indisposition or by small money bribes; and careful ones are
+proselytized by Sir Almroth's statistics; but on the whole both
+inoculation and amateur medical statistics are regarded with suspicion
+by the poor; and the fact that revaccination is compulsory in the
+regular army, and that the moral pressure applied to secure both typhoid
+inoculation and vaccination both in the regular army and the
+Territorials is such as only a few stalwarts are able to resist, is
+deeply resented. At present the inoculation mania has reached the pitch
+of proposing no less than four separate inoculations: revaccination,
+typhoid, cholera, and--Sir Almroth's last staggerer--inoculation against
+wounds! When the War Office and its medical advisers have been
+successfully inoculated against political lunacy, it will be time enough
+to discuss such extravagances. Meanwhile, the sooner the War Office
+issues a proclamation that no recruit will be either compelled or
+importuned to submit to any sort of inoculation whatever against his
+will, the better for the recruiting, and the worse for the enemy.
+
+
+*The War Office Bait of Starvation.*
+
+But this blunder was a joke compared to the next exploit of the War
+Office. It suddenly began to placard the country with frantic assurances
+to its five-thousand-a-year friends that they would be "discharged with
+all possible speed THE MINUTE THE WAR IS OVER." Only considerations of
+space restrained them, I presume, from adding "LAWN TENNIS, SHOOTING,
+AND ALL THE DELIGHTS OF FASHIONABLE LIFE CAN BE RESUMED IMMEDIATELY ON
+THE FIRING OF THE LAST SHOT." Now what does this mean to the wage
+worker? Simply that the moment he is no longer wanted in the trenches he
+will be flung back into the labour market to sink or swim without an
+hour's respite. If we had had a Labour representative or two to help in
+drawing up these silly placards--I am almost tempted to say if we had
+had any human being of any class with half the brains of a rabbit
+there--the placards would have contained a solemn promise that no single
+man should be discharged at the conclusion of the war, save at his own
+request, until a job had been found for him in civil life. I ask the
+heavens, with a shudder, do these class-blinded people in authority
+really intend to take a million men out of their employment; turn them
+into soldiers; and then at one blow hurl them back, utterly unprovided
+for, into the streets?
+
+But a War Office capable of placarding Lord Roberts's declaration that
+the men who are enlisting are doing "what all able-bodied men in the
+kingdom should do" is clearly ignorant enough for anything. I do not
+blame Lord Roberts for his oratorical flourish: we have all said things
+just as absurd on the platform in moments of enthusiasm. But the
+officials who reproduced it in cold blood would have us believe that
+soldiers live on air; that ammunition drops from heaven like manna; and
+that an army could hold the field for twenty-four hours without the
+support of a still more numerous body of civilians working hard to
+support it. Sane men gasp at such placards and ask angrily, "What sort
+of fools do you take us for?" I have in my hand a copy of _The Torquay
+Times_ containing a hospitable invitation to soldiers' wives to call at
+the War Office, Whitehall, S.W., if they desire "assistance and
+explanation of their case." The return fare from Torquay to London is
+thirty shillings and sixpence third class; but the War Office no doubt
+assumes that all soldiers' wives keep motor cars. Still, let us be just
+even to the War Office. It did _not_ ask the soldiers' wives for forms
+of authorization to pay the separation allowance to their bankers every
+six months. It actually offered the money monthly!
+
+
+*Delusive Promises.*
+
+The middle and upper classes are nearly as bad as the War Office. They
+talk of keeping every man's place open for him until the end of the war.
+Obviously this is flatly impossible. Some places can be kept, and no
+doubt are being kept. Some functions are suspended by the war and cannot
+be resumed until the troops return to civil life and resume them.
+Employers are so hardened to the daily commercial necessity for
+discharging men without a thought as to what is to become of them that
+they are quite ready to undertake to sack the replacers when the troops
+come back. Also the return of peace may be followed by a revival of
+trade in which employment may not be hard to find, even by discharged
+soldiers, who are always passed over in the labour market in favour of
+civilians, as those well know who have the task of trying to find places
+for them. But these considerations do not justify an attempt to persuade
+recruits that they can go off soldiering for months--they are told by
+Lord Kitchener that it will probably be for years--and then come back
+and walk to their benches or into their offices and pick up their work
+as if they had left only the night before. The very people who are
+promising this are raising the cry "business as usual" in the same
+breath. How can business be carried on as usual, or carried on at all,
+on unoccupied office stools and at counters with no men behind them?
+Such rubbish is an insult to the recruit's intelligence. These promises
+of keeping places open were made to the men who enlisted for South
+Africa, and were of course broken, as a promise to supply green cheese
+by quarrying the moon would have been broken. New employees must be
+found to do the work of the men who are in the field; and these new ones
+will not all be thrown into the street when the war is over to make room
+for discharged soldiers, even if a good many of these soldiers are not
+disqualified by their new training and habits for their old employment.
+I repeat, there is only one assurance that can be given to the recruits
+without grossly and transparently deluding them; and that is that they
+shall not be discharged, except at their own request, until civil
+employment is available for them.
+
+
+*Funking Controversy.*
+
+This is not the only instance of the way in which, under the first scare
+of the war, we shut our eyes and opened our mouths to every folly. For
+example, there was a cry for the suspension of all controversy in the
+face of the national danger. Now the only way to suspend controversial
+questions during a period of intense activity in the very departments in
+which the controversy has arisen is to allow them all to be begged.
+Perhaps I should not object if they were all begged in favour of my own
+side, as, for instance, the question of Socialism was begged in favour
+of Socialism when the Government took control of the railways; bought up
+all the raw sugar; regulated prices; guaranteed the banks; suspended the
+operation of private contracts; and did all the things it had been
+declaring utterly and eternally Utopian and imposible when Socialists
+advocated them. But it is now proposed to suspend all popular liberties
+and constitutional safeguards; to muzzle the Press, and actually to have
+no contests at bye-elections! This is more than a little too much. We
+have submitted to have our letters, our telegrams, our newspapers
+censored, our dividends delayed, our trains cut off, our horses and even
+our houses commandeered, our streets darkened, our restaurants closed,
+and ourselves shot dead on the public highways if we were slow to
+realize that some excited person bawling in the distance was a sentry
+challenging us. But that we are to be politically gagged and enslaved as
+well; that the able-bodied soldier in the trenches, who depends on the
+able-minded civilian at home to guard the liberties of his country and
+protect him from carelesness or abuse of power by the authorities whom
+he must blindly and dumbly obey, is to be betrayed the moment his back
+is turned to his fellow-citizens and his face to the foe, is not
+patriotism: it is the paralysis of mortal funk: it is the worst kind of
+cowardice in the face of the enemy. Let us hear no more of it, but
+contest our elections like men, and regain the ancient political
+prestige of England at home as our expeditionary force has regained it
+abroad.
+
+The Labour Party, then, need have no hesitation in raising all the
+standing controversies between Democracy and Junkerism in their acutest
+form, and taking advantage of the war emergency to press them to a
+series of parliamentary victories for Labour, whether in negotiations
+with the Government whips, in divisions on the floor of the House, or in
+strenuously contested bye-elections. No doubt our Junkers will try to
+disarm their opponents by representing that it would be in the last
+degree unfair, un-English, and ungentlemanly on the part of the Labour
+members to seize any tactical advantage in parliamentary warfare, and
+most treacherous and unpatriotic to attack their country (meaning the
+Junker Party) when it is at war. Some Labour members will be easily
+enough gulled in this way: it would be laughable, if the consequences
+were not so tragic, to see how our parliamentary beginners from the
+working class succumb to the charm of the Junker appeal. The Junkers
+themselves are not to be coaxed in this manner: it is no use offering
+tracts to a missionary, as the poor Kaiser found when he tried it on.
+The Labour Party will soon learn the value of these polite
+demonstrations that it is always its duty not to hamper the governing
+classes in their very difficult and delicate and dangerous task of
+safeguarding the interests of this great empire: in short, to let itself
+be gammoned by elegant phrases and by adroit practisings on its personal
+good-nature, its inveterate proletarian sentimentality, and its secret
+misgivings as to the correctness of its manners. The Junkers have
+already taken the fullest advantage of the war to paralyze democracy. If
+the Labour members do not take a vigorous counter-offensive, and fight
+every parliamentary trench to the last division, the Labour Movement
+will be rushed back as precipitately as General von Kluck rushed the
+Allies back from Namur to the gates of Paris. In truth, the importance
+of the war to the immense majority of Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Germans
+lies in the possibility that when Junkers fall out common men may come
+by their own.
+
+
+
+
+*III.*
+
+*THE TERMS OF PEACE.*
+
+
+*Natural Limits to Duration of the War.*
+
+
+So much for the recruiting. Now for the terms of peace. It is time to
+take that subject in hand; for Lord Kitchener's notion that we are going
+to settle down to years of war as we did a century ago is soldierly, but
+not sensible. It is, of course, physically possible for us to continue
+for twenty years digging trenches and shelling German troops and shoving
+German armies back when they are not shoving us, whilst old women pull
+turnips and tend goats in the fire zones across which soldiers run to
+shelter. But we cannot afford to withdraw a million male adults who have
+passed a strictish health test from the work of parentage for several
+years unless we intend to breed our next generation from parents with
+short sight, varicose veins, rotten teeth, and deranged internal organs.
+Soldiers do not think of these things: "theirs not to reason why: theirs
+but to do and die"; but sensible civilians have to. And even soldiers
+know that you cannot make ammunition as fast as you can burn it, nor
+produce men and horses as instantaneously as you can kill them by
+machinery. It would be well, indeed, if our papers, instead of writing
+of ten-inch shells, would speak of £1,000 shells, and regimental bands
+occasionally finish the National Anthem and the Brabançonne and the
+Marseillaise with the old strain, "That's the way the money goes: Pop
+goes the Ten Inch." It is easy to rebuke Mr. Norman Angell and Herr
+Bloch for their sordid references to the cost of war; and Mr. H.G. Wells
+is profoundly right in pointing out that the fact that war does not pay
+commercially is greatly to its credit, as no high human activity ever
+does pay commercially. But modern war does not even pay its way. Already
+our men have "pumped lead" into retreating Germans who had no lead left
+to pump back again; and sooner or later, if we go on indefinitely, we
+shall have to finish the job with our fists, and congratulate ourselves
+that both Georges Carpentier and Bombardier Wells are on our side. This
+war will stop when Germany throws up the sponge, which will happen long
+before she is utterly exhausted, but not before we ourselves shall be
+glad enough of a rest. Nations are like bees: they cannot kill except at
+the cost of their own lives.
+
+The question of terms will raise a fierce controversy. At the extremes
+of our public opinion we have two temperaments, first, our gentlemen,
+our sportsmen, our daredevils, our _preux chevaliers_. To these the
+notion of reviling your enemy when he is up; kicking him when he is
+knocked down by somebody else; and gouging out his eyes, cutting out his
+tongue, hewing off his right arm, and stealing all his money, is
+abhorrent and cowardly. These gallants say, "It is not enough that we
+can fight Germany to-day. We can fight her any day and every day. Let
+her come again and again and yet again. We will fight her one to three;
+and if she comes on ten to one, as she did at Mons, we will mill on the
+retreat, and drive her back again when we have worn her down to our
+weight. If her fleet will not come out to fight us because we have too
+many ships, we will send all the odds in our favour back to Portsmouth
+and fight ship to ship in the North Sea, and let the bravest and best
+win." That is how gallant fighters talk, and how Drake is popularly
+(though erroneously) supposed to have tackled the Armada.
+
+
+*The Ignoble Attitude of Cruel Panic.*
+
+But we are not all _preux chevaliers._ We have at the other extremity
+the people who are craving for loot and vengeance, who clamour for the
+humiliation and torture of the enemy, who rave against the village
+burnings and shootings by the Prussians in one column and exult in the
+same proceedings by the Russians in another, who demand that German
+prisoners of war shall be treated as criminals, who depict our Indian
+troops as savage cutthroats because they like to think of their enemies
+being mauled in the spirit of the Indian Mutiny, who shriek that the
+Kaiser must be sent to Devil's Island because St. Helena is too good for
+him, and who declare that Germany must be so maimed and trodden into the
+dust that she will not be able to raise her head again for a century.
+Let us call these people by their own favourite name, Huns, even at the
+risk of being unjust to the real Huns. And let us send as many of them
+to the trenches as we can possibly induce to go, in the hope that they
+may presently join the lists of the missing. Still, as they rather cling
+to our soil, they will have to be reckoned with when the settlement
+comes. But they will not count for much then. Most of them will be
+heartily ashamed of what they said in those first three or four weeks of
+blue funk (I am too timid myself not to make allowances for that most
+distressing and universal, but fortunately transient effect of war); and
+most of those who are not will be ashamed to bear malice publicly.
+
+
+*The Commercial Attitude.*
+
+Far more weighty in the matter will be the intermediate sections. First,
+our commercial main body, which thinks that chivalry is not business,
+and that rancour is childish, but cannot see why we should not make the
+Germans pay damages and supply us with some capital to set the City
+going again, forgetting that when France did that after 1871 for Berlin,
+Berlin was set going so effectually that it went headlong to a colossal
+financial smash, whilst the French peasant who had provided the capital
+from his old stocking throve soberly on the interest at the expense of
+less vital classes. Unfortunately Germany has set the example of this
+kind of looting. Prussian generals, like Napoleon's marshals, have
+always been shameless brigands, keeping up the seventeenth and
+eighteenth century tradition of making cities bribe them to refrain from
+sack and pillage and even billeting, and being quite incapable of the
+magnificence of the great Condé (or was it Turenne?), who refused a
+payment offered by a city on the ground that he had not intended to
+march through it. Blucher's fury when Wellington would not allow him to
+plunder Paris, and his exclamation when he saw London "What a city to
+loot!" is still regarded as fair soldiering; and the blackmail levied
+recently by the Prussian generals on the Belgian and French towns they
+have occupied must, I suppose, be let pass as ransom, not as ordinary
+criminal looting. But if the penalty of looting be thus spared, the
+Germans can hardly complain if they are themselves held to ransom when
+the fortunes of war go against them. Liège and Lille and Antwerp and the
+rest must be paid their money back with interest; and there will be a
+big builder's bill at Rheims. But we should ourselves refrain strictly
+from blackmail. We should sell neither our blood nor our mercy. If we
+sell either we are as much brigands as Blucher.
+
+
+*Vindictive Damages.*
+
+And we must not let ourselves be tempted to soil our hands under pretext
+of vindictive damages. The man who thinks that all the money in Germany
+could pay for the life of a single British drummer boy ought to be shot
+merely as an expression of the feeling that he is unfit to live. We
+stake our blood as the Germans stake theirs; and in that _ganz
+besonderes Saft_ alone should we [missing text]r accept payment. We had
+better **[missing text]y to the Kaiser at the end of the **[missing
+text] "Scoundrel: you can never replace **[missing text] Louvain
+library, nor the sculpture of Rheims; and it follows logically that you
+shall empty your pockets into ours." Much better say: "God forgive us
+all!" If we cannot rise to this, and must soil our hands with plunder,
+at least let us call it plunder, and not profane our language and our
+souls by giving it fine names.
+
+
+*Our Annihilationists.*
+
+Then we shall have the Militarists, who will want to have Germany "bled
+to the white," dismembered and maimed, so that she may never do it
+again. Well, that is quite simple, if you are Militarist enough to do
+it. Loading Germany with debt will not do it. Towing her fleet into
+Portsmouth or sinking it will not do it. Annexing provinces and colonies
+will not do it. The effective method is far shorter and more practical.
+What has made Germany formidable in this war? Obviously her
+overwhelmingly superior numbers. That was how she rushed us back almost
+to the gates of Paris. The organization, the readiness, the sixteen-inch
+howitzer helped; but it was the multitudinous _Kanonenfutter_ that
+nearly snowed us under. The British soldier at Cambrai and Le Cateau
+killed and killed until his rifle was too hot to hold and his hand was
+paralyzed with slayer's cramp; but still they came and came.
+
+
+*Why Not Kill the German Women?*
+
+Well, there is no obscurity about that problem. Those Germans who took
+but an instant to kill had taken the travail of a woman for
+three-quarters of a year to breed, and eighteen years to ripen for the
+slaughter. All we have to do is to kill, say, 75 per cent, of all the
+women in Germany under 60. Then we may leave Germany her fleet and her
+money, and say "Much good may they do you." Why not, if you are really
+going in to be what you, never having read "this Neech they talk of,"
+call a Nietzschean Superman? War is not an affair of sentiment. Some of
+our newspapers complain that the Germans kill the wounded and fire on
+field hospitals and Red Cross Ambulances. These same newspapers fill
+their columns with exultant accounts of how our wounded think nothing of
+modern bullet wounds and hope to be back at the front in a week, which I
+take to be the most direct incitement to the Germans to kill the wounded
+that could be devized. It is no use being virtuously indignant: "stone
+dead hath no fellow" is an English proverb, not a German one. Even the
+killing of prisoners is an Agincourt tradition. Now it is not more
+cowardly to kill a woman than to kill a wounded man. And there is only
+one reason why it is a greater crime to kill a woman than a man, and why
+women have to be spared and protected when men are exposed and
+sacrificed. That reason is that the destruction of the women is the
+destruction of the community. Men are comparatively of no account: kill
+90 per cent, of the German men, and the remaining 10 per cent. can
+repeople her. But kill the women, and _Delenda est Carthago_. Now this
+is exactly what our Militarists want to happen to Germany. Therefore the
+objection to killing women becomes in this case the reason for doing it.
+Why not? No reply is possible from the Militarist, disable-your-enemy
+point of view. If disablement is your will, there is your way, and the
+only effectual way. We really must not call the Kaiser and Von Bernhardi
+disciples of the mythical Neech when they have either overlooked or
+shrunk from such a glaring "biological necessity." A pair of puling
+pious sentimentalists if you like. But Supermen! Nonsense. O, my brother
+journalists, if you revile the Prussians, call them sheep led by snobs,
+call them beggars on horseback, call them sausage eaters, depict them in
+the good old English fashion in spectacles and comforter, seedy overcoat
+buttoned over paunchy figure, playing the contrabass tuba in a street
+band; but do not flatter them with the heroic title of Superman, and
+hold up as magnificent villainies worthy of Milton's Lucifer these
+common crimes of violence and raid and lust that any drunken blackguard
+can commit when the police are away, and that no mere multiplication can
+dignify. As to Nietzsche, with his Polish hatred of Prussia (who
+heartily reciprocated the sentiment), when did he ever tell the Germans
+to allow themselves to be driven like sheep to the slaughter in millions
+by mischievous dolts who, being for the most part incapable of reading
+ten sentences of a philosophic treatise without falling asleep, allow
+journalists as illiterate as themselves to persuade them that he got his
+great reputation by writing a cheap gospel for bullies? Strictly between
+ourselves, we also are an illiterate people; but we may at least hold
+our tongues about matters we don't understand, and not say in the face
+of Europe that the English believe that the composer of Parsifal was a
+Militarist Prussian (he was an exiled revolutionist); that Nietzsche was
+a diciple of Wagner (Nietzsche preferred the music of Bizet, a
+Frenchman); and that the Kaiser is a disciple of Nietzsche, who would
+have laughed his childish pietism to scorn.
+
+
+*The Simple Answer.*
+
+Nietzsche would certainly have agreed that we must kill the German women
+if we mean business when we talk of destroying Germany. But he would
+also have answered my Why not?, which is more than any consistent
+Militarist can. Indeed, it needs no philosopher to give the answer. The
+first ordinary anti-Militarist human person you meet will tell you that
+it would be too horrible; that life would be unbearable if people did
+such things. And he would be quite right; so please let us hear no more
+of kicking your enemy when he is down so that he may be unable to rise
+for a whole century. We may be unable to resist the temptation to loot
+Germany more or less if we conquer her. We are already actively engaged
+in piracy against her, stealing her ships and selling them in our prize
+courts, instead of honestly detaining them until the war is over and
+keeping a strict account of them. When gentlemen rise in the House of
+Commons and say that they owe Germans money and do not intend to pay it,
+one must face the fact that there will be a strong popular demand for
+plunder. War, after all, is simply a letting loose of organized murder,
+theft, and piracy on a foe; and I have no doubt the average Englishman
+will say to me what Falstaff said to Pistol concerning his share in the
+price of the stolen fan: "Reason, you rogue, reason: do you think I'll
+endanger my soul _gratis_?" To which I reply, "If you can't resist the
+booty, take it frankly, and know yourself for half patriot, half
+brigand; but don't talk nonsense about disablement. Cromwell tried it in
+Ireland. He had better have tried Home Rule. And what Cromwell could not
+do to Ireland we cannot do to Germany."
+
+
+*The Sensible People.*
+
+Finally we come to the only body of opinion in which there is any hope
+of civilization: the opinion of the people who are bent, not on
+gallantry nor revenge nor plunder nor pride nor panic nor glory nor any
+of the invidiousnesses of patriotism, but on the problem of how to so
+redraw the map of Europe and reform its political constitutions that
+this abominable crime and atrocious nuisance, a European war, shall not
+easily occur again. The map is very important; for the open sores which
+have at last suppurated and burst after having made the world uneasy for
+years, were produced by altering the colour of Alsace and Lorraine and
+of Bosnia and Herzegovina on the map. And the new map must be settled,
+not by conquest, but by consent of the people immediately concerned. One
+of the broken treaties of Europe which has been mentioned less
+frequently of late than the Belgian treaty is the treaty of Prague, by
+which a plebiscite was to have been taken on the subject of the
+nationality of Schleswig and Holstein. That plebiscite has never been
+taken. It may have to be taken, with other plebiscites, before this war
+is settled.
+
+
+*German Unity Inviolable.*
+
+But here let me warn those who are hoping for a disintegrated Germany
+like that which Thackeray ridiculed, that their hopes are vain. The
+southern Germans, the, friendliest, most easy-going people in the world
+(as far as I know the world) dislike the Prussians far more heartily
+than we do; but they know that they are respected and strong and big as
+part of United Germany, and that they were weak and despised and petty
+as separate kingdoms. Germany will hold together. No doubt the Germans
+may reasonably say to the Prussian drill sergeant and his master
+Hohenzollern, "A nice mess you have made of your job after all we have
+endured from you because we believed you could make us invincible. We
+thought that if you were hard masters you were at any rate good
+grenadiers; but here are these piffling little Belgians and these
+Russians who were beaten by the Japanese, and these English who made
+such a poor show against a handful of Boer farmers, fighting and
+organizing just as well as you. So, as the French and English are
+organized as a republic and an extremely limited monarchy, we will try
+how that sort of constitution will suit us." But they will not break up:
+on the contrary, they are much more likely to extend the German
+community by incorporating German Austria. And as this would raise the
+question whether Hohenzollern or Hapsburg should rule the roost, the
+simplest solution would be to get rid of them both, and take the sooner
+or later inevitable step into the democratic republican form of
+Government to which Europe is visibly tending, though "this king
+business," as my American correspondents call it, has certain
+conveniences when it is limited and combined with an aristocracy also
+limited by primogeniture and politically controlled by a commonalty into
+which all but the eldest brothers in the aristocratic families fall,
+thus making the German segregation of the _adel_ class impossible. Such
+a monarchy, especially when the monarch is a woman, as in Holland today,
+and in England under Victoria, is a fairly acceptable working substitute
+for a formal republic in old civilizations with inveterate monarchical
+traditions, absurd as it is in new and essentially democratic States. At
+any rate, it is conceivable that the western allies might demand the
+introduction of some such political constitution in Germany and Austria
+as a guarantee; for though the demand would not please Russia, some of
+Russia's demands will not please us; and there must be some give and
+take in the business.
+
+
+*Limits of Constitutional Interference.*
+
+Let us consider this possibility for a moment. First, it must be firmly
+postulated that civilized nations cannot have their political
+constitutions imposed on them from without if the object of the
+arrangement is peace and stability. If a victorious Germany were to
+attempt to impose the Prussian constitution on France and England, they
+would submit to it just as Ireland submitted to Dublin Castle, which, to
+say the least, would not be a millennial settlement. Profoundly as we
+are convinced that our Government of India is far better than any native
+Indian government could be (the assumption that "natives" could govern
+at all being made for the sake of argument with due reluctance), it is
+quite certain that until it becomes as voluntary as the parliamentary
+government of Australia, and has been modified accordingly, it will
+remain an artificial, precarious, and continually threatening political
+structure. Nevertheless, we need not go to the opposite extreme and
+conclude that a political constitution must fit a country so accurately
+that it must be home-made to measure. Europe has a stock of ready-made
+constitutions, both Monarchical and Republican, which will fit any
+western European nation comfortably enough. We are at present
+considerably bothered by the number of Germans who, though their own
+country and constitution is less than a day's journey away, settle here
+and marry Englishwomen without feeling that our constitution is
+unbearable. Englishmen are never tired of declaring that "they do things
+better abroad" (as a matter of fact they often do), and that the ways of
+Prussia are smarter than the ways of Paddington. It is therefore quite
+possible that a reach-me-down constitution proposed, not by the
+conquerors, but by an international congress with no interest to serve
+but the interests of peace, might prove acceptable enough to a nation
+thoroughly disgusted with its tyrants.
+
+
+*Physician: Heal Thyself.*
+
+Now a congress which undertook the Liberalization of Germany would
+certainly not stop there. If we invite a congress to press for a
+democratization of the German constitution, we must consent to the
+democratization of our own. If we send the Kaiser to St. Helena (or
+whatever the title of the Chiselhurst villa may be) we must send Sir
+Edward Grey there, too. For if on the morrow of the peace we may all
+begin to plot and plan one another's destruction over again in the
+secrecy of our Foreign Office, so that in spite of Parliament and free
+democratic institutions the Foreign Secretary may at any moment step
+down from the Foreign Office to the House of Commons and say, "I
+arranged yesterday with the ambassador from Cocagne that England is to
+join his country in fighting Brobdingnag; so vote me a couple of hundred
+millions, and off with you to the trenches," we shall be just where we
+were before as far as any likelihood of putting an end to war is
+concerned. The congress will certainly ask us to pledge ourselves that
+if we shake the mailed fist at all we shall shake it publicly, and that
+though we may keep our sword ready (let me interject in passing that
+disarmament is all nonsense: nobody is going to disarm after this
+experience) it shall be drawn by the representatives of the nation, and
+not by Junker diplomatists who despise and distrust the nation, and have
+planned war behind its back for years. Indeed they will probably demur
+to its being drawn even by the representative of the nation until the
+occasion has been submitted to the judgment of the representatives of
+the world, or such beginnings of a world representative body as may be
+possible. That is the true _Weltpolitik_.
+
+
+*The Hegemony of Peace.*
+
+For the main business of the settlement, if it is to have any serious
+business at all, must be the establishment of a Hegemony of Peace, as
+desired by all who are really capable of high civilization, and
+formulated by me in the daily Press in a vain attempt to avert this
+mischief whilst it was brewing. Nobody took the smallest public notice
+of me; so I made a lady in a play say "Not bloody likely," and instantly
+became famous beyond the Kaiser, beyond the Tsar, beyond Sir Edward
+Grey, beyond Shakespeare and Homer and President Wilson, the papers
+occupying themselves with me for a whole week just as they are now
+occupying themselves with the war, and one paper actually devoting a
+special edition to a single word in my play, which is more than it has
+done for the Treaty of London (1839). I concluded then that this was a
+country which really could not be taken seriously. But the habits of a
+lifetime are not so easily broken; and I am not afraid to produce
+another dead silence by renewing my good advice, as I can easily recover
+my popularity by putting still more shocking expressions into my next
+play, especially now that events have shewn that I was right on the
+point of foreign policy.
+
+
+*East Is East; and West Is West.*
+
+I repeat, then, that there should be a definite understanding that
+whatever may happen or not happen further east, England, France, and
+Germany solemnly pledge themselves to maintain the internal peace of the
+west of Europe, and renounce absolutely all alliances and engagements
+that bind them to join any Power outside the combination in military
+operations, whether offensive or defensive, against one inside it. We
+must get rid of the monstrous situation that produced the present war.
+France made an alliance with Russia as a defence against Germany.
+Germany made an alliance with Austria as a defence against Russia.
+England joined the Franco-Russian alliance as a defence against Germany
+and Austria. The result was that Germany became involved in a quarrel
+between Austria and Russia. Having no quarrel with France, and only a
+second-hand quarrel with Russia, she was, nevertheless, forced to attack
+France in order to disable her before she could strike Germany from
+behind when Germany was fighting France's ally, Russia. And this attack
+on France forced England to come to the rescue of England's ally,
+France. Not one of the three nations (as distinguished from their tiny
+Junker-Militarist cliques) wanted to fight; for England had nothing to
+gain and Germany had everything to lose, whilst France had given up hope
+of her Alsace-Lorraine _revanche_, and would certainly not have hazarded
+a war for it. Yet because Russia, who has a great deal to gain by
+victory and nothing except military prestige to lose by defeat, had a
+quarrel with Austria over Servia, she has been able to set all three
+western friends and neighbours shedding "rivers of blood" from one
+another's throats; an outrageous absurdity. Fifty years ago the notion
+of England helping Russia and Japan to destroy Germany would have seemed
+as suicidal as Canada helping the Apaches to destroy the United States
+of America; and though we now think much better of the Japanese (and
+also, by the way, of the Apaches), that does not make us any the more
+patient with the man who burns down his own street because he admires
+the domestic architecture of Yokohama, especially when the fire
+presently spreads to the cathedral of Rheims. It is bad enough that we
+should have betrayed oriental Persia to oriental Russia as we did (and
+get nothing for our pains but what we deserved); but when it comes to
+sacrificing occidental Germany to her as well, we are sharpening a knife
+for our own occidental throat. The Russian Government is the open enemy
+of every liberty we boast of. Charles I.'s unsuccessful attempt to
+arrest five members of the House of Commons for disagreeing with him is
+ancient history here: it occurred 272 years ago; but the Tsar's
+successful attempt to arrest thirty members of the Duma and to punish
+them as dangerous criminals is a fact of to-day. Under Russian
+government people whose worst crime is to find _The Daily News_ a
+congenial newspaper are hanged, flogged, or sent to Siberia as a matter
+of daily routine; so that before 1906 even the articles in _The Times_
+on such events as the assassinations of Bobrikoff and the Grand Duke
+were simply polite paraphrases of "Serve him right." It may be asked why
+our newspapers have since ceased to report examples of Russia's
+disregard of the political principles we are supposed to stand for. The
+answer is simple. It was in 1906 that we began to lend Russia money, and
+Russia began to advertise in _The Times_. Since then she has been
+welcome to flog and hang her H.G. Wellses and Lloyd Georges by the dozen
+without a word of remonstrance from our plutocratic Press, provided the
+interest is paid punctually. Russia has been embraced in the large
+charity of cosmopolitan capital, the only charity that does not begin at
+home.
+
+
+*The Russian Russians and Their Prussian Tsars.*
+
+And here I must save my face with my personal friends who are either
+Russians or discoverers of the soul of the Russian people. I hereby
+declare to Sasha Kropotkin and Cunninghame Graham that my heart is with
+their Russia, the Russia of Tolstoy and Turgenieff and Dostoieffsky, of
+Gorki and Tchekoff, of the Moscow Art Theatre and the Drury Lane Ballet,
+of Peter Kropotkin and all the great humanitarians, great artists, and
+charming people whom their very North German Tsars exile and imprison
+and flog and generally do what in them lies to suppress and abolish. For
+the sake of Russian Russia, I am prepared to strain every point in
+Prussian Russia's favour. I grant that the Nihilists, much as we loved
+them, were futile romantic people who could have done nothing if
+Alexander II. had abdicated and offered them the task of governing
+Russia instead of persecuting them and being finally blown to bits by
+them. I grant that the manners of the Fins to the Russians are described
+as insufferable both by the Swedes and the Russians, and that we never
+listened to the Russian side of that story. I am ready to grant Gilbert
+Murray's plea that the recent rate of democratic advance has been
+greater in Russia than anywhere else in Europe, though it does remind me
+a little of the bygone days when the Socialists, scoring 20 votes at one
+general election and forty at the next, were able to demonstrate that
+their gain of 100 per cent. was immensely in excess of the wretched two
+or three per cent. that was the best the Unionists or Liberals could
+shew. I am willing to forget how short a time it is since Sir Henry
+Campbell-Bannerman said: "The Duma is dead: long live the Duma!" and
+since we refused to allow the Tsar to land in England when his ship was
+within gangway's length of our shore, on which occasion I myself held up
+the Anglo-Russian agreement for the partition of Persia to the
+execration of a crowd in Trafalgar Square, whilst our Metropolitan
+Police snatched the _l'sarbeleidigend_ English newspapers from the
+sellers and tore them up precisely in the Cossack manner. I have an
+enormous relish for the art of Russia; I perceive a spirit in Russia
+which is the natural antidote to Potsdamnation; and I like most of the
+Russians I know quite unaffectedly. I could find it in my heart to
+reproach the Kaiser for making war on the Russia of these delightful
+people, just as I like to think that at this very moment good Germans
+may be asking him how he can bring himself to discharge shrapnel at the
+England of Bernard Shaw and Cunninghame Graham. History may not forgive
+him for it; but the practical point at the moment is that he does it,
+and no doubt attributes the perfidy of England to the popularity of our
+works. And as we have to take the Kaiser as we find him, and not as the
+Hohenzollern legend glorifies him, I have to take the Tsar as I find
+him. When we fight the Kaiser we are not fighting Bach and Wagner and
+Strauss, to whom we have just joyfully surrendered without a blow at the
+battle of Queen's Hall, but all the forces in Germany that made things
+hard for Wagner and Strauss. And when we fight for the Tsar we are not
+fighting for Tolstoy and Gorki, but for the forces that Tolstoy
+thundered against all his life and that would have destroyed him had he
+not been himself a highly connected Junker as well as a revolutionary
+Christian. And if I doubt whether the Tsar would feel comfortable as a
+member of a Democratic League of Peace, I am not doubting the good
+intent of Kropotkin: I am facing the record of Kropotkin's imperial
+jailer, and standing on the proud fact that England is the only country
+in Europe, not excepting even France, in which Kropotkin has been
+allowed to live a free man, and had his birthday celebrated by public
+meetings all over the country, and his articles welcomed by the leading
+review. In point of fact, it is largely on Kropotkin's account that I
+regard the Tsar as a gentleman of slightly different views to President
+Wilson, and hate the infamous tyranny of which he is the figurehead as I
+hate the devil. And I know that practically all our disinterested and
+thoughtful supporters of the war feel deeply uneasy about the Russian
+alliance. At all events, I should be trifling grossly with the facts of
+the situation if I pretended that the most absolute autocracy in Europe,
+commanding an inexhaustible army in an invincible country with a
+dominion stretching from the Baltic to the Pacific, may not, if it
+achieves a military success against the most dreaded military Power in
+Europe, be stirred to ambitions far more formidable to western liberty
+and human welfare than those of which Germany is now finding out the
+vanity after worrying herself and everyone else with them for forty
+years. When all is said that can be said for Russia, the fact remains
+that a forcibly Russianized German province would be just such another
+open sore in Europe as Alsace-Lorraine, Poland, Macedonia or Ireland. It
+is useless to dream of guarantees: if Russia undertook to govern
+democratically she would not be able to redeem her promise: she would do
+better with primitive Communism. Her city populations may be as capable
+of Democracy as our own (it is, alas! not saying much); but the
+overwhelming mass of peasants to whom the Tsar is a personal God will
+for a long time to come make his bureaucracy irresistible. As against
+Russian civilization German and Austrian civilization is our
+civilization: there is no getting over that. A constitutional kingship
+of Poland and a sort of Caliphate of the Slavs in remapped southeastern
+Europe, with that access to warm sea water which is Russia's common
+human right, valid against all Balances of Power and Keys to India and
+the like, must be her reward for her share in the war, even if we have
+to nationalize Constantinople to secure it to her. But it cannot be too
+frankly said at the outset that any attempt to settle Europe on the
+basis of the present hemming in of a consolidated Germany and German
+Austria by a hostile combination of Russia and the extreme states
+against it, would go to pieces by its own inherent absurdity, just as it
+has already exploded most destructively by its own instability. Until
+Russia becomes a federation of several separate democratic States, and
+the Tsar is either promoted to the honourable position of hereditary
+President or else totally abolished, the eastern boundary of the League
+of Peace must be the eastern boundary of Swedish, German, and Italian
+civilization; and Poland must stand between it and the quite different
+and for the moment unassimilable, civilization of Russia, whose
+friendship we could not really keep on any other terms, as a closer
+alliance would embarrass her as much as it would embarrass us.
+Meanwhile, we must trust to the march of Democracy to de-Russianize
+Berlin and de-Prussianize Petrograd, and to put the nagaikas of the
+Cossacks and the riding-whips with which Junker officers slash German
+privates, and the forty tolerated homosexual brothels of Berlin, and all
+the other psychopathic symptoms of overfeeding and inculcated insolence
+and sham virility in their proper place, which I take to be the dustbin.
+
+
+*Driving Capital Out of the Country*.
+
+But I must here warn everyone concerned that the most formidable
+opposition to the break-up of these unnatural alliances between east and
+west, between Democracy and Autocracy, between the twentieth century and
+the Dark Ages, will not come from the Balancers of Power. They are not
+really Balance of Power alliances: in fact, they are tending to an
+enormous overbalance of power in favor of the east as against the west
+and in favor of Militarist Autocracy as against Democracy. They are at
+root absolutely unpatriotic, even absolutely conscienceless products of
+commercial finance; and the Balance of Power theories are only the
+attempts of our diplomats to put a public spirited face on the
+operations of private cupidity. This is not the first time nor the
+second that I have had to urge that the greatest danger to us in the
+sphere of foreign politics is the tendency of capital to run away from
+civilization: the one running downhill to hell as naturally as the other
+struggles uphill to the Celestial City. The Englishman is allowed to
+produce the subsistence of himself and his family only on condition that
+he produces the subsistence of the capitalist and his retainers as well;
+and lo! he finds more and more that these retainers are not Englishmen,
+but Russians, South Americans, Kaffirs, Persians, or yellow or black
+barbarians armed for his destruction (not to mention Prussians and
+Austrians), and that the treaties made by our diplomatists have less and
+less to do with the security of the nation or the balance of power or
+any other public business, and more and more with capitalist
+opportunities of making big dividends out of slavish labour. For
+instance, the Anglo-Russian agreement is not a national treaty: it is
+the memorandum of a commercial agreement settling what parts of Persia
+are to be exploited by the Russian and English capitalists respectively;
+the capitalists, always against State interference for the benefit of
+the people, being very strongly in favor of it for coercing strikers at
+home and keeping foreign rivals off their grass abroad. And the absurd
+part of it is that when the State has thus arranged for our capitalists
+to exploit certain parts of Persia, and for their sakes to protect the
+parliamentary liberties of the part left to Russia, they discovered
+that, after all, the most profitable game was to lend Russia the money
+to exploit with, and to facilitate the operation by allowing her to
+destroy the Persian parliament in the face of our own exhortation to it
+to keep the flag flying, which we accordingly did without a blush. The
+French capitalists had dragged France into an alliance with Russia long
+before this; but the French Republic had the excuse of the German peril
+and the need for an anti-German ally. Her natural ally for that purpose
+was England; but as there was no market in England for her money, her
+plutocrats drove her into the alliance with Russia as well; and it is
+that alliance and not the alliance with England that has terrified
+Germany into flying at her throat and plunging Europe into a frightful
+war. The natural alliance with England twice averted war: in the
+Moroccan crises of Algeciras and Agadir, when Sir Edward Grey said
+boldly that we should defend France, and took the first steps towards a
+joint military and naval control of the French and English forces. Why
+he shrank from that firm position last July and thereby led Germany to
+count so fatally on our neutrality I do not pretend to know; it suffices
+for my argument that we were able to hold the balance between France and
+Germany, but failed to hold it between Germany and Russia, and that it
+was the placing of Russian loans in France and England that brought
+Russia into our western affairs. It would have paid us ten times over to
+have made Russia a present of all we and France have lent her
+(indemnifying, of course, the holders of the stock through an addition
+to the income tax) rather than pay the price of a European war. But what
+is the use of crying for spilt milk? I am merely explaining why, when
+French money went to Russia, the French papers discovered that the
+Russians were a most interesting people and their Government--properly
+understood--a surprisingly Liberal Government; and why, when English
+money went to Russia, the English press suddenly developed leanings
+towards the Greek Church, and deplored the unofficial execution of
+Stolypin as deeply as it had rejoiced in the like fate of Bobrikoff. The
+upshot of it all is that western civilization is at present busy
+committing suicide by machinery, and importing hordes of Asiatics and
+Africans to help in the throat cutting, not for the benefit of the silly
+capitalists, who are being ruined wholesale, but to break up the
+Austrian Empire for the benefit of Russia and the Slavs of eastern
+Europe, which may be a very desirable thing, but which could and should
+be done by the eastern Powers among themselves, without tearing Belgium
+and Germany and France and England to pieces in the process.
+
+
+*The Red Flag and the Black.*
+
+Will you now at last believe, O stupid British, German, and French
+patriots, what the Socialists have been telling you for so many years:
+that your Union Jacks and tricolours and Imperial Eagles ("where the
+carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered") are only toys to keep
+you amused, and that there are only two real flags in the world
+henceforth: the red flag of Democratic Socialism and the black flag of
+Capitalism, the flag of God and the flag of Mammon? What earthly or
+heavenly good is done when Tom Fool shoots Hans Narr? The plain fact is
+that if we leave our capital to be dealt with according to the
+selfishness of the private man he will send it where wages are low and
+workers enslaved and docile: that is, as many thousand miles as possible
+from the Trade Unions and Trade Union rates and parliamentary Labour
+Parties of civilization; and Germany, at his sordid behest, will plunge
+the world into war for the sake of disgracing herself with a few rubber
+plantations, poetically described by her orators and journalists as "a
+place in the sun." When you do what the Socialists tell you by keeping
+your capital jealously under national control and reserving your
+shrapnel for the wasters who not only shirk their share of the
+industrial service of their country, but intend that their children and
+children's children shall be idle wasters like themselves, you will find
+that not a farthing of our capital will go abroad as long as there is a
+British slum to be cleared and rebuilt, or a hungry, ragged, and
+ignorant British child to be fed, clothed, and educated.
+
+
+*A League of Peace*.
+
+But in the west I see no insuperable obstacle to a Treaty of Peace in
+the largest sense. This war has smoothed the way to it, if I may use the
+word smoothing to describe a process conduced with so little courtesy
+and so much shrapnel. Germany has now learned--and the lesson was
+apparently needed, obvious as it would have been to a sanely governed
+nation--that when it comes to shoving and shooting, Germany instantly
+loses all the advantages of her high civilization, because France and
+England, cultured or uncultured, can shove and shoot as well or beter
+than she, whilst as to slashing and stabbing, their half barbarous Turco
+and Ghoorka slaves can cut the Prussian Guard to bits, in spite of the
+unquestionable superiority of Wagner's music to theirs. Then take
+France. She does not dream that she could fight Germany and England
+single-handed. And England could not fight France and Germany without a
+sacrifice as ruinous as it would be senseless. We therefore have the
+necessary primary conditions for a League of Peace between the three
+countries; for if one of them break it, the other two can make her
+sorry, under which circumstances she will probably not break it. The
+present war, if it end in the reconquest of Alsace and Lorraine by the
+French, will make such a League much more stable; not that France can
+acquire by mere conquest any right to hold either province against its
+will (which could be ascertained by plebiscite), but because the honors
+of war as between France and Germany would then be easy, France having
+regained her laurels and taught Germany to respect her, without
+obliterating the record of Germany's triumph in 1870. And if the war
+should further result in the political reconstruction of the German
+Empire as a democratic Commonwealth, and the conquest by the English
+people of democratic control of English foreign policy, the combination
+would be immensely eased and strengthened, besides being brought into
+harmony with American public feeling, which is important to the security
+and prestige of the League.
+
+
+*The Case of the Smaller States.*
+
+Already the war has greatly added to the value of one of the factors
+upon which the League of Peace will depend. The smaller States: Holland,
+Belgium, Switzerland, and the Scandinavian Powers, would have joined it
+any time these 40 years, had it existed, for the sake of its protection,
+and thereby made the Protestant north of Mr. Houston Chamberlain's dream
+as much a reality as any such dream is ever likely to be. But after the
+fight put up by Belgium the other day, the small States will be able to
+come in with the certainty of being treated with considerable respect as
+military factors; for Belgium can now claim to have saved Europe
+single-handed. Germany has been very unpleasantly reminded of the fact
+that though a big man may be able to beat a little one, yet if the
+little one fights for all he is worth he may leave the victor very sorry
+he broke the peace. Even as between the big Powers, victory has not, as
+far as the fighting has yet gone, been always with the biggest
+battalions. With a couple of millions less men, the Kaiser might have
+taken more care of them and made a better job of it.
+
+At the same time I hold no brief for small States as such, and most
+vehemently deny that we are in any way bound to knight errantry on their
+behalf as against big ones. They are mostly either incorrigibly
+bellicose themselves, like Montenegro, or standing temptations to the
+big Powers, like Bosnia and Herzegovina. They multiply frontiers, which
+are nuisances, and languages, which have made confusion since the
+building of Babel. The striking contrast between the United States of
+North America and the disunited States of South America in this respect
+is, from the Pacifist point of view, very much in favor of the northern
+unity. The only objection to large political units is that they make
+extremely dangerous autocracies. But as groups of federated democracies
+they are the best neighbours in the world. A federal democratic Russia
+would be as safe a colleague as America: a federal democratic Germany
+would be as pleasant company as Switzerland. Let us, I beg, hear no more
+of little States as British Dulcineas.
+
+
+*The Claims of Belgium.*
+
+As to the special case of Belgium, its claims in the settlement are
+simple and indeed single. If we conclude a peace without clearing the
+Germans completely out of Belgium, we shall be either beaten or
+dishonoured. And such indemnity as a money payment can effect for
+Belgium is due not only by Germany, but by Britain, France, and Russia
+as well. Belgium has been crushed between the Alliance and the Entente:
+it was these two menaces to the peace of Europe that produced
+Armageddon; and as Belgium's heroic resistance served the Entente
+against the Alliance, the obligation to make good the remediable damage
+is even more binding on the Entente.
+
+But there is another and more pressing matter arising out of the
+conquest of Belgium.
+
+
+*The Belgian Refugees and the Problem of Unemployment.*
+
+As I write these lines the descent on our shores of an army of refugees
+from captured Antwerp and threatened Ostend has forced the President of
+the Local Government Board to make a desperate appeal to all and sundry
+to form representative committees to deal with the prevention and relief
+of distress: in other words to save the refugees from starving to death.
+Now the Board of Trade has already drawn attention to a memorandum of
+the Local Government Board as to the propriety of providing employment
+for refugees. And instantly and inevitably the condition had to be laid
+down that if the Committees find employment for anyone, they shall refer
+the case to the local Labour Exchange in order that "any steps taken to
+assist refugees to find employment shall not be such as to endanger the
+employment of British workpeople." In other words, the starving Belgians
+have fled from the Germans only to compete for crust with starving
+Englishmen. As long as there is an unemployed Englishman in the
+country--and there are a good many, especially in the cotton
+industry--how is it possible to give a job to a Belgian without
+depriving an Englishman of it? Why, instead of making impossible
+conditions, and helplessly asking private citizens to do something for
+pity's sake, will not the Government face the fact that the refugee
+question is simply an intensification of the normal unemployed question,
+the only difference being that we are accustomed to leave our own people
+to starve when they are common persons with whom the governing classes
+do not associate, whereas the Belgians have rendered us such a
+tremendous service in the war, and our statesmen have so loudly
+protested that the integrity of Belgium is dearer to England than her
+own heart's blood, that we cannot with any decency treat the destitute
+Belgians as if they were mere British riffraff. Yet when we attempt to
+provide for the Belgians by finding work for them the Board of Trade has
+to point out that by doing so we are taking the bread out of the mouths
+of our own people. Hence we arrive at the remarkable situation of
+starving Britons and Belgians looking hungrily through barbed wire
+fences at flourishing communities of jolly and well fed German prisoners
+of war (whose friendly hat wavings to me and my fellow passengers as I
+rush through Newbury Racecourse Station in the Great Western Express I
+hereby acknowledge publicly with all possible good feeling). I therefore
+for the present strongly recommend all Belgians who have made up their
+minds to flee to England, to pick up German uniforms on the battle
+fields and surrender to the British in the character of Uhlans. Their
+subsistence will then be secure until the war is over, as we dare not
+illtreat our prisoners lest the Germans should retaliate upon the
+British soldiers in their hands, even if we were all spiteful enough to
+desire to do it, as some of our baser sort have not been ashamed to
+propose.
+
+But the women and children, and the too young and the too old, cannot
+resort to this expedient. And though theoretically our own unemployed
+could be dressed in British uniforms and sent abroad with instructions
+to take refuge in neutral territory and be "interned" or to surrender to
+the first Uhlan patrol they met, yet it would be difficult to reduce
+this theory to practice, though the possibility is worth mentioning as a
+reduction to absurdity of the situation. As a matter of common sense "we
+should at once place all destitute Belgian refugees on the footing of
+prisoners of war, except that we need not post sentries to shoot them if
+they try to escape, nor surround them with barbed wire. Indeed these
+precautions are necessary in the case of the Germans rather to save
+their sense of honour whilst remaining here than to defeat any very
+strong longing on their part to return to the trenches.
+
+In a reasonable state of society there would be another difference. The
+Belgians would offer to work so as not to be a burden to us; whilst the
+German prisoner would say--as he actually does, by the way--"No: I am
+not here by my own will: if you open the door I shall go home and take
+myself off your hands; so I am in no way bound to work for you." As it
+is, our Trade Unions are up in arms at the slightest hint of either
+Belgian or German labour being employed when there is no shortage of
+English labour!"
+
+
+*The Minority Report*.
+
+All this exasperating anomaly and deadlock and breakdown would disappear
+if we had a proper system of provision for our own unemployed civilians
+(there are no unemployed soldiers: we do not discharge them between the
+battles). The Belgians would have found an organization of unemployment
+ready for them, and would have been provided for with our own
+unemployed, not as refugees, but simply as unemployed. How to do that
+need not be explained here. The problem was worked out by one of the
+hardest bits of thinking yet done in the Socialist movement, and set
+forth in the Minority Report of the Royal Commission on the Poor Laws
+and the Relief of Distress, 1909. Our helplessness in the present
+emergency shews how very unwise we were to shelve that report.
+Unluckily, what with the wounded vanity of the majority of the
+Commission, who had been played off the stage by Mrs. Sidney Webb; the
+folly of the younger journalists of the advanced guard, who had just
+then rediscovered Herbert Spencer's mare's nest of "the servile State,"
+and revolted with all the petulant anarchism of the literary profession
+against the ideal Interfering Female as typified in their heated
+imaginations by poor Mrs. Sidney Webb, who became the Aunt Sally of our
+young artists in stale anti-bureaucratic invective; and, above all, the
+mulishly silent refusal of our governing classes to see why the
+unemployed should not be simply left to starve, as they had always been
+(the Poor Law being worse than useless for so large a purpose), nothing
+was done; and there is consequently no machinery ready for dealing with
+the refugees. That is why we must treat them for the moment simply as
+unguarded prisoners of war.
+
+
+*The General Strike Against War.*
+
+But if the problem of unemployment among our own people becomes acute,
+we shall have to fall back on the Minority Report proposals or else run
+the risk of a revolt against the war. We have already counted on the
+chances of that revolt hampering Germany, just as Germany counted on the
+chances of its hampering Russia, The notion that the working classes can
+stop a war by a general international strike is never mentioned during
+the first rally to the national flag at the outbreak of a war; but it is
+there all the time, ready to break out again if the supplies of food and
+glory run short. Its gravity lies in its impracticability. If it were
+practicable, every sane man would advocate it. As it is, it might easily
+mean that British troops would be coercing British strikers at home when
+they should be fighting Potsdam abroad, thus producing a disastrous and
+detestable division of popular feeling in the face of the enemy.
+
+
+*The Disarmament Delusion.*
+
+Objections to the Western Pacifist settlement will come from several
+quarters, including the Pacifist quarters. Some of the best disposed
+parties will stumble over the old delusion of disarmament. They think it
+is the gun that matters. They are wrong: the gun matters very much when
+war breaks out; but what makes both war and the gun is the man behind
+them. And if that man really means the peace of the world to be kept, he
+will take care to have a gun to keep it with. The League of Peace must
+have a first-rate armament, or the League of War will very soon make
+mincemeat of it. The notion that the men of evil intent are to have all
+the weapons will not work. Theoretically, all our armaments should be
+pooled. But as we, the British Empire, will most certainly not pool our
+defenses with anyone, and as we have not the very smallest intention of
+disarming, and will go on building gun for gun and ship for ship in step
+with even our dearest friends if we see the least risk of our being left
+in a position of inferiority, we cannot with any countenance demand that
+other Powers shall do what we will not do ourselves. Our business is not
+to disable ourselves or anyone else, but to organize a balance of
+military power against war, whether made by ourselves or any other
+Power; and this can be done only by a combination of armed and fanatical
+Pacifists of all nations, not by a crowd of non-combatants wielding
+deprecations, remonstrances, and Christmas cards.
+
+
+*America's Example: War at a Year's Notice.*
+
+How far it will be possible to take these national armaments out of
+national control remains to be seen. Already America, who is as deeply
+demoralized by Capitalism as we are, though much less tainted with
+Militarism now that Colonel Roosevelt has lost his front seat, has
+pledged herself to several European States not to go to war with them
+until the matter under dispute has been in the hands of an international
+tribunal for a year. Now there is no military force on earth, nor likely
+to be, strong enough to prevent America from treating these agreements
+as Germany has just treated the 1839 Treaty guaranteeing the neutrality
+of Belgium. Therefore the Militarists declare that the agreements are
+not worth the scraps of paper they are written on. They always will
+footle in this way. They might as well say that because there are crimes
+which men can commit with legal impunity in spite of our haphazard
+criminal codes, men always do commit them. No doubt nations will do what
+it is to their interest to do. But because there is in every nation a
+set of noisy moral imbeciles who cannot see that nations have an
+overwhelming interest in creating and maintaining a tradition of
+international good faith, and honouring their promissory notes as
+scrupulously as the moral imbeciles pay their silly gambling debts and
+fight their foolish duels, we are not, I presume, going to discard every
+international guarantee except the howitzer. Why, the very Prussian
+Militarists themselves are reviling us for doing what their own
+Militarist preachers assumed as a matter of course that we should do:
+that is, attack Prussia without regard to the interests of European
+civilization when we caught her at a disadvantage between France and
+Russia. But we should have been ashamed to do that if she had not, by
+assuming that there was no such thing as shame (_alias_ conscience),
+terrified herself into attacking France and Belgium, when, of course, we
+were immediately ashamed not to defend them. This idiotic ignoring of
+the highest energies of the human soul, without the strenuous pressure
+of which the fabric of civilization--German civilization perhaps most of
+all--could not hold together for a single day, should really be treated
+in the asylums of Europe, not on battlefields.
+
+I conclude that we might all very well make a beginning by pledging
+ourselves as America has done to The Hague tribunal not to take up arms
+in any cause that has been less than a year under arbitration, and to
+treat any western Power refusing this pledge as an unpopular and
+suspicious member of the European club. To break such a pledge would be
+an act of brigandage; and the need for suppressing brigandage cannot be
+regarded as an open question.
+
+
+*The Security Will o' the Wisp.*
+
+It will be observed that I propose no guarantee of absolute security.
+Not being a sufferer from _delirium tremens_ I can live without it.
+Security is no doubt the Militarists' most seductive bait to catch the
+coward's vote. But their method makes security impossible, They
+undertook to secure the English in Egypt from an imaginary Islam rising
+by the Denshawai Horror, as a result of which nobody has ventured to
+suggest that we should trust the Egyptian army in this conflict, though
+India, having learnt from Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay Macdonald that
+there are really anti-Militarists in England who regard Indians as
+fellow creatures, is actually rallying to us against the Prussian
+Junkers, who are, in Indian eyes, indistinguishable from the
+Anglo-Indians who call Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay Macdonald
+traitors, and whose panicstricken denial of even a decent pretence of
+justice in the sedition trials is particularly unfortunate just now. We
+must always take risks; and we should never trade on the terror of
+death, nor forget that this wretchedest of all the trades is none the
+less craven because it can so easily be gilt with romance and heroism
+and solemn national duty and patriotism and the like by persons whose
+superficial literary and oratorical talent covers an abyss of
+Godforsaken folly.
+
+
+*The Only Real World Danger.*
+
+The one danger before us that nothing can avert but a general raising of
+human character through the deliberate cultivation and endowment of
+democratic virtue without consideration of property and class, is the
+danger created by inventing weapons capable of destroying civilization
+faster than we produce men who can be trusted to use them wisely. At
+present we are handling them like children. Now children are very
+pretty, very lovable, very affectionate creatures (sometimes); and a
+child can make nitroglycerine or chloride of nitrogen as well as a man
+if it is taught to do so. We have sense enough not to teach it; but we
+do teach the grown-up children. We actually accompany that dangerous
+technical training with solemn moral lessons in which the most
+destructive use of these forces at the command of kings and capitalists
+is inculcated as heroism, patriotism, glory and all the rest of it. It
+is all very well to fire cannons at the Kaiser for doing this; but we do
+it ourselves. It is therefore undeniably possible that a diabolical
+rhythm may be set up in which civilization will rise periodically to the
+point at which explosives powerful enough to destroy it are discovered,
+and will then be shattered and thrown back to a fresh start with a few
+starving and ruined survivors. H.G. Wells and Anatole France have
+pre-figured that result in fiction; and I cannot deny the strength of
+its probability; for if England and Germany can find no better way of
+celebrating their arrival at the highest point of civilization yet
+attained than setting out to blow one another to fragments with
+fulminates, it would seem that the peace of the neutral States is the
+result, not of their being more civilized, but less heavily armed. And
+when we see that the effect of the enterprise is not to redouble civil
+vigilance and stimulate the most alert and jealous political criticism,
+but on the contrary to produce an assumption that every constitutional
+safeguard must be suspended until the war is over, and that every silly
+tyrannical expedient such as censorship of the press, martial law, and
+the like, will begin to work good instead of evil the moment men take to
+murdering one another, it must be admitted that the prospect is not too
+hopeful. Our only consolation is that civilization has survived very
+destructive wars before, mostly because they have produced effects not
+only unintended but violently objected to by the people who made them.
+In 1870, for instance, Napoleon III. can hardly have intended his own
+overthrow and return to exile in England; nor did Bismarck aim at the
+restoration of French Republicanism and the formation of an
+Anglo-Franco-Russian alliance against Prussia. Several good things may
+come out of the present war if it leaves anybody alive to enjoy them.
+
+
+*The Church and the War.*
+
+And now, where in our society is the organ whose function it should be
+to keep us constantly in mind that, as Lassalle said, "the sword is
+never right," and to shudder with him at the fact that "the Lie is a
+European Power"? In no previous war have we struck that top note of keen
+irony, the closing of the Stock Exchange and not of the Church. The
+pagans were more logical: they closed the Temple of Peace when they drew
+the sword. We turn our Temples of Peace promptly into temples of war,
+and exhibit our parsons as the most pugnacious characters in the
+community. I venture to affirm that the sense of scandal given by this
+is far deeper and more general than the Church thinks, especially among
+the working classes, who are apt either to take religion seriously or
+else to repudiate it and criticize it closely. When a bishop at the
+first shot abandons the worship of Christ and rallies his flock around
+the altar of Mars, he may be acting patriotically, necessarily,
+manfully, rightly; but that does not justify him in pretending that
+there has been no change, and that Christ is, in effect, Mars. The
+straightforward course, and the one that would serve the Church best in
+the long run, would be to close our professedly Christian Churches the
+moment war is declared by us, and reopen them only on the signing of the
+treaty of peace. No doubt to many of us the privation thus imposed would
+be far worse than the privation of small change, of horses and motor
+cars, of express trains, and all the other prosaic inconveniences of
+war. But would it be worse than the privation of faith, and the horror
+of the soul, wrought by the spectacle of nations praying to their common
+Father to assist them in sabring and bayonetting and blowing one another
+to pieces with explosives that are also corrosives, and of the Church
+organizing this monstrous paradox instead of protesting against it?
+Would it make less atheists or more? Atheism is not a simple homogeneous
+phenomenon. There is the youthful atheism with which every able modern
+mind begins: an atheism that clears the soul of superstitions and
+terrors and servilities and base compliances and hypocrisies, and lets
+in the light of heaven. And there is the atheism of despair and
+pessimism: the sullen cry with which so many of us at this moment,
+looking on blinded deafened maimed wrecks that were once able-bodied
+admirable lovable men, and on priests blessing war, and newspapers and
+statesmen and exempt old men hounding young men on to it, are saying "I
+know now there is no God." What has the Church in its present attitude
+to set against this crushed acceptance of darkness except the quaint but
+awful fact that there are cruder people on whom horrifying calamities
+have just the opposite effect, because they seem the work of some power
+so overwhelming in its malignity that it must be worshipped because it
+is mighty? Let the Church beware how it plays to that gallery. If all
+the Churches of Europe closed their doors until the drums ceased rolling
+they would act as a most powerful reminder that though the glory of war
+is a famous and ancient glory, it is not the final glory of God.
+
+But as I know quite well that the Churches are not going to do anything
+of the kind, I must not close on a note which might to some readers
+imply that I hope, as some highly respected friends of mine do, to build
+a pacific civilization on the ruins of the vast ecclesiastical
+organizations which have never yet been able to utter the truth, because
+they have had to speak to the poor according to their ignorance and
+credulity, and to the rich according to their power. When I read that
+the icon of the Russian peasant is a religious force that will prevail
+over the materialism of Helmholtz and Haeckel, I have to contain myself
+as best I can in the face of an assumption by a modern educated European
+which implies that the Irish peasants who tied scraps of rag to the
+trees over their holy wells and paid for masses to shorten the stay of
+their dead relatives in purgatory, were more enlightened than their
+countryman Tyndall, the Lucretian materialist, and to ask whether the
+Russian peasant may not find his religious opinions somewhat neutralized
+by his alliance with the countries of Paul Bert and Combes, of Darwin
+and Almroth Wright. If we are to keep up any decent show of talking
+sense on this point we must begin by recognizing that the lines of
+battle in this war cut right across all the political and sectarian
+lines in Europe, except the line between our Socialist future and our
+Commercialist past. Materialist France, metaphysical Germany,
+muddle-headed English, Byzantine Russia may form what military
+combinations they please: the one thing they cannot form is a Crusade;
+and all attempts to represent this war as anything higher or more
+significant philosophically or politically or religiously for our
+Junkers and our Tommies than a quite simple primitive contest of the
+pugnacity that bullies and the pugnacity that will not be bullied are
+foredoomed to the derision of history. However far-reaching the
+consequences of the war may be, we in England are fighting to shew the
+Prussians that they shall not trample on us nor on our neighbors if we
+can help it, and that if they are fools enough to make their fighting
+efficiency the test of civilization, we can play that game as
+destructively as they. That is simple, and the truth, and by far the
+jolliest and most inspiring ground to recruit on. It stirs the blood and
+stiffens the back as effectively and quickly as hypocrisy and cant and
+humbug sour and trouble and discourage. But it will not carry us farther
+than the end of the fight. We cannot go on fighting forever, or even for
+very long, whatever Lord Kitchener may think; and win, lose, or tie, the
+parties, when the fight is over, must fall back on their civil wisdom
+and political foresight for a settlement of the terms on which we are to
+live happily together ever after. The practicable conditions of a stable
+comity of nations cannot be established by the bayonet, which settles
+nothing but the hash of those who rely on it. They are to found, as I
+have already explained, in the substitution for our present Militarist
+kingdoms of a system of democratic units delimited by community of
+language, religion, and habit; grouped in federations of united States
+when their extent makes them politically unwieldy; and held against war
+by the bond of international Socialism, the only ground upon which the
+identity of interest between all workers never becomes obscured.
+
+
+*The Death of Jaures.*
+
+By far the greatest calamity wrought by the war has been the death of
+Jaurès, who was worth more to France and to Europe than ten army corps
+and a hundred Archdukes. I once proposed a press law that might have
+saved him. It was that every article printed in a newspaper should bear
+not only the name and address of the writer, but the sum paid him for
+the contribution. If the wretched dupe who assassinated Jaurès had known
+that the trashy articles on the Three Years Law he had been reading were
+not the voice of France in peril, but the ignorant scribbling of some
+poor devil at his wits' end to earn three francs, he would hardly have
+thrown away his own life to take that of the greatest statesman his
+country has produced since Mirabeau. It is hardly too much to say that
+this ghastly murder and the appalling war that almost eclipsed its
+horror, is the revenge of the sweated journalist on a society so silly
+that though it will not allow a man to stuff its teeth without
+ascertained qualifications for the task, it allows anyone, no matter how
+poor, how ignorant, how untrained, how imbecile, to stuff its brains
+without even taking the trouble to ask his name. When we interfere with
+him and his sweaters at all, we interfere by way of appointing a
+censorship to prevent him from telling, not lies, however mischievous
+and dangerous to our own people abroad, but the truth. To be a liar and
+a brewer of bad blood is to be a privileged person under our censorship,
+which, so far, has proceeded by no discoverable rule except that of
+concealing from us everything that the Germans must know lest the
+Germans should find it out.
+
+
+*Socialism Alone Keeps Its Head.*
+
+Socialism has lost its leader on the Continent; but it is solid and
+representative on the main point; it loathes war; and it sees clearly
+that war is always waged by working men who have no quarrel, but on the
+contrary a supreme common interest. It steadily resists the dangerous
+export of capital by pressing the need for uncommercial employment of
+capital at home: the only practicable alternative. It knows that war, on
+its romantic side, is "the sport of kings": and it concludes that we had
+better get rid of kings unless they can kill their tedium with more
+democratic amusements. It notes the fact that though the newspapers
+shout at us that these battles on fronts a hundred miles long, where the
+slain outnumber the total forces engaged in older campaigns, are the
+greatest battles known to history, such machine-carnages bore us so
+horribly that we are ashamed of our ingratitude to our soldiers in not
+being able to feel about them as about comparatively trumpery scraps
+like Waterloo or even Inkerman and Balaclava. It never forgets that as
+long as higher education, culture, foreign travel, knowledge of the
+world: in short, the qualification for comprehension of foreign affairs
+and intelligent voting, is confined to one small class, leaving the
+masses in poverty, narrowness, and ignorance, and being itself
+artificially cut off at their expense from the salutary pressure of the
+common burden which alone keeps men unspoilt and sane, so long will that
+small class be forced to obtain the support of the masses for its wars
+by flattering proclamations of the national virtues and indignant
+denunciations of the villanies of the enemy, with, if necessary, a
+stiffening of deliberate falsehood and a strenuous persecution of any
+attempt at inconvenient truthtelling. Here there is no question of the
+Junker being a monster. You must rule ignoramuses according to their
+ignorance. The priest must work bogus miracles for them; the man of
+science must offer them magical cures and prophylactics; the barrister
+must win their verdict by sophistries, false pathos, and appeals to
+their prejudices; the army and navy must dazzle them with pageants and
+bands and thundering salvos and romantic tales; the king must cut
+himself off from humanity and become an idol. There is no escape whilst
+such classes exist. Mahomet, the boldest prophet that ever threw down
+the gage of the singleness and supremacy of God to a fierce tribe of
+warriors who worshipped stones as devotedly as we worship dukes and
+millionaires, could not govern them by religious truth, and was forced
+to fall back on revolting descriptions of hell and the day of judgment,
+invented by him for the purpose. What else could he do if his people
+were not to be abandoned to their own destruction? If it is an axiom of
+diplomacy that the people must not be told the truth, that is not in the
+least because, for example, Sir Edward Grey has a personal taste for
+mendacity; it is a necessity imposed by the fact that the people are
+incapable of the truth. In the end, lying becomes a reflex action with
+diplomatists; and we cannot even issue a penny bluebook without
+beginning it with the quite unprovoked statement that "no crime has ever
+aroused deeper or more general horror throughout Europe" than the
+assassination of the Archduke. The real tragedy was that the violent
+death of a fellow creature should have aroused so little.
+
+
+*Divided Against Ourselves*.
+
+This state of things would be bad enough if the governing classes really
+sought the welfare of the governed, and were deceiving them for their
+own good. But they are doing nothing of the sort. They are using their
+power secondarily, no doubt, to uphold the country in which they have so
+powerful and comfortable a position; but primarily their object is to
+maintain that position by the organized legal robbery of the poor; and
+to that end they would join hands with the German Junkers as against the
+working class in Germany and England as readily as Bismarck joined hands
+with Thiers to suppress the Commune of Paris. And even if this were not
+so, nothing would persuade the working classes that those who sweat them
+ruthlessly in commercial enterprise are any more considerate in public
+affairs, especially when there is any question of war, by which much
+money can be made for rich people who deal in the things most wanted and
+most highly paid for in war time: to wit, armaments and money. The
+direct interest of our military caste in war accounts for a good deal;
+but at least it involves personal risk and hardship and bereavement to
+the members of that caste. But the capitalist who has shares in
+explosives and cannons and soldiers' boots runs no risk and suffers no
+hardship; whilst as to the investor pure and simple, all that happens to
+him is that he finds the unearned income obtainable on Government
+security larger than ever. Victory to the capitalists of Europe means
+that they can not only impose on the enemy a huge indemnity, but lend
+him the money to pay it with whilst the working classes produce and pay
+both principal and interest.
+
+As long as we have that state of things, we shall have wars and secret
+and mendacious diplomacy. And this is one of many overwhelming reasons
+for building the State on equality of income, because without it
+equality of status and general culture is impossible. Democracy without
+equality is a delusion more dangerous than frank oligarchy and
+autocracy. And without Democracy there is no hope of peace, no chance of
+persuading ourselves that the sacredness of civilization will protect it
+any more than the sacredness of the cathedral of Rheims has protected
+it, not against Huns and Vandals, but against educated German gentlemen.
+
+
+*Rheims.*
+
+Commercial wage-slaves can never reproduce that wonderful company of
+sculptured figures that made Rheims unlike any other place in the world;
+and if they are now destroyed, or shortly about to be, it does not
+console me that we still have--perhaps for a few days longer only--the
+magical stained glass of Chartres and the choir of Beauvais. We tell
+ourselves that the poor French people must feel as we should feel if we
+had lost Westminster Abbey. Rheims was worth ten Westminster Abbeys; and
+where it has gone the others may just as easily go too. Let us not sneer
+at the German pretension to culture: let us face the fact that the
+Germans are just as cultured as we are (to say the least) and that war
+has nevertheless driven them to do these things as irresistibly as it
+will drive us to do similar things tomorrow if we find ourselves
+attacking a town in which the highest point from which our positions can
+be spotted by an observer with a field glass in one hand and a telephone
+in the other is the towering roof of the cathedral. Also let us be
+careful how we boast of our love of medieval art to people who well
+know, from the protests of Ruskin and Morris, that in times of peace we
+have done things no less mischievous and irreparable for no better
+reason than that the Mayor's brother or the Dean's uncle-in-law was a
+builder in search of a "restoration" job. If Rheims cathedral were taken
+from the Church to-morrow and given to an English or French joint stock
+company, everything transportable in it would presently be sold to
+American collectors, and the site cleared and let out in building sites.
+That is the way to make it "pay" commercially.
+
+
+*The Fate of The Glory Drunkard.*
+
+But our problem is how to make Commercialism itself bankrupt. We must
+beat Germany, not because the Militarist hallucination and our
+irresolution forced Germany to make this war, so desperate for her, at a
+moment so unfavourable to herself, but because she has made herself the
+exponent and champion in the modern world of the doctrine that military
+force is the basis and foundation of national greatness, and military
+conquest the method by which the nation of the highest culture can
+impose that culture on its neighbors. Now the reason I have permitted
+myself to call General Von Bernhardi a madman is that he lays down quite
+accurately the conditions of this military supremacy without perceiving
+that what he is achieving is a _reductio ad absurdum_. For he declares
+as a theorist what Napoleon found in practice, that you can maintain the
+Militarist hold over the imaginations of the people only by feeding them
+with continual glory. You must go from success to success; the moment
+you fail you are lost; for you have staked everything on your power to
+conquer, for the sake of which the people have submitted to your tyranny
+and endured the sufferings and paid the cost your military operations
+entailed. Napoleon conquered and conquered and conquered; and yet, when
+he had won more battles than the maddest Prussian can ever hope for, he
+had to go on fighting just as if he had never won anything at all. After
+exhausting the possible he had to attempt the impossible and go to
+Moscow. He failed; and from that moment he had better have been a
+Philadelphia Quaker than a victor of Marengo, Austerlitz, Jena and
+Wagrarn. Within a short breathing time after that morning when he stood
+outside Leipsic, whistling _Malbrook s'en va-t-en guerre_ whilst his
+flying army gasped its last in the river or fled under a hail of bullets
+from enemies commanded by generals without a tenth of his ability or
+prestige, we find him disguised as a postillion, cowering abjectly
+behind the door of a carriage whilst the French people whom he had
+crammed with glory for a quarter of a century were seeking to tear him
+limb from limb. His success had made him the enemy of every country
+except France: his failure made him the enemy of the human race. And
+that was why Europe rose up finally and smashed him, although the
+English Government which profited by that operation oppressed the
+English people for thirty years afterwards more sordidly than Napoleon
+would have oppressed them, and its Allies replaced him on the throne of
+France by an effete tyrant not worthy to unlace his shoe latchet.
+Nothing can finally redeem Militarism. When even genius itself takes
+that path its end is still destruction. When mere uppishness takes it
+the end is not changed, though it may be reached more precipitately and
+disastrously.
+
+
+*The Kaiser.*
+
+Prussia has talked of that path for many years as the one down which its
+destiny leads it. Its ruler, with the kid gloves he called mailed fists
+and the high class tailoring he called shining armour, did much of the
+talking, though he is in practice a most peaceful teetotaller, as many
+men with their imaginations full of the romance of war are. He had a
+hereditary craze for playing at soldiers; and he was and is a naïve
+suburban snob, as the son of The Englishwoman would naturally be,
+talking about "the Hohenzollerns" exactly as my father's people in
+Dublin used to talk about "the Shaws." His stage walk, familiar through
+the cinematograph, is the delight of romantic boys, and betrays his own
+boyish love of the _Paradeschritt_. It is frightful to think of the
+powers which Europe, in its own snobbery, left in the hands of this
+Peter Pan; and appalling as the results of that criminal levity have
+been, yet, being by no means free from his romantic follies myself, I do
+not feel harshly toward Peter, who, after all, kept the peace for over
+twenty-six years. In the end his talk and his games of soldiers in
+preparation for a toy conquest of the world frightened his neighbours
+into a league against him; and that league has now caught him in just
+such a trap as his strategists were laying for his neighbours. We please
+ourselves by pretending that he did not try to extricate himself, and
+forced the war on us; but that is not true. When he realized his peril
+he tried hard enough; but when he saw that it was no use he accepted the
+situation and dashed at his enemies with an infatuate courage not
+unworthy of the Hohenzollern tradition. Blinded as he was by the false
+ideals of his class, it was the best he could do; for there is always a
+chance for a brave and resolute warrior, even when his back is not to
+the wall but to the Russians.
+
+That means that we have to conquer him and not to revile him and strike
+moral attitudes. His victory over British and French Democracy would be
+a victory of Militarism over civilization; it would literally shut the
+gates of mercy on mankind. Leave it to our official fools and
+governesses to lecture the Kaiser, and to let loose Turcos and Ghoorkas
+on him: a dangerous precedent. Let Thomas Atkins, Patrick Murphy, Sandy
+McAlister, and Pitou Dupont fight him under what leadership they can
+get, until honour is satisfied, simply because if St. George does not
+slay the dragon the world will be, as a friend of mine said of Europe
+the other day, "no place for a gentleman."
+
+
+*Recapitulation.*
+
+1. The war should be pushed vigorously, not with a view to a final
+crushing of the German army between the Anglo-French combination and the
+Russian millions, but to the establishment of a decisive military
+superiority by the Anglo-French combination alone. A victory
+unattainable without Russian aid would be a defeat for Western European
+Liberalism; Germany would be beaten not by us, but by a Militarist
+autocracy worse than her own. By sacrificing Prussian Poland and the
+Slav portions of the Austrian Empire Germany and Austria could satisfy
+Russia, and merge Austria and Germany into a single German State, which
+would then dominate France and England, having ascertained that they
+could not conquer her without Russia's aid. We may fairly allow Russia
+to conquer Austria if she can; that is her natural part of the job. But
+if we two cannot without Russian help beat Potsdam, or at least hold her
+up in such a stalemate as will make it clear that it is impossible for
+her to subjugate us, then we shall simply have to "give Germany best"
+and depend on an alliance with America for our place in the sun.
+
+2. We cannot smash or disable Germany, however completely we may defeat
+her, because we can do that only by killing her women; and it is
+trifling to pretend that we are capable of any such villainy. Even to
+embarrass her financially by looting her would recoil on ourselves, as
+she is one of our commercial customers and one of our most frequently
+visited neighbors. We must, if we can, drive her from Belgium without
+compromise. France may drive her from Alsace and Lorraine. Russia may
+drive her from Poland. She knew when she opened fire that these were the
+stakes in the game; and we are bound to support France and Russia until
+they are won or lost, unless a stalemate reduces the whole method of
+warfare to absurdity. Austria, too, knew that the Slav part of her
+empire was at stake. By winning these stakes the Allies will wake the
+Kaiser from his dream of a Holy Teuton Empire with Prussia as the Head
+of its Church, and teach him to respect us; but that once done, we must
+not allow our camp followers to undo it all again by spiteful
+humiliations and exactions which could not seriously cripple Germany,
+and would make bad blood between us for a whole generation, to our own
+great inconvenience, unhappiness, disgrace, and loss. We and France have
+to live with Germany after the war; and the sooner we make up our mind
+to do it generously, the better. The word after the fight must be _sans
+rancune_; for without peace between France, Germany, and England, there
+can be no peace in the world.
+
+3. War, as a school of character and a nurse of virtue, must be formally
+shut up and discharged by all the belligerents when this war is over. It
+is quite true that ill-bred and swinish nations can be roused to a
+serious consideration of their position and their destiny only by
+earthquakes, pestilences, famines, comets' tails, Titanic shipwrecks,
+and devastating wars, just as it is true that African chiefs cannot make
+themselves respected unless they bury virgins alive beneath the
+doorposts of their hut-palaces, and Tartar Khans find that the
+exhibition of a pyramid of chopped-off heads is a short way to impress
+their subjects with a convenient conception of their divine right to
+rule. Ivan the Terrible did undoubtedly make his subjects feel very
+serious indeed; and stupid people are apt to believe that this sort of
+terror-stiffened seriousness is virtue. It is not. Any person who should
+set-to deliberately to contrive artificial earthquakes, scuttle liners,
+and start epidemics with a view to the moral elevation of his
+countrymen, would very soon find himself in the dock. Those who plan
+wars with the same object should be removed with equal firmness to
+Hanwell or Bethlehem Hospital. A nation so degraded as to be capable of
+responding to no higher stimulus than that of horror had better be
+exterminated, by Prussian war lords or anyone else foolish enough to
+waste powder on them instead of leaving them to perish of their own
+worthlessness.
+
+4. Neither England nor Germany must claim any moral superiority in the
+negotiations. Both were engaged for years in a race for armaments. Both
+indulged and still indulge in literary and oratorical provocation. Both
+claimed to be "an Imperial race" ruling other races by divine right.
+Both shewed high social and political consideration to parties and
+individuals who openly said that the war had to come. Both formed
+alliances to reinforce them for that war. The case against Germany for
+violating the neutrality of Belgium is of no moral value to England
+because (_a_) England has allowed the violation of the Treaty of Paris
+by Russia (violation of the neutrality of the Black Sea and closing of
+the free port of Batoum), and the high-handed and scandalous violation
+of the Treaty of Berlin by Austria (seizure of Bosnia and Herzegovina),
+without resorting to arms or remedying the aggression in any other way;
+(_b_) because we have fully admitted that we should have gone to war in
+defence of France in any case, whether the Germans came through Belgium
+or not, and refused to give the German Ambassador any assurance that we
+should remain neutral if the Germans sacrificed the military advantage
+of attacking through Belgium for the sake of avoiding a war with us;
+(_c_) that the apparent moral superiority of the pledge given by France
+and England to respect Belgian neutrality is illusory in face of the
+facts that France and England stood to gain enormously, and the Germans
+to lose correspondingly, by confining the attack on France to the
+heavily fortified Franco-German frontier, and that as France and England
+knew they would be invited by the Belgians to enter Belgium if the
+Germans invaded it, the neutrality of Belgium had, as far as they were
+concerned, no real existence; (_d_) that as all treaties are valid only
+_rebus sic stantibus_, and the state of things which existed at the date
+of the Treaty of London (1839) had changed so much since then (Belgium
+is no longer menaced by France, at whom the treaty was aimed, and has
+acquired important colonies, for instance) that in 1870 Gladstone could
+not depend on it, and resorted to a special temporary treaty not now in
+force, the technical validity of the 1839 treaty is extremely doubtful;
+(_e_) that even if it be valid its breach is not a _casus belli_ unless
+the parties for reasons of their own choose to make it so; and (_f_)
+that the German national peril pleaded by the Imperial Chancellor in his
+Peer Gynt speech (the _durchhauen_ one), when he rashly but frankly
+threw away the strong technical case just stated and admitted a breach
+of international law, was so great according to received Militarist
+ideas in view of the Russian mobilization, that it is impossible for us
+or any other Militarist-ridden Power to feel sure ourselves, much less
+to convince others, that we should have been any more scrupulous in the
+like extremity. It must be added that nothing can extenuate the enormity
+of the broad fact that an innocent country has been horribly devastated
+because her guilty neighbors formed two huge explosive combinations
+against one another instead of establishing the peace of Europe, but
+that is an offence against a higher law than any recorded on diplomatic
+scraps of paper, and when it comes to judgment the outraged conscience
+of humanity will not have much patience with the naughty child's plea of
+"he began it."
+
+5. Militarism must not be treated as a disease peculiar to Prussia. It
+is rampant in England; and in France it has led to the assassination of
+her greatest statesman. If the upshot of the war is to be regarded and
+acted upon simply as a defeat of German Militarism by Anglo-French
+Militarism, then the war will not only have wrought its own immediate
+evils of destruction and demoralization, but will extinguish the last
+hope that we have risen above the "dragons of the prime that tare each
+other in their slime." We have all been equally guilty in the past. It
+has been steadily assumed for years that the Militarist party is the
+gentlemanly party. Its opponents have been ridiculed and prosecuted in
+England; hanged, flogged or exiled in Russia; and imprisoned in France:
+they have been called traitors, cads, cranks, and so forth: they have
+been imprisoned for "bad taste" and for sedition whilst the most
+virulent sedition against Democracy and the most mutinous military
+escapades in the commissioned ranks have been tolerated obsequiously,
+until finally the practical shelving of Liberal Constitutionalism has
+provoked both in France and England a popular agitation of serious
+volume for the supersession of parliament by some sort of direct action
+by the people, called Syndicalism. In short Militarism, which is nothing
+but State Anarchism, has been carried to such a pitch that it has been
+imitated and countered by a movement of popular Anarchism, and has
+exploded in a European war because the Commercialist Governments of
+Europe had no faith in the effective guidance of any modern State by
+higher considerations than Lord Roberts's "will to conquer," the weight
+of the Kaiser's mailed fist, and the interest of the Bourses and Stock
+Exchanges. Unless we are all prepared to fight Militarism at home as
+well as abroad, the cessation of hostilities will last only until the
+belligerents have recovered from their exhaustion.
+
+6. It had better be admitted on our side that as to the conduct of the
+war there is no trustworthy evidence that the Germans have committed any
+worse or other atrocities than those which are admitted to be inevitable
+in war or accepted as part of military usage by the Allies. By "making
+examples" of towns, and seizing irresponsible citizens as hostages and
+shooting them for the acts of armed civilians over whom they could exert
+no possible control, the Germans have certainly pushed these usages to a
+point of Terrorism which is hardly distinguishable from the deliberate
+murder of non-combatants; but as the Allies have not renounced such
+usages, nor ceased to employ them ruthlessly in their dealings with the
+hill tribes and fellaheen and Arabs with whom they themselves have to
+deal (to say nothing of the notorious domestic Terrorism of the Russian
+Government), they cannot claim superior humanity. It is therefore waste
+of time for the pot to call the kettle black. Our outcry against the
+Germans for sowing the North Sea with mines was followed too closely by
+the laying of a mine field there by ourselves to be revived without
+flagrant Pharisaism. The case of Rheims cathedral also fell to the
+ground as completely as a good deal of the building itself when it was
+stated that the French had placed a post of observation on the roof.
+Whether they did or not, all military experts were aware that an officer
+neglecting to avail himself of the cathedral roof in this way, or an
+opposing officer hestitating to fire on the cathedral so used, would
+have been court-martialed in any of the armies engaged. The injury to
+the cathedral must therefore be suffered as a strong hint from
+Providence that though we can have glorious wars or glorious cathedrals
+we cannot have both.
+
+7. To sum up, we must remember that if this war does not make an end of
+war in the west, our allies of to-day may be our enemies of to-morrow,
+as they are of yesterday, and our enemies of to-day our allies of
+to-morrow as they are of yesterday; so that if we aim merely at a fresh
+balance of military power, we are as likely as not to negotiate our own
+destruction. We must use the war to give the _coup de grace_ to medieval
+diplomacy, medieval autocracy, and anarchic export of capital, and make
+its conclusion convince the world that Democracy is invincible, and
+Militarism a rusty sword that breaks in the hand. We must free our
+soldiers, and give them homes worth fighting for. And we must, as the
+old phrase goes, discard the filthy rags of our righteousness, and fight
+like men with everything, even a good name, to win, inspiring and
+encouraging ourselves with definite noble purposes (abstract nobility
+butters no parsnips) to face whatever may be the price of proving that
+war cannot conquer us, and that he who dares not appeal to our
+conscience has nothing to hope from our terrors.
+
+
+
+
+*"Shaw's Nonsense About Belgium"*
+
+By Arnold Bennett.
+
+Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.
+
+
+Mr. Bernard Shaw's "Common Sense About the War" is the talk of the town,
+and it deserves to be. One of its greatest values is its courage, for in
+it Shaw says many things no one else would have dared to say. It
+therefore, by breaking the unearthly silence on certain aspects of the
+situation, perhaps inaugurates a new and healthier period of discussion
+and criticism on such subjects as recruiting, treatment of soldiers and
+sailors' dependents, secret diplomacy, militarism, Junkerism, churches,
+Russia, peace terms, and disarmament. It contains the most magnificent,
+brilliant, and convincing common sense that could possibly be uttered.
+No citizen, I think, could rise from the perusal of this tract with a
+mind unilluminated or opinions unmodified. Hence everybody ought to read
+it, though everybody will not be capable of appreciating the profoundest
+parts of it.
+
+Mixed up with the tremendous common sense, however, is a considerable
+and unusual percentage of that perverseness, waywardness, and
+arlequinading which are apparently an essential element of Mr. Shaw's
+best work. This is a disastrous pity, having regard to the immense
+influence and vogue of Shaw, not only in Germany, but in America, and
+the pity is more tragic as Shaw has been most absurd about the very
+matter which most Englishmen regard as most important, namely, Great
+Britain's actual justification for going to war.
+
+
+*Shaw's Admitted Prejudice.*
+
+Mr. Shaw begins by conceiving the possibility of his being blinded by
+prejudice or perversity, and admits his capacity for criticising England
+with a certain slight malicious taste for taking the conceit out of her.
+Seemingly he belongs to that numerous class who think that to admit a
+fault is to excuse it. As a highwayman might say before taking your
+purse, "Now, I admit, I have a certain slight taste for thieving," and
+expect you to smile forgiveness of his depredation, Shaw's bias is
+evident wherever he discusses the action and qualities of Great Britain.
+Thus he contrasts Bernhardi's brilliant with our own very dull
+militarists' facts, the result being that the intense mediocrity of
+Bernhardi leaps to the eye on every page, and that events have
+thoroughly discredited all his political and many of his military ideas,
+whereas we possess militarists of first-class quality.
+
+Naturally, Shaw calls England muddle-headed. Yet of late nothing has
+been less apparent than muddle-headednes. Of British policy, Shaw says
+that since the Continent generally regards us as hypocritical, we must
+be hypocritical. He omits to say that the Continent generally, and
+Germany in particular, regards our policy and our diplomacy as extremely
+able and clear-sighted. The unscrupulous cleverness of Britain is one of
+Germany's main themes.
+
+These are minor samples of Mr. Shaw's caprices. In discussing the origin
+of the war Mr. Shaw's aim is to prove that all the great powers are
+equally to blame. He goes far back and accuses Great Britain of
+producing the first page of Bernhardian literature in the anonymous
+pamphlet "The Battle of Dorking." He admits in another passage that the
+note of this pamphlet was mainly defensive. He is constantly thus making
+intrenchments for himself in case of forced retirement, and there is in
+his article almost nothing unjust against Great Britain that is not
+ingeniously contradicted or mitigated elsewhere.
+
+
+*Great Britain's War Literature.*
+
+Beginning with "The Battle of Dorking" and ending with H.G. Well's "War
+in the Air," one of the most disturbing and effective warnings against
+militarism ever written, he sees simply that Great Britain has produced
+threatening and provocative militarist literature comparable to
+Germany's. No grounds exist for such a contention. There are militarists
+in all countries, but there are infinitely more in Germany than in any
+other country. The fact is notorious. The fact is also notorious that
+the most powerful, not the most numerous, party in Germany wanted the
+war. It would be as futile to try to prove that Ireland did not want
+home rule as that Germany did not want war. As for a war literature,
+bibliographical statistics show, I believe, that in the last ten years
+Germany has published seven thousand books or pamphlets about war. No
+one but a German or a Shaw, in a particularly mischievous mood, would
+seek to show that Great Britain is responsible for the war fever. It
+simply is not so.
+
+Mr. Shaw urges that we all armed together. Of course we did. When one
+nation publicly turns bellicose the rest must copy her preparations. If
+Great Britain could live this century over again she would do over again
+what she actually did, because common sense would not permit her to do
+otherwise. The admitted fact that some Britons are militarists does not
+in the slightest degree impair the rightness or sagacity of our policy.
+If one member of a family happens to go to the bad and turn burglar,
+therein is no reason why the family mansion should not be insured
+against burglary.
+
+Mr. Shaw proceeds to what he calls the diplomatic history of the war.
+His notion of historical veracity may be judged from his description of
+the Austrian ultimatum to Servia as an escapade of a dotard. He puts the
+whole blame of it on Franz Josef, and yet he must know quite well that
+Germany has admitted even to her own subjects that Austria asked
+Germany's opinion about her policy and obtained Germany's approval
+before delivering the ultimatum. [Official German pamphlet "Reasons for
+the War with Russia," August, 1914.] There is no word in Mr. Shaw's
+diplomatic history of the repeated efforts toward peace made by Great
+Britain and scotched by Germany. On the contrary, with astounding
+audacity and disingenuousness, he tries to make it appear that
+suggestions for peace were offered by Germany and rejected by Great
+Britain. Once more it simply was not so.
+
+
+*Defense of Sir Edward Grey.*
+
+Mr. Shaw's paraphrase of Document 17 in the British diplomatic
+dispatches is a staggering travesty. So far as I can see it bears no
+relation to the original. Further, he not only deplores that a liberal
+government should have an imperialist Foreign Secretary, but he accuses
+Sir Edward Grey of sacrificing his country's welfare to the interests of
+his party and committing a political crime in order not to incur the
+wrath of The Daily News and The Manchester Guardian. This is totally
+inexcusable. Let me not be misunderstood. I am not a liberal. I am an
+out-and-out radical. I foresee a cleavage in the Liberal Party, and when
+that cleavage comes I shall be on the extreme left wing. I entirely
+agree with Mr. Shaw's denunciation of secret diplomacy and undemocratic
+control of foreign policy. By every social tradition I should be in
+opposition to Sir Edward Grey, but I think Grey was the best Foreign
+Secretary that the Liberal Party could have chosen and that he worked
+well on the only possible plane, the plane of practicality. I am quite
+sure he is an honest man, and I strongly resent, as Englishmen of all
+opinions will resent, any imputation to the contrary.
+
+As for the undemocratic control of foreign policy, a strong point about
+our policy on the eve of the war is that it was dictated by public
+opinion. [See Grey's dispatch to the British Ambassador at Berlin, No.
+123.] Germany could have preserved peace by a single gesture addressed
+to Franz Josef. She did not want peace. Mr. Shaw said Sir Edward Grey
+ought to have shouted out at the start that if Germany fought we should
+fight. Sir Edward Grey had no authority to do so, and it would have been
+foolish to do so. Mr. Shaw also says Germany ought to have turned her
+whole army against Russia and left the western frontier to the care of
+the world's public opinion in spite of the military alliance by which
+France was bound to Russia. We have here an example of his aptitude for
+practical politics.
+
+
+*Was Belgium a Mere Excuse?*
+
+Let us now come to Belgium. Mr. Shaw protests needlessly that he holds
+no brief for small States as such, and he most vehemently denies that we
+are bound to knight errantry on their behalf. His objection to small
+States is that they are either incorrigibly bellicose or standing
+temptations to big powers. Outside the Balkans no small State is
+bellicose. All are eminently pacific. That they are a standing
+temptation to thieves is surely no reason for their destruction. If it
+is a reason Mr. Shaw ought to throw his watch down the drain.
+
+Mr. Shaw states that Belgium was a mere excuse for our going to war.
+That there was a vast deal more in the pre-war diplomacy than appears in
+the printed dispatches, or in any dispatches, I am as convinced as Mr.
+Shaw is, but I am equally convinced that so far as we are concerned
+there was nothing in diplomacy, however secret, to contradict our public
+attitude. The chief item not superficially apparent is that the
+diplomats knew all along that Germany wanted war and was doing all she
+could to obtain war on terms most favorable to herself. That our own
+interest coincided with our duty to Belgium did not by any means render
+our duty a mere excuse for action. If a burglar is making his way upward
+in the house where Mr. Shaw lives and Mr. Shaw comes down and collars
+him in the flat of a defenseless invalid below and hands him over to the
+police Mr. Shaw would not expect the police to say, "You are a
+hypocrite; you only seized the burglar because you feared he would come
+to you next." I stick to the burglar simile, because a burglar is just
+what Germany is.
+
+
+*The "Infamous Proposal" Phrase.*
+
+Mr. Shaw characterizes Mr. Asquith's phrase, "Germany's infamous
+proposal," as the "obvious barrister's claptrap." Once more this is
+totally inexcusable. I do not always see eye to eye with Mr. Asquith, I
+agree with Mr. Shaw that he has more than once sinned against democratic
+principles, but what has that to do with the point? My general
+impression of Mr. Asquith and general impression of this country is that
+Mr. Asquith, in addition to being a pretty good Liberal, is an honest
+man. His memorable speech containing the "infamous proposal" phrase was
+most positively a genuine emotional expression of his conviction and of
+the conviction of the whole country, and Mr. Shaw, a finished master of
+barrister's claptrap when he likes, has been merely scurrilous about it.
+Germany's proposal was infamous. Supposing that we had taken the Belgium
+point at Mr. Shaw's valuation of it, the "nonsense about Belgium," as he
+calls it, and refrained from war, what would have been the result? The
+result would have been that today we could not have looked one another
+in the face as we passed down the street.
+
+But Mr. Shaw is not content with arguing that the Belgium point was a
+mere excuse for us. He goes further and continually implies that there
+was no Belgium point. Every time he mentions the original treaty that
+established Belgian neutrality he puts after it in brackets, [date
+1839,] an obvious barrister's device, sarcastically to discredit the
+treaty because of its age. He omits to say that the chief clause in the
+treaty contains the word "perpetually." What is worse, he infers that by
+the mere process of years, as Belgium gradually made herself, civilized
+herself, enriched herself, and increased her stake in the world, her
+moral right to independence and freedom instead of being strengthened
+was somehow mysteriously weakened. The theory is monstrous, but if he
+does not mean that he means nothing.
+
+Further, he says that in 1870 Gladstone could not depend on the treaty
+of 1839 and resorted to a special temporary treaty not now in force, and
+that, therefore, technically the validity of the 1839 treaty is
+extremely doubtful. This twisting of facts throws a really sinister
+light upon the later developments of Mr. Shaw as a controversialist. The
+treaty of 1870 was, indeed, temporary, except in so far as it confirmed
+the treaty of 1839. Article 3 of the treaty of 1870 says it shall be
+binding on the contracting parties during the continuance of the war and
+for twelve months after, and then proceeds "and on the expiration of
+that time the independence and neutrality of Belgium will, so far as the
+high contracting parties are respectively concerned, continue to rest as
+heretofore on the quintuple treaty of 1839," (textual.)
+
+Mr. Shaw's manifesto is lengthy and it will no doubt be reprinted in
+book form. I repeat what I said in my first paragraph as to the major
+part of it, but I assert that the objectionable part of the manifesto is
+so objectionable in its flippancy, in its perversity, in its injustice,
+and in its downright inexactitude as to amount to a scandal. Mr. Shaw
+has failed to realize either his own importance or the importance and
+very grave solemnity of the occasion. The present is no hour for that
+disingenuous, dialectical bravura which might excusably relieve a
+domestic altercation. Before reprinting Mr. Shaw should, I suggest;
+seriously reconsider his position and rewrite.
+
+
+
+
+*"Bennett States the German Case"*
+
+By George Bernard Shaw.
+
+Letter to The Daily News of London.
+
+
+_To The Daily News, Sir:_
+
+In justice to the enemy I am bound to admit that Mr. Bennett's case,
+which is the German case, is a very strong one and that his ironic
+comment on the case against Germany, "We have here an example of Mr.
+Shaw's aptitude for practical politics," is a comment that the Kaiser
+will probably make and that the average "practical man" will make, too.
+
+Mr. Bennett, in saying that I am a simpleton to doubt that, if Germany
+had not attacked France, France would have attacked her, shows a much
+greater courage than he credits me with. That is Germany's contention,
+and if valid is her justification for dashing at any enemy who, as Mr.
+Bennett believes, was lying in wait to spring on her back when Russia
+had her by the throat. If Mr. Bennett is right, and I am a simpleton,
+there is nothing more to be said. The Imperial Chancellor's plea of "a
+state of necessity" is proved up to the hilt.
+
+I did not omit to say that Germany regards our policy and our diplomacy
+as extremely able and clear-sighted. I expressly and elaborately pointed
+that out. Mr. Bennett, being an Englishman, is so flattered by the
+apparent compliment from those clever Germans that he insists it is
+deserved. I, being an Irishman and, therefore, untouched by flattery,
+see clearly that what the Germans mean by able and clear-sighted is
+crafty, ruthless, unscrupulous, and directed to the deliberate and
+intentional destruction of Germany by a masterly diplomatic combination
+of Russia, France and Great Britain against her, and I defend the
+English and Sir Edward Grey in particular on the ground, first, that the
+British nation at large was wholly innocent of the combination, and,
+second, that even among diplomatists, guilty as most of them
+unquestionably were and openly as our Junkers--like the German
+ones--clamored for war with Germany, there was more muddle than
+Machiavelli about them, and that Sir Edward never completely grasped the
+situation or found out what he really was doing and even had a
+democratic horror of war.
+
+
+*Shaw's Excuses Scorned.*
+
+But Mr. Bennett will not have any of my excuses for his unhappy country.
+He will have it that the Germans are right in admiring Sir Edward as a
+modern Caesar Bogia, and that our militarist writers are "of first class
+quality," as contrasted with the "intense mediocrity" of poor Gen.
+Bernhardi.
+
+If Mr. Bennett had stopped there the Kaiser would send him the Iron
+Cross, but of course, like a true born Englishman, he goes on to deny
+indignantly that England has produced a militarist literature comparable
+to Germany and to affirm hotly that Mr. Asquith is an honest man whose
+bad arguments are "a genuine emotional expression of his convictions and
+that of the whole country," and that Sir Edward Grey is an honest man,
+and that he (Mr. Bennett) "strongly resents as Englishmen of all
+opinions will resent any imputation to the contrary"--just what I said
+he would say and that he entirely agrees with my denunciation of secret
+diplomacy and undemocratic control of foreign policy and that I am a
+perverse and wayward harlequin, mischievous, unveracious, scurrilous,
+monstrous, disingenuous, flippant, unjust, inexact, scandalous, and
+objectionable, and that on all points to which he takes exception and a
+good many more I am so magnificent, brilliant, and convincing that no
+citizen could rise from perusing me without being illuminated.
+
+That is just a little what I meant by saying that Englishmen are
+muddle-headed, because they never have been forced by political
+adversity to mistrust their tempers and depend on a carefully stated
+case as Irishmen have been.
+
+
+*Showed Germany the Way.*
+
+I did with great pains what nobody else had done. I showed what Germany
+should have done, knowing that I had no right to reproach her for doing
+what she did until I was prepared to show that a better way had been
+open to her.
+
+Bennett says, in effect, that nobody but a fool could suppose that my
+way was practicable and proceeds to call Germany a burglar. That does
+not get us much further. In fact, to me it seems a step backward. At all
+events it is now up to Mr. Bennett to show us what practical alternative
+Germany had except the one I described. If he cannot do that, can he
+not, at least, fight for his side? We, who are mouthpieces of many
+inarticulate citizens, who are fighting at home against the general
+tumult of scare and rancor and silly cinematograph heroics for a sane
+facing of facts and a stable settlement, are very few. We have to bring
+the whole continent of war-struck lunatics to reason if we can.
+
+What chance is there of our succeeding if we begin by attacking one
+another because we do not like one another's style or confine ourselves
+to one another's pet points? I invite Mr. Bennett to pay me some more
+nice compliments and to reserve his fine old Staffordshire loathing for
+my intellectual nimbleness until the war is over.--G. BERNARD SHAW.
+
+[Illustration: G.K. CHESTERTON. _See Page 108_]
+
+[Illustration: SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE. (_Photo by Arnold Genthe_) _See
+Page 132_]
+
+
+
+
+*Flaws in Shaw's Logic*
+
+By Cunninghame Graham.
+
+Letter to The Daily News of London.
+
+
+_To the Editor of The Daily News:_
+
+The controversy between men of peace as to the merits, demerits, causes,
+and possible results of the great war is becoming almost as dangerous
+and little less noisy than the real conflict now being waged in and
+around Ypres. The only difference between the two conflicts is that the
+combatants in Flanders only strive to kill the body. Those who fire
+paper bullets aim at the annihilation of the soul.
+
+Literature is a nice thing in its way. It both passes and gives us many
+weary hours. It has its place. But I submit that at present it is mere
+dancing on a tight rope. Whether the war could have been avoided or not
+is without interest today. In fact, there is no controversy possible
+after Maximilian Harden's pronouncement. In it he throws away the
+scabbard and says boldly that Germany from the first was set on war.
+Hence it becomes a work of supererogation to find excuses for her, and
+hence, my old friend, Bernard Shaw, penned his long indictment of his
+hereditary enemy, England, all in vain.
+
+We are a dull-witted race. Although the Continent has dubbed us
+"Perfidious Albion," it is hard for us to take in general ideas, and no
+man clearly sees the possibilities of the development of the original
+sin that lies dormant in him. Thus it becomes hard for us to understand
+the reason why, if Germany tore up a treaty three months ago we are
+certain to tear up another in three years' time.
+
+All crystal gazing appeals but little to the average man on this side of
+the St. George's channel. It may be that we shall tear up many treaties,
+but the broad fact remains that hitherto we have torn up none.
+
+The particular treaty that Germany tore up was signed by five powers in
+1839, ratified again in 1870 by a special clause respected by King
+Frederick William in his war against the French, was often referred to
+in Parliament by Gladstone and by other Ministers, and was considered
+binding on its signatories. Germany tore it up for her own ends, thus
+showing that she was a stupid though learned people, for she at once at
+the same time prejudiced her case to the whole world and made a military
+mistake.
+
+No human motives are without alloy, but at the same time honesty in our
+case has proved the better policy. Germany, no doubt, would have granted
+us almost anything for our assent to her march through Belgium. We
+refused her offers, no doubt from mixed motives, for every Englishman is
+not an orphan archangel, stupid, or dull or muddle-headed, or what not.
+The balance of the world is with us, not, perhaps, because they love us
+greatly, but because they see that we, perhaps by accident, have been
+forced into the right course and that all smaller nationalities such as
+Montenegro, Ireland, Poland, and the rest would disappear on our defeat.
+
+CUNNINGHAME GRAHAM.
+
+
+
+
+*Editorial Comment on Shaw*
+
+From THE NEW YORK TIMES, Nov. 5, 1914.
+
+
+Mr. G. Bernard Shaw thinks that "the time has now come to pluck up
+courage and begin to talk and write soberly about the war." Our readers
+will find in THE TIMES Sunday Magazine this morning some of the fruits
+of this auto-suggestion. They are very remarkable. While Mr. Shaw can
+hardly be called a representative of any considerable class, the fact
+that one prominent writer, always much read, can assume Mr. Shaw's
+attitude and make public Mr. Shaw's comments throws a strong light on
+the spirit of British society. It is true that he intimates that he ran
+the risk of "prompt lynching" at one time, but that was probably the
+suggestion of a certain timidity and vanity to which he pleads guilty.
+His safe and prosperous existence is really a striking evidence, on the
+one hand, of British good nature, and, on the other, of the indifferent
+estimate the British put on his influence.
+
+Like Iago, Mr. Shaw is nothing if not critical, and in this crisis his
+criticism is for the most part bitter, extreme, and in purpose
+destructive. He particularly dislikes Sir Edward Grey and the Government
+of which he is a leading spirit, and the class which the Government
+represents. He singles out Sir Edward as the chief "Junker" and among
+the chief "militarists" who brought about this war. Mr. Shaw's attacks
+on the Foreign Secretary are savage, and, as often happens with savage
+attacks--they are far from consistent. For example, Mr. Shaw paraphrases
+at some length the interview between Sir Edward and the German
+Ambassador, in which the latter made four different propositions to
+secure the neutrality of Great Britain if Germany waged war on France,
+all of which Sir Edward refused. Mr. Shaw sees in this only evidence of
+determination to take arms against Germany in any case, carrying out a
+long-cherished plan formed by the Government of which Sir Edward Grey
+was, for this matter, the responsible member. He does not see--- though
+it is so plain that a wayfaring man though a professional satirist
+should not err therein--that what the Secretary intended to do--what, in
+fact, he did do--was to refuse to put a price on British perfidy, to
+accept any "bargain" offered to that end.
+
+On the other hand, Mr. Shaw paraphrases at still greater length the
+report of the interview in which the Russian Foreign Minister and the
+French Ambassador at St. Petersburg tried to induce the British
+Government to commit itself in advance to war against Germany. Mr. Shaw
+thinks that thus the German "bluff" would have been called and war would
+have been prevented, and he is confident that Mr. Winston Churchill
+would have taken the Bismarck tone and dictated the result. He cannot
+see--what is really the essential fact in both cases--that Sir Edward
+Grey was striving in every honorable way to preserve peace, that his
+Government refused to stand idle and see France crushed in the same
+spirit that it refused to menace Germany until a definite and undeniable
+cause of war arose.
+
+That cause came with Germany's violation of its pledge to observe the
+neutrality of Belgium, and England's response excites Mr. Shaw's most
+furious contempt. He adopts with zest the judgment of the German
+Chancellor. The pledge for all who signed it was but a scrap of paper,
+of no more binding force than others that had gone their way to dusty
+death in the diplomatic waste baskets. To observe the obligation it
+imposed was hypocrisy. To fight in order to compel Germany to observe it
+was crass militarism. Plainly, Mr. Shaw is a little difficult. The
+Government under which he lives is either too bellicose or not bellicose
+enough; too ready to help France if France is attacked or not ready
+enough to bully Germany, and especially it is all wrong about Belgium
+and its treaty, since treaties have several times been broken, and so on
+through a bewildering circle of contradictory statements and notions.
+
+Mr. Shaw finds little to choose between the groups of combatants. He
+distinctly prides himself on his impartiality, not to say indifference.
+On account of his Irish birth he claims something of the detachment of a
+foreigner, but admits a touch of Irish malice in taking the conceit out
+of the English. Add to this his professed many-sidedness as a dramatist
+and playwright and we get as good an explanation as can be given of this
+noted writer's attitude toward the tremendous struggle now waging. But
+Mr. Shaw's assumption of even-handed scorn for every one concerned, of
+"six of one and a half dozen of the other," does not hold out. He feels
+profoundly that such fighting as Germany does, for such a purpose as
+inspires Germany, must be met by force, and that England could not in
+the long run, no matter by whom guided or governed, have shirked the
+task laid upon her. That being the case, one wonders a little why it was
+worth while to cover every one with ridicule and to present a picture of
+Great Britain so essentially grotesque and distorted.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+*Bernard Shaw on the End of the War.*
+
+_From The New York Sun, Nov_. 15, 1914.
+
+
+In the midst of a good deal of untimely gibing, George Bernard Shaw, as
+reported in a London dispatch to The Sun of yesterday, says one or two
+very wise and appropriate things about the end of the war and the times
+to come after it. His warnings are a useful check to the current loose
+talk of the fire-eaters and preachers of the gospel of vengeance.
+
+"We and France have to live with Germany after the war," Mr. Shaw points
+out. Even to embarrass her financially would be a blow to England
+herself, Germany being one of England's best customers and one of her
+most frequently visited neighbors. The truth of this is unanswerable.
+The great object must be to effect a peace with as little rancor as
+possible.
+
+Mr. Shaw does not say it, but there are going to be overwhelming
+political reasons why the pride of Germany and Austria and still more
+why their military power shall not be too much impaired in case of their
+defeat.
+
+Perhaps in the final settlement the Western Allies may be found to have
+more in common with Berlin than with St. Petersburg. Germany has pointed
+this out with much force.
+
+Mr. Shaw's position is not admirable when he chooses their days of
+tribulation for sticking pins into his own people, even though some of
+the things he says may be unpleasantly true. But it cannot be denied
+that he has some sane views on the situation. The pity is that he must
+always impair the force of the useful things he has to say by
+flippancies, impertinences, and out-of-place girdings at those whose
+courage he should help to maintain. He reminds one of a man who insists
+on wrangling over the mistaken construction of a chimney while the house
+is burning down.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+*Bernard Shaw as a Patriot.*
+
+_From The New York World, Nov. 17, 1914._
+
+
+Bernard Shaw has written for our neighbor THE TIMES an elaborate
+three-page thesis to maintain:
+
+1. That Great Britain was abundantly justified in making war with
+Germany.
+
+2. That the explanation given by the British Government for making war
+against Germany was stupid, hypocritical, mendacious, and disgraceful.
+
+3. That he alone is capable of interpreting the moral purpose of the
+British people in undertaking this necessary work of civilization.
+
+4. That the reason the British Government's justification of the war is
+so inadequate is because no British Government is ever so clever as
+Bernard Shaw.
+
+5. That even in the midst of the most horrible calamity known to human
+history it pays to advertise.
+
+Various patriots have various ways of serving their country. Some go to
+the firing line to be shot and others stay at home to be a source of
+innocent merriment to the survivors.
+
+
+
+
+*"Shaw Empty of Good Sense"*
+
+
+By Christabel Pankhurst.
+
+Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.
+
+
+His reputation for perversity and contrariety is fully maintained by
+George Bernard Shaw in the ineptly-named article, "Common Sense About
+the War." At home in Britain we all know that it is Mr. Shaw's habit to
+oppose where he might be expected to support, and vice versa. For
+example, should he speak at a prohibition meeting he would most likely
+extol strong drink, or if asked to defend the sale of liquor declare
+dramatically for prohibition.
+
+He sees himself as the critic of everything and everybody--the one and
+only man who knows what to do and how to do it.
+
+Mr. Shaw charges his compatriots with intellectual laziness, but they
+are not so lazy as to leave him to do their thinking for them. That he
+sometimes--and oftener in the past than now--says illuminating things is
+true, but firm reliance cannot be placed upon his freakish mental
+processes, exemplified in his writings about the war. He has played with
+effect the part of jester to the British public, but when, as now, his
+jests are empty of the kernel of good sense, the matter gets beyond a
+joke.
+
+The truth is that in face of this great and tragic reality of war the
+men of mere words, the literary theorists, are in danger of missing
+their way. Certainly women of deeds are more likely to see things aright
+than are men of words, and it is as a woman of deeds that I, a
+suffragette, make answer to my irresponsible compatriot, Mr. Bernard
+Shaw. And yet not a compatriot, for Mr. Shaw disclaims those feelings of
+loyalty and enthusiasm for the national cause that fill the mass of us
+who live under the British flag!
+
+"Until Home Rule emerges from its present suspended animation," says Mr.
+Shaw, "I shall retain my Irish capacity for criticising England with
+something of the detachment of a foreigner." Now, these words are not a
+little surprising, because Mr. Shaw's interest in the Home Rule cause
+has hitherto been of a most restrained and well-nigh secret character,
+and any one who imagines that Mr. Shaw is a strenuous campaigner for
+Home Rule is greatly mistaken. If in the years preceding the war the
+Horne Rule cause had depended upon Mr. Shaw's activities, it would have
+been in a bad way. It is now, when a foreign enemy menaces our nation as
+a whole, that Mr. Shaw manifests this enhanced interest in Home Rule.
+
+The suffragettes, who have fought and suffered for their cause as no
+living man reformer in the British Isles has fought and suffered for
+his, have during the present crisis subordinated their claim to the
+urgent claims of national honor and safety. So Mr. Shaw, whose
+campaigning is done generally in the armchair, and never in any place
+more dangerous than the rostrum, ought surely to refrain from his
+frivolous, inconsistent, destructive, and unprofitable criticism of our
+country.
+
+As for the question of lynching, Mr. Shaw is, the American public may be
+assured, in no danger whatever of being lynched. He is in far more
+danger of having the Iron Cross conferred upon him by the Kaiser in
+recognition of his attempt to supplement the activities of the official
+German Press Bureau. But if he were a German subject, writing on certain
+points of German policy as he does upon certain points of British
+policy, his fate can well be imagined. The only retribution that will
+come upon this man, who exploits the freedom of speech and pen that
+England gives him, is that his words lose now and henceforth the weight
+they used to have. Oh, the conceit of the man, who in this dark hour,
+when the English are dying on the battlefield, writes of "taking the
+conceit out of England" by a stroke of his inconsequent pen!
+
+
+*Admits England's Cause Is Just.*
+
+But with all his will to "take the conceit" out of this England, so
+fiercely menaced, her sons killed, her daughters widowed--yet needing,
+so he thinks, his castigation into the bargain--the critic is
+constrained to admit that our country is playing the part of "the
+responsible policeman of the West" and that "for England to have
+refrained from hurling herself into the fray, horse, foot, and
+artillery, was impossible from every point of view." Then why preface
+these statements by a series of attacks upon the country which is
+admitted to be justly fighting in a just cause?
+
+The sole importance of Mr. Shaw's criticism comes from this. He
+unwarrantably indorses statements made by Germany in her attempt to put
+the Allies in the wrong. Because he is known to the German people by his
+dramatic work, extracts from his article will be circulated among them
+as an expression of the views of a representative British citizen. And
+how are the Germans to know that this is false, deprived as they are of
+news of what is happening in the outside world and ignorant as they must
+be of Mr. Shaw's real lack of influence at this serious time?
+
+That their traffic in mere words disables some literary men from
+comprehending facts is shown by Mr. Shaw's play upon the word
+"Junkerism." He points to the dictionary definition of the word instead
+of to the fact it represents, and by this verbal juggling tries to
+convince his readers that the military autocracy that dominates and
+misdirects Germany has its counterpart and equal in Great Britain.
+Whereas, the conditions in the two countries are wholly different, and
+it is this very difference that Germany has regarded as one of the signs
+of British inferiority.
+
+Mr. Shaw's suggestion that the British are posing as "Injured Innocence"
+and as "Mild Gazelles" is neither funny nor true. We are simply a people
+defending ourselves, resisting conquest and military despotism, and
+fighting for the ideal of freedom and self-government. When our country
+is no longer in danger we suffragettes, if it be still necessary, are
+prepared to fight on and wage our civil war that we may win freedom and
+self-government for women as well as men. But, in the meantime, we
+support the men--yes, and even the Government do we in a sense
+support--in fighting the common enemy who menaces the freedom of men and
+women alike. Although the Government in the past have erred gravely in
+their dealing with the woman question, they are for the purpose of this
+war the instrument of the nation.
+
+
+*Facts Belie Him.*
+
+Mr. Shaw would seem to hold Britain responsible for German militarism,
+but the facts he cites are against him there. "I am old enough," says
+he, "to remember the beginnings of the anti-German phase of military
+propaganda in England. The Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left England
+very much taken aback. Up to that date nobody was much afraid that
+Prussia--suddenly Prussia beat France right down in the dust."
+Precisely! It was this war on France, deliberately engineered by
+Bismarck, and it was the defeat and despoilment of France that fed
+Germany's militarism and encouraged Germany to make those plans of
+military aggression which, after long and deliberate preparation, are
+being carried into effect in the present war. Germany's plans of
+military aggression have compelled other countries to prepare, however
+inadequately, to defend themselves.
+
+Mr. Shaw gives support to the Germans' contention that they are not the
+aggressors but are menaced by Russia. Yet he does not explain why, if
+that is so, Germany took French gold and territory in 1870 and has since
+continued to alienate France; nor why Germany has chosen Britain as her
+enemy of enemies to be supplanted and surpassed in power.
+
+If Germany is simply on the defensive against Russia and has no desire
+to attack and cripple France and Britain, then why has she antagonized
+these countries and driven one after the other into a Russian alliance?
+
+When he affects to criticise Germany for not having "entrusted the
+security of her western frontier to the public opinion of Western Europe
+and to America and fought Russia, if attacked, with her rear not
+otherwise defended," Mr. Shaw burkes the fact that Germany's object is
+to seize Belgium and to make it part of the German Empire, also to seize
+at least the northern coast of France and to make this seizure the means
+of dominating Britain.
+
+Indeed, the point at which German ambition for conquest ceases would be
+hard to fix. And yet Mr. Shaw pictures for us an injured-innocent,
+mild-gazelle Germany on the defensive! Quite in this picture is his
+assertion that "the ultimatum to Servia was the escapade of a dotard,"
+whereas, everybody knows that the ultimatum was dictated at Berlin. It
+is plain as a pikestaff that in order to bring on the Great War of
+conquest for which her rulers thought The Day had arrived. Germany
+dictated the issue and terms of the ultimatum to Servia and then urged
+Austria to refuse any compromise and arbitration which might have
+averted war.
+
+Mr. Shaw has assumed the impossible task of trying to blind the American
+public to these and other facts that prove Germany to be the aggressor
+in this war, but he will fail in his attempt at white-washing German
+policy because it is one of the characteristics of the American people
+that they have a strong feeling for reality and that no twisting and
+combining of words can prevent them from getting at the facts beneath.
+
+Bernhardi's writings are generally believed to be an inspiration, and in
+part a statement of German policy. But Mr. Shaw differs. In trying to
+prove that Bernhardism has nothing to do with the case, he maintains
+that Germany has neglected the Bernhardi programme, and says:
+
+"He warned Germany to make an alliance with Italy, Austria, Turkey, and
+America before undertaking the subjugation of France, then of England."
+
+Mr. Shaw then asserts that Germany disregarded this advice and allowed
+herself to be caught between Russia and a Franco-British combination
+with no ally save Austria. But here again facts are against him. For
+Germany has followed with marvelous precision the line drawn by
+Bernhardi.
+
+She is actually fighting in partnership with Austria. She allied herself
+with Italy--though Italy has refused to fight with her in this present
+war of aggression. Germany has also bent Turkey to her purpose, and has
+dragged the Turks into the war. An alliance with America! Well, to have
+gained the help of America in crushing France and crippling England, and
+ravaging and conquering Belgium was quite beyond the power of German
+diplomacy and intrigue! Still Germany's attempts to win at least
+America's moral support in this war are vigorous, if unsuccessful.
+
+And with what quotable matter Mr. Shaw provides the German rulers for
+the further deluding of their subjects when he writes of the German
+people being "stirred to their depths by the apparent treachery and
+duplicity of the attack made upon them in their extrernest peril from
+France and Russia," when he writes of the Kaiser doing "all a Kaiser
+could do without unbearable ignominy to induce the British not to fight
+him and give him fair play with Russia," and when he writes of "taking
+the Kaiser at a disadvantage." As though we ought meekly to have agreed
+to the Kaiser's plan of defeating France and using her defeat as a
+bridge to England and a means of conquering England! Uncommon nonsense
+about the war--so we must rename Mr. Shaw's production!
+
+And what is all this that flows from the pen of Mr. Shaw about Belgium
+and "obsolete treaties," "rights of way," "necessities that know no
+international law," "circumstances that alter treaties"? Made in Germany
+such statements are, and yet even the Imperial German Chancellor is not
+so contemptuous as Bernard Shaw is of Belgium's charter of existence,
+the treaty now violated by Germany.
+
+That is a treaty that cannot become obsolete until the powers who made
+it release Belgium from the restrictions and obligations which the
+treaty imposes. Germany pleads guilty in this matter of the violation of
+Belgian neutrality, though Mr. Shaw attempts to show her innocent, for
+the German Chancellor has said: "This is an infraction of international
+law--we are compelled to overrule the legitimate protests of the
+Luxemburg and Belgian Governments. We shall repair the wrong we are
+doing as soon as our military aims have been achieved." And again the
+Chancellor said the invasion of Belgium "is contrary to the law of
+nature." To Mr. Bernard Shaw's peculiar sense of international morality
+such dealing is not, however, repugnant.
+
+
+*No "Right of Way" in Belgium.*
+
+In his letter to President Wilson Mr. Shaw, either willfully or
+ignorantly, seeks to confuse the neutrality of a neutralized State such
+as Belgium and the neutrality of an ordinary State such as Italy, and he
+pretends that violation of the first sort of neutrality creates a
+situation in no way different from that created by the violation of the
+second and normal sort of neutrality. I would refer Mr. Shaw to "The
+Case for Belgium" issued by the Belgian delegates to the United States
+wherein they point out that "the peculiarity about Belgian neutrality is
+that it has been imposed upon her by the powers as the one condition
+upon which they recognized her national existence."
+
+The consequence of this is that whereas Italy and the United States and
+other powers having a similar status can, subject to the risk of attack
+from an affronted belligerent, please themselves whether or not they
+condone a violation of their neutrality, Belgium and the other
+neutralized States cannot condone such violation, but must either resist
+all breaches of their neutrality or surrender their right to existence.
+And further a neutralized State, putting faith in the treaty that
+guarantees its existence and its neutrality, refrains naturally from
+that preparation for war which would be deemed necessary in the absence
+of such a treaty.
+
+There is no such thing as the "right of way" through neutralized Belgium
+which Mr. Shaw claims on behalf of belligerent Germany. Far from
+exercising a right of way Germany has violently committed a trespass,
+offering a German promise, a mere "scrap of paper," as reparation. "A
+right of way," argues Bernard Shaw, "is not a right of conquest"; but
+the truth is that in passing through Belgium Germany assumed dominion
+over Belgium, which dominion she has since formally asserted and is
+seeking forcibly to maintain.
+
+
+*A New Shavian Theory.*
+
+No comprehension does Mr. Shaw display of the hurt to the Belgians'
+sense of honor involved in Germany's use of their territory for purposes
+hostile to their friendly neighbor, France. To be forced into injuring a
+friend is an outrage, indeed, and Mr. Shaw surely knows too much of
+matters military to be unaware that to permit a right of way to one
+combatant amounts to making an attack upon the other, and that Germany,
+by the very fact of crossing Belgium soil, was forcing Belgium to be the
+enemy of France. Only by their great heroism were the Belgians able to
+escape this infamy that had been planned for them.
+
+To be conquered does not really matter! There we have another Shavian
+theory. How grateful would the would-be world-ruling Kaiser feel to Mr.
+Shaw were he to succeed in inoculating the peoples of Europe and of
+America with that theory! So would the task of putting the peoples under
+the German yoke (otherwise known as German culture) be made easier--and
+cheaper. But the spirit of national freedom, which is as precious to
+humanity as is the spirit of individual freedom, cannot be driven out by
+words any more than it can be driven out by blows. The most unlettered
+Belgian soldier, fighting for a truth that is at the very heart and
+depth of all things true, puts the mere wordmonger to shame.
+
+That Great Britain does not fight only for Belgium is certainly a fact,
+though Belgium's plight alone would have been enough to bring us into
+the conflict. We fight also for France, because she is wrongfully
+attacked, and because she is by her civilization and culture one of the
+world's treasures. We fight for the all-sufficient reason of
+self-defense.
+
+There is the case for Britain, and despite his special pleading for
+Germany, Mr. Shaw can show no flaw in it. He does say, however, that the
+British Government, instead of first seeking a mild way of preserving
+peace, ought to have said point blank to Germany: "If you attack France
+we shall attack you." I also think that such a declaration would have
+been the right one. To me and to many others the thought that our
+country might stand by and watch inactively an attack upon France was
+intolerable. Great was our relief when this apprehension was removed by
+the British Government's declaration of war. Why did not the British
+Government say to Germany before the war cloud burst that Britain would
+fight to defend France, and why did the Government delay so long in
+declaring war? Mr. Shaw does not give the reason, but I will give it.
+
+It was that the Government feared opposition to our entering into the
+war would come from a Radico-Socialist literary clique in London, from a
+section of the Liberal press, and from certain Liberal and Labor
+politicians who had been deceived by German professors and other
+missionaries of the Kaiser into thinking the German peril did not exist.
+When Belgium was invaded most of these misguided ones were unable to
+cling any longer to their "keep out of it" policy, and then the
+Government felt free to act. Yet the Government need not have waited,
+because with the facts before them the people as a whole would perfectly
+have understood the necessity of fighting even had Belgium not been
+invaded.
+
+Henceforward the general public must be kept informed of what is
+happening in the international world. Foreign politics must be conducted
+with greater publicity. There, at least, Bernard Shaw is right, but this
+is a reform which he and his fellow-men have failed to effect, whereas
+women, had they been voters, would have demanded and secured it long
+ago.
+
+Now, although undue diplomatic secrecy, always wrong, will be especially
+wrong when the terms of peace come to be made, sentimentality will
+certainly be more mischievous still. It is difficult to resist the
+conclusion that Bernard Shaw's writings on the war are intended as an
+appeal to sentimentality--an appeal that Germany at the close of the war
+shall have treatment which, by being more than just to her, would be
+less than just to the countries whom she has attacked, and would mean a
+recurrence of this appalling war in after years.
+
+Before the war specious words were used to cloak the German policy of
+aggression which has plunged the world in horror and is martyrizing
+peoples. In view of the coming victory of the Allies, the same tactics
+will be adopted by the German militarists, and it behooves Bernard Shaw
+to beware lest even without intent he serve as their tool. Men such as
+he who believe that while they can never be in the wrong, their country
+can never be in the right, are just the men who are in danger of
+stumbling at this time.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTABEL PANKHURST.
+
+_Photo (C) by Underwood & Underwood._
+
+_See Page 68_]
+
+[Illustration: JAMES M. BARRIE. _See Page 100_]
+
+
+
+
+*Comment by Readers of Shaw*
+
+ *Shaw Has Made Minister von Jagow's Remark on a "Scrap of Paper"
+ Understandable.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+Most hearty thanks for that masterly "common-sense" article of Bernard
+Shaw. How clearly he expresses the much that many of us have felt way
+down inside and have not been able to formulate even to ourselves!
+
+He has made at least one woman--and one of German parentage at
+that--understand what reams of public and private communications from
+all over the Fatherland could not make clear: just why the blunt,
+impetuous, shocked, and astounded Kaiser dared give utterance to that
+disgraceful "scrap of paper" remark--inexcusable but also very
+understandable in the light of his knowledge of and confidence in a more
+astute miscreant; why France and Germany have always considered England
+more or less of a Tartuffe and a "Scheinheilige" (one who seems holy);
+and why every German--man, woman and child--so execrates Sir Edward Grey
+and colleagues.
+
+Nothing in all the sickening present conditions, the future long-lasting
+woe and misery, the barbarous neutrality violations has so made me blush
+for my mother's country as the "scrap of paper" incident; and it has
+been most bitter to listen to the extravagant, fantastic eulogies on
+England, with which we've been so favored without feeling honestly able
+to make any excuses whatever for Germany.
+
+But now--thanks to that article--I can understand what I may not
+condone, and, though abhorring the Kaiser and my mother's compatriots
+for their share in that horror going on abroad, I can also pity the
+hot-headed, imperfect mere man going to war under a carefully incited
+and fostered misapprehension, and need no longer glorify the
+cool-headed, sapient policy which so cleverly duped ruler and people.
+
+Not since the war began have I felt so undepressed, so free to
+sympathize where I so love, so free from having to commend those for
+whom I feel no love whatever. For all of which accept the warmest thanks
+of
+
+KATE HUDSON.
+
+New York, Nov. 17.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*Shaw Article Work of "Farceur."*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+"Common sense and Shaw!" Shaw begins his article by saying, "I am giving
+my views for what they are worth, with a malicious bias." Later on he
+says: "I am writing history." Toward the end, after having obscured with
+words many things which had hitherto been clear to most people, he says:
+"Now that we begin to see where we really are, &c." How Shavian!
+
+There are at least two sides to all questions, and so long as they are
+reasonably presented one is glad to hear them even if they fail to
+convince, but when a farceur is allowed to occupy three whole pages
+usually filled by serious and interesting writers it seems time to
+protest. The subject itself is not one for easy paradox or false and
+flippant epigram.
+
+Mr. Shaw says he does not hold his tongue easily. He certainly does not,
+and when it wags it wags foolishly, and, as he admits, maliciously,
+albeit sometimes amusingly, and with superficial brilliance. He says the
+Irish do not consider England their country yet. Of course they do not.
+Why should the Irish consider themselves English? Neither do the Scots,
+nor the Welsh, nor the Canadians, nor will they ever so think. But they
+are all British, and so, despite all Mr. Shaw says to the contrary,
+Kitchener was right.
+
+Mr. Shaw falls into a common and regrettable error when he continually
+writes England when he really means the British Empire. It is the
+British Empire that is at war, for which, though a citizen, Mr. Shaw has
+no authority to speak or to be considered a representative, for, as he
+unnecessarily admits, he is not a "British patriot"; neither is he a
+"Junker," for I have looked through all his definitions of the word, and
+none applies to him.
+
+In what way is the "Battle of Dorking" like Bernhardi? The one he says
+had as a moral: "To arms! or the Germans will besiege London!" The other
+said: "To arms! so that the Germans may besiege London, or any other
+country that does not want compulsory culture!" The one was defensive,
+the other offensive.
+
+He says of the war: "We" began it. Since he says he is not English, and
+that it is an English war, whom does he mean by "We"? If he means the
+British, then, should a policeman see a small boy being ill-treated by a
+large man and go to the help of that boy, he, the policeman, must be
+said to have begun the fight which would probably ensue between him and
+said man, notwithstanding that the policeman is only fulfilling what he
+has sworn to do.
+
+Monaco, he says, "seems to be, on the whole, the most prosperous and
+comfortable State in Europe." If this is buffoonery it is singularly out
+of place. But even Monaco has an "army," has had recently a small
+revolution, and the Monegasques do not consider themselves ideally
+comfortable, and they have many "injustices." Does he hold the
+principality up as a model administration and the source of its
+prosperity as above reproach?
+
+Mr. Shaw represents no one but himself, and, like all small men, he
+reviles others greater than he, such as Sir Edward Grey and Mr. Asquith,
+but it does not become him, looking at his own life's history, to cast
+cheap sneers at anonymous journalists in cheap newspapers, who, though
+they may lack his literary style, possess, at least, one virtue which he
+boasts that he has not--patriotism! Yours very truly,
+
+LAWRENCE GRANT.
+
+New York, Nov. 18.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*Antidote to "Long Infliction of Dreary Stuff."*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+Hail to Bernard Shaw! Could anything be more refreshing? After the long
+infliction upon us of the flood of dreary stuff from London and Paris,
+and all the talk of German militarism, and what is to become of it at
+the hands of such immaculately unmilitary apostles of peace and
+international righteousness and treaty observances as Russia, France,
+and England, and all the maudlin denunciations of the German Nietzsche
+and Bernhardi, and the terrible Kaiser, could anything be more
+refreshing than Shaw's advent in the field of current war history?
+
+Though an Anglo-Saxon of American birth and long descent, and no
+believer in militarism of any sort of itself, yet I see in that no
+reason to distort ancient history by an attempt to make it appear that
+German militarism is at all the chief sinner, or, for that matter, not a
+very necessary and desirable thing in order that Germany may have her
+rightful place in the world, or any place at all.
+
+V.A.W. Warwick, N.Y., Nov. 16.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*False Assumptions Basis of Shaw's Attack.*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+The article on the European war by Mr. G.B. Shaw in THE TIMES of Sunday
+appeals to me as a noteworthy specimen of what an artful literary genius
+can do in the way of argumentative cantankerousness. His chief grievance
+is British diplomacy as represented by Sir Edward Grey, upon whose
+devoted head he empties the vials of his splenetic humor.
+
+Underlying his argument are two glaringly false assumptions, and on
+these the whole fabric rests. The first is that a certain undefined but
+presumably multitudinous body, which he designates as "Socialist,"
+"Democratic," and "Social Democratic," is better qualified to determine
+the policy and conduct the correspondence of the Foreign Office than
+trained and experienced statesmen.
+
+The second is that Sir Edward Grey should have followed the suggestion
+of Sazonof and threatened Germany with war at a certain stage of the
+correspondence. This can now be only a matter of opinion, but it may be
+confidently affirmed that of all nations the Germany of this day would
+be the last to back down in face of a threat. It may be also said
+generally that an open threat is about the surest way to bring on a war.
+Austria threatened Servia and war ensued. Germany threatened Russia and
+war ensued. Germany threatened Belgium--in the form of a notification
+that she intended to invade her territory--and war ensued.
+
+Mr. Shaw's contentions are grotesque.
+
+Flushing, Nov. 16. SAM TEST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*"Junkers" Controlled Old World Ages Before Shaw.*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times:_
+
+With regard to the article by Mr. Bernard Shaw, the gist of the matter
+can be compressed in fewer words. The ideas expressed are not the
+exclusive property of Mr. Shaw. The Old World for indefinite ages has
+been controlled and directed by what he calls the "Junker" class, the
+rich and idle aristocrats who want for nothing, and, being born to rule,
+do not find it worth while to exert themselves mentally, and for whom
+there is no suitable profession but the army and diplomacy.
+
+The mass of the people are to them the great unwashed, and those a
+little higher in the scale "cads and bounders," or the German
+equivalent, in fact the canaille of the French who at the time of the
+Revolution took things into their own hands to the great surprise of
+everybody. This substratum is not considered in the scheme of the
+"Junker's" existence, though the lower orders alone are the workers and
+producers and make ease and luxury possible.
+
+Mr. Shaw. I believe, intends to intimate that there might be a use for
+the intellectual class, the thinkers and writers with the imagination
+that can put them mentally in the place of the individuals who make up
+the masses, think the thoughts and live the lives vicariously of the
+people who are the nation, and if the "Junker" class of England and
+Germany and kindred nations who govern and dictate its policies were
+leavened with the brains and broad-mindedness of the thinkers there
+might be found a better use for men than killing each other and a
+brighter outlook for the world which is now filled with widows and
+orphans.
+
+Mrs. F.B. WILLIAMSON.
+
+Elizabeth, N.J., Nov, 16.
+
+
+
+
+*Open Letter to President Wilson*[A]
+
+*By George Bernard Shaw.*
+
+
+Sir: I petition you to invite the neutral powers to confer with the
+United States of America for the purpose of requesting Britain, France,
+and Germany to withdraw from the soil of Belgium and fight out their
+quarrel on their own territories. However the sympathies of the neutral
+States may be divided, and whatever points now at issue between the
+belligerent powers may be doubtful, there is one point on which there
+can be neither division nor doubt, and that is that the belligerent
+armies have no right to be in Belgium, much less to fight in Belgium,
+and involve the innocent inhabitants of that country in their reciprocal
+slaughter. You will not question my right to address this petition to
+you. You are the official head of the nation that is beyond all question
+or comparison the chief of the neutral powers, marked out from all the
+rest by commanding magnitude, by modern democratic constitution, and by
+freedom from the complication of monarchy and its traditions, which have
+led Europe into the quaint absurdity of a war waged formally between the
+German Kaiser, the German Czar, the German King of the Belgians, the
+German King of England, the German Emperor of Austria, and a gentleman
+who shares with you the distinction of not being related to any of them,
+and is therefore describable monarchically as one Poincaré, a Frenchman.
+
+I make this petition on its merits, without claiming any representative
+character except such as attaches to me as a human being. Nobody here
+has asked me to do it. Except among the large class of constitutional
+beggars, the normal English feeling is that it is no use asking for a
+thing if you feel certain that it will be refused, and are not in a
+position to enforce compliance. Also, that the party whose request is
+refused and not enforced looks ridiculous. Many Englishmen will say that
+a request to the belligerents to evacuate Belgium forthwith would be
+refused; could not be enforced; and would make the asker ridiculous. We
+are, in short, not a prayerful nation. But to you it will be clear that
+even the strongest power, or even allied group of powers, can have its
+position completely changed by an expression of the public opinion of
+the rest of the world. In your clear western atmosphere and in your
+peculiarly responsible position as the head centre of western democracy,
+you, when the European situation became threatening three months ago,
+must have been acutely aware of the fact to which Europe was so fatally
+blinded--namely, that the simple solution of the difficulty in which the
+menace of the Franco-Russo-British Entente placed Germany was for the
+German Emperor to leave his western frontier under the safeguard of the
+neighborliness and good faith of American, British, and French
+democracy, and then await quite calmly any action that Russia might take
+against his country on the east. Had he done so, we could not have
+attacked him from behind; and had France made such an attack--and it is
+in the extremest degree improbable that French public opinion would have
+permitted such a hazardous and unjustifiable adventure--he would at
+worst have confronted it with the fullest sympathy of Britain and the
+United States, and at best with their active assistance. Unhappily,
+German Kings do not allow democracy to interfere in their foreign
+policy; do not believe in neighborliness; and do believe in cannon and
+cannon fodder. The Kaiser never dreamed of confiding his frontier to you
+and to the humanity of his neighbors. And the diplomatists of Europe
+never thought of that easy and right policy, and could not suggest any
+substitute for it, with the hideous result which is before you.
+
+
+*The State of Belgium.*
+
+Now that this mischief has been done, and the two European thunderclouds
+have met and are discharging their lightnings, it is not for me to
+meddle with the question whether the United States should take a side in
+their warfare as far as it concerns themselves alone. But I may plead
+for a perfectly innocent neutral State, the State of Belgium, which is
+being ravaged in a horrible manner by the belligerents. Her surviving
+population is flying into all the neighboring countries to escape from
+the incessant hail of shrapnel and howitzer shells from British cannon,
+French cannon, German cannon, and, most tragic of all, Belgian cannon;
+for the Belgian Army is being forced to devastate its own country in its
+own defense.
+
+For this there can be no excuse; and at such a horror the rest of the
+world cannot look on in silence without incurring the guilt of the
+bystander who witnesses a crime without even giving the alarm. I grant
+that Belgium, in her extreme peril, made one mistake. She called to her
+aid the powers of the Entente alone instead of calling on the whole
+world of kindly men. She should have called on America, too; and it is
+hard to see how you could in honor have disregarded that call. But if
+Belgium says nothing, but only turns her eyes dumbly toward you while
+you look at the red ruin in which her villages, her heaps of slain, her
+monuments and treasures are being hurled by her friends and enemies
+alike, are you any the less bound to speak out than if Belgium had asked
+you to send her a million soldiers?
+
+Not for a moment do I suggest that your intervention should be an
+intervention on behalf of either the Allies or the Entente. If you
+consider both sides equally guilty, we know that you can find reasons
+for that verdict. But Belgium is innocent; and it is on behalf of
+Belgium that so much of the world as is still at peace is waiting for a
+lead from you. No other question need be prejudged. If Germany maintains
+her claim to a right of way through Belgium on a matter which she
+believed (however erroneously) to be one of life and death to her as a
+nation, nobody, not even China, now pretends that such rights of way
+have not their place among those common human rights which are superior
+to the more artificial rights of nationality. I think, for example, that
+if Russia made a descent on your continent under circumstances which
+made it essential to the maintenance of your national freedom that you
+should move an army through Canada, you would ask our leave to do so,
+and take it by force if we did not grant it. You may reasonably suspect,
+even if all our statesmen raise a shriek of denial, that we should take
+a similar liberty under similar circumstances in the teeth of all the
+scraps of paper in our Foreign Office dustbin. You see, I am frank with
+you, and fair, I hope, to Germany. But a right of way is not a right of
+conquest; and even the right of way was not, as the Imperial Chancellor
+imagined, a matter of life and death at all, but a militarist
+hallucination, and one that has turned out, so far, a military mistake.
+In short, there was no such case of overwhelming necessity as would have
+made the denial of a right of way to the German Army equivalent to a
+refusal to save German independence from destruction, and therefore to
+an act of war against her, justifying a German conquest of Belgium. You
+can therefore leave the abstract question of international rights of way
+quite unprejudiced by your action. You can leave every question between
+the belligerents fully open, and yet, in the common interest of the
+world, ask Germany to clear out of Belgium, into France or across the
+Channel, if she can, back home if she can force no other passage, but at
+all events out of Belgium. A like request would, of course, be addressed
+to Britain and to France at the same time. The technical correctness of
+our diplomatic position as to Belgium may be unimpeachable; but as the
+effect of our shells on Belgium is precisely the same as that of the
+German shells, and as by fighting on Belgian soil we are doing her
+exactly the same injury that we should have done her if the violation of
+her neutrality had been initiated by us instead of by Germany, we could
+not decently refuse to fall in with a general evacuation.
+
+
+*A Certain Result of Intervention.*
+
+At all events, your intervention could not fail to produce at least the
+result that even if the belligerents refused to comply, your request
+would leave them in an entirely new and very unpleasant relation to
+public opinion. No matter how powerful a State is, it is not above
+feeling the vast difference between doing something that nobody condemns
+and something that everybody condemns except the interested parties.
+
+That difference alone would be well worth your pains. But it is by no
+means a foregone conclusion that a blank refusal would be persisted in.
+Germany must be aware that the honor of England is now so bound up with
+the complete redemption of Belgium from the German occupation that to
+keep Antwerp and Brussels she must take Portsmouth and London. France is
+no less deeply engaged. You can judge better than I what chance Germany
+now has, or can persuade herself she has, of exhausting or overwhelming
+her western enemies without ruining herself in the attempt. Whatever
+else the war and its horrors may have done or not done, you will agree
+with me that it has made an end of the dreams of military and naval
+steam-rollering in which the whole wretched business began. At a cost
+which the conquest of a whole continent would hardly justify, these
+terrible armaments and the heroic hosts which wield them push one
+another a few miles back and forward in a month, and take and retake
+some miserable village three times over in less than a week. Can you
+doubt that though we have lost all fear of being beaten, (our darkened
+towns, and the panics of our papers, with their endless scares and silly
+inventions, are mere metropolitan hysteria,) we are getting very tired
+of a war in which, having now re-established our old military
+reputation, and taught the Germans that there is no future for their
+empire without our friendship and that of France, we have nothing more
+to gain? In London and Paris and Berlin nobody at present dares say
+"Sirs, ye are brethren; why do ye wrong one to another?"; for the
+slightest disposition toward a Christian view of things is regarded as a
+shooting matter in these capitals; but Washington is still privileged to
+talk common humanity to the nations.
+
+
+*An Advantage of Aloofness.*
+
+Finally, I may remind you of another advantage which your aloofness from
+the conflict gives you. Here, in England and in France, men are going to
+the front every day; their women and children are all within earshot;
+and no man is hard-hearted enough to say the worst that might be said of
+what is going on in Belgium now. We talk to you of Louvain and Rheims in
+the hope of enlisting you on our side or prejudicing you against the
+Germans, forgetting how sorely you must be tempted to say as you look on
+at what we are doing, "Well, if European literature, as represented by
+the library of Louvain, and European religion, as represented by the
+Cathedral of Rheims, have not got us beyond this, in God's name let them
+perish." I am thinking of other things--of the honest Belgians, whom I
+have seen nursing their wounds, and whom I recognize at a glance as
+plain men, innocent of all warlike intentions, trusting to the wisdom
+and honesty of the rulers and diplomatists who have betrayed them, taken
+from their farms and their businesses to destroy and be destroyed for no
+good purpose that might not have been achieved better and sooner by
+neighborly means. I am thinking of the authentic news that no papers
+dare publish, not of the lies that they all publish to divert attention
+from the truth. In America these things can be said without driving
+American mothers and wives mad; here, we have to set our teeth and go
+forward. We cannot be just; we cannot see beyond the range of our guns.
+The roar of the shrapnel deafens us; the black smoke of the howitzer
+blinds us; and what these do to our bodily senses our passions do to our
+imaginations. For justice, we must do as the mediaeval cities did--call
+in a stranger. You are not altogether that to us; but you can look at
+all of us impartially. And you are the spokesman of Western democracy.
+That is why I appeal to you.
+
+G. BERNARD SHAW.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[A] The English newspaper, The Nation, in which Mr. Shaw's letter to the
+President of the United States appeared on Nov. 7, made the following
+comment thereon:
+
+We are glad to publish Mr. Shaw's brilliant appeal to the President of
+the United States, because we believe that when the time for settlement
+arrives, the influence of America will be a powerful, perhaps a
+decisive, factor in obtaining it. We agree, too, with him that while she
+is not likely to respond to an appeal to intervene on the side of the
+Entente or the Alliance, the case of Belgium, the innocent victim of the
+war, is bound to find her in a very different mood. The States are
+already Belgium's almoner; it is only a step further for them to come in
+as her savior. But on a vital point we disagree with Mr. Shaw. His Irish
+mind puts the case with an indifference to which we cannot pretend. We
+have got to save Western Europe from a victory of Prussian militarism,
+as well as to avenge Belgium and set her on her feet again. We regard
+the temper and policy revealed in Germany's violation of Belgium soil
+and her brutalization of the Belgian people as essential to our judgment
+of this war and its end. And we dare not concede an inch to Mr. Shaw's
+"right of way" theory. His distinction between "right of way" and a
+"right of conquest" has no practical effect other than to extinguish the
+rights of small nationalities as against great ones, who alone have the
+power to take a "right of way" when it is refused, and afterward to turn
+it into a right of conquest. Germany's action was not only a breach of
+her own treaty (only revealed within a few hours of its execution), but
+of Article I. of The Hague Convention on the rights of neutral powers:
+
+ "THE TERRITORY OF NEUTRAL POWERS IS INVIOLABLE."
+
+It is not therefore a small thing that Germany has ripped clean through
+the whole fabric of The Hague Conventions of 1907. Could the American
+Government, aware of that fact, address herself to intervention on the
+Belgian question without regard to the breaches of international law
+which were perpetrated, first, through the orignal German invasion of
+Belgium, and then in the conduct of the campaign in that country?
+
+
+
+
+*A German Letter to G. Bernard Shaw*
+
+By Herbert Eulenberg.
+
+ _The following letter from the noted German playwright Eulenberg,
+ whose plays of a decided modern tendency have been presented
+ extensively in Germany and in Vienna, was made public by the German
+ Press Bureau of New York in October_, 1914.
+
+Bernard Shaw: You have addressed us Germans several times of late
+without receiving a reply from us. The reason for this was probably the
+momentary bitterness against your country of our people's intellectual
+representatives. Indeed, our best scholars and artists, Ernst Haeckel at
+81 years, leading the rest, stripped themselves during these past weeks
+of all the honors which England had apportioned them. Permit me as one
+who had the opportunity to do much for the propagation of your dramatic
+works, especially of your finest drama, "Candida," in Western Germany
+and in Holland, to present as quiet and as moderate a retort as is
+possible.
+
+Your appeal to intellectual Germany we reciprocate with a question to
+intellectual England. It is as follows: How is it possible for you to
+witness your country's present unheard of policy (so opposed to culture)
+without rising as one man against it? Do you believe that we thinking
+Germans would ever, without saying or doing anything, observe an
+alliance of our Government, whose goal was the strengthening of
+imperialism and the subjugation and destruction of a cultured power,
+such as France or England? Never! Among your people only a very small
+number of brave scholars protested against this criminal alliance of
+your Government at the beginning of the war. You others, you poets,
+painters, and musicians of present-day England were silent and permitted
+Sir Edward Grey to continue to sin against a people related to you by
+blood and intellect. You raised your voice a little, Bernard Shaw! But
+what did you propose to us: "Refrain from your militarism, my dear
+Germans, and become again the congenial, complacent poets and thinkers,
+the people of Goethe and Beethoven, whom no one hated! Then we will
+surely help you against the bad Russians!"
+
+Is not this proposal a bit too naïve for you, Bernard Shaw? We are
+situated in the midst of Russians and Frenchmen, who have formed an open
+alliance against us for more than twenty years. Our neighbors in the
+East denounce nothing more than us, and our neighbors in the West
+denounce us and plan against us, who have for nearly half a century
+evinced nothing but friendliness toward them. When such enemies surround
+us, does not your friendly counsel, Bernard Shaw, seem as if you said to
+us: "Just let yourself be massacred, Germans! Afterward your British
+cousins will vouchsafe you their protection."
+
+
+*Germany Not Isolated.*
+
+Do you think that we would carry on our militarism and our expensive
+drilling if we lived on an island as you do? We would not think of it.
+We would speedily dispatch a blood-thirsty butcher, like your Lord
+Kitchener, from our island to our most unhealthy colony. We could not
+even reconcile our worthy Dr. Karl Peters, who had dealt a little
+unscrupulously with a few negro women, with our conceptions of culture,
+and had to pass him over to you! But the thought shall not come to me or
+to us, as it does to your Prime Ministers, to pose as angels of light, a
+fact about which you have yourself told your compatriots the bitter
+truth to our great joy. We admit having injured Belgium's neutrality,
+but we have only done it because of dire necessity, because we could not
+otherwise reach France and take up the fight against two sides forced
+upon us. Belgium's independence and freedom, which is suddenly of the
+utmost importance to your King and your Ministers, we have not touched.
+Even after the expeditious capture of Liége we asked Belgium for the
+second time: "Let us pass quickly through your country. We will make
+good every damage, and will not take away a square foot of your country!
+Do destroyers of liberty and Huns and vandals, or whatever other
+defamatory names your English papers now heap upon us, who at the time
+of Beethoven and Schopenhauer formed the Areopagus of culture, conduct
+themselves in such a way? Does not one of your living spirits in England
+cry aloud at the reprehensible alliance which your Government has made
+over your heads with Russia and Japan? On the most shameful day in
+English history, on the day when Mongolian Japan gave the German people
+her ultimatum at the instigation of your politicians, on this, I repeat
+it, most shameful day in the entire English history, I believed that the
+great dead in Westminster Abbey would rise from their graves horrified
+at the shameful deed which their grandsons and great-grandsons imposed
+upon old England.
+
+
+*The Land of Shakespeare.*
+
+We Germans venerated the old England almost as a fatherland. We have
+recognized, understood, and studied Shakespeare, whom you, Bernard Shaw,
+so dislike, more than any other people, even more than the English
+nation itself. Lord Byron received more benefits from Goethe alone than
+from all of England put together. Newton, Darwin, and Adam Smith found
+in Germany their best supporters and interpreters. The dramatic writers
+of latter-day England, most worthy of mention, from Oscar Wilde to you,
+Galsworthy and Knoblauch, are recognized by us and their plays performed
+numberless times. We have always endeavored to understand the English
+character. "Nowhere did we feel so much at home as in Germany," all your
+compatriots will tell you who have been guests here.
+
+In "gratitude" for this our merchants were persecuted for years by your
+merchants, because of a wild hatred for Germans, which, by the way, had
+a most disagreeable effect upon the races of other colors. In
+"gratitude," with but few exceptions which we will not forget, we are
+now abused and belittled by your press before all of Europe and America
+as if we were assassins, vagabonds, enemies of culture and murderers,
+far worse than the Russians. As thanks for that you have entered upon a
+war against us, for which even Sir Edward Grey could not at first give a
+good reason until the injury of Belgium neutrality luckily came to his
+assistance.
+
+Our people are, therefore, now rightly embittered against England
+because through your groundless participation you have made more
+difficult the war against Russia and France, for which one alone, the
+Czar of Russia, bears the blame. But despite this great bitterness they
+would never approve the demolition of your country and your nation,
+because of their respect for your great past and your share in the
+development of culture in Europe. You, however, joined an alliance as a
+third great power, whose only purpose is our dissolution and
+destruction. Merely for reasons of justice and of moral courage a Pitt,
+a Burke, a Disraeli would have withdrawn their participation in such an
+alliance, which--Oh, heroic deed--falls upon the Germans by threes, no,
+by fours or fives. Your present-day statesmen, wholly unworthy of
+representing a people with your past and your inheritance, incite the
+Mongolians and blacks against us, your brother nation. They steal and
+permit our small and insufficiently protected colonies to be stolen and
+no not care a jot for all considerations of Europeans' culture and
+morals.
+
+
+*An Unnatural Russian Alliance.*
+
+England, once the home and the refuge for all free spirits from the days
+of the Inquisition, from Rousseau until Freiligrath and Karl Marx,
+England has allied herself with Russia--the prison and the horror of all
+friends of liberty! Hear ye, hear ye illustrious dead, who lived and
+struggled for the freedom and the greatest possible joy of mankind, and
+shake in your tombs with disgust and with horror! But you living ones,
+and you, Bernard Shaw, the foremost of all English artists, do
+everything in your power to break this terrible alliance and make it
+powerless for England. Much more lies in the balance for her than is
+understood by your present nearsighted politicians, who have in mind
+only the momentary advantages. The destruction of the German power is
+not the only thing in question here; no, it concerns a great part of
+civilized Europe in regard to the suspension of their hard-won political
+liberty; and England, the people of the Magna Charta, the first free
+Constitution, can never be a party to that. That is why we call to you,
+Bernard Shaw, in the name of Europe, and ask you for your voice in the
+struggle.
+
+It is a splendid thing that this serious time has also aroused the
+poets, the thinkers and artists as political and diplomatic advisers,
+and we should not let ourselves be crowded out of this profession, for
+which, thanks to our minds, we are not less fitted than the high-brow
+Lords and Counts. Men of our guild from Thucydides and Herodotus to
+Petrarch and Rubens, and our Humboldt and your Beaconsfield have ever
+shown themselves to be good intermediaries and peace advocates. And
+that, believe me, Bernard Shaw, is of more importance to our people, as
+well as to our Kaiser, who for over twenty-five years has avoided war
+like a poison, than all other bloody laurels. Here's to a decent,
+honorable and "eternal" peace.
+
+HERBERT EULENBERG.
+
+
+
+
+*British Authors Defend England's War*
+
+
+ _One of the most interesting documents brought forth about the war
+ was issued Sept. 17 in London. It was signed by fifty-three of the
+ leading British writers. Herewith are presented the text of their
+ defense of England and their autograph signatures in facsimile._
+
+The undersigned writers, comprising among them men of the most divergent
+political and social views, some of them having been for years ardent
+champions of good-will toward Germany, and many of them extreme
+advocates of peace, are nevertheless agreed that Great Britain could not
+without dishonor have refused to take part in the present war. No one
+can read the full diplomatic correspondence published in the "White
+Paper" without seeing that the British representatives were throughout
+laboring whole-heartedly to preserve the peace of Europe, and that their
+conciliatory efforts were cordially received by both France and Russia.
+
+When these efforts failed Great Britain had still no direct quarrel with
+any power. She was eventually compelled to take up arms because,
+together with France, Germany, and Austria, she had solemnly pledged
+herself to maintain the neutrality of Belgium. As soon as danger to that
+neutrality arose she questioned both France and Germany as to their
+intentions. France immediately renewed her pledge not to violate Belgian
+neutrality; Germany refused to answer, and soon made all answer needless
+by her actions. Without even the pretense of a grievance against Belgium
+she made war on the weak and unoffending country she had undertaken to
+protect, and has since carried out her invasion with a calculated and
+ingenious ferocity which has raised questions other and no less grave
+than that of the willful disregard of treaties.
+
+When Belgium in her dire need appealed to Great Britain to carry out her
+pledge, that country's course was clear. She had either to break faith,
+letting the sanctity of treaties and the rights of small nations count
+for nothing before the threat of naked force, or she had to fight. She
+did not hesitate, and we trust she will not lay down arms till Belgium's
+integrity is restored and her wrongs redressed.
+
+The treaty with Belgium made our duty clear, but many of us feel that,
+even if Belgium had not been involved, it would have been impossible for
+Great Britain to stand aside while France was dragged into war and
+destroyed. To permit the ruin of France would be a crime against liberty
+and civilization. Even those of us who question the wisdom of a policy
+of Continental ententes or alliances refuse to see France struck down by
+a foul blow dealt in violation of a treaty.
+
+We observe that various German apologists, official and semi-official,
+admit that their country had been false to its pledged word, and dwell
+almost with pride on the "frightfulness" of the examples by which it has
+sought to spread terror in Belgium, but they excuse all these
+proceedings by a strange and novel plea. German culture and civilization
+are so superior to those of other nations that all steps taken to assert
+them are more than justified, and the destiny of Germany to be the
+dominating force in Europe and the world is so manifest that ordinary
+rules of morality do not hold in her case, but actions are good or bad
+simply as they help or hinder the accomplishment of that destiny.
+
+These views, inculcated upon the present generation of Germans by many
+celebrated historians and teachers, seem to us both dangerous and
+insane. Many of us have dear friends in Germany, many of us regard
+German culture with the highest respect and gratitude; but we cannot
+admit that any nation has the right by brute force to impose its culture
+upon other nations, nor that the iron military bureaucracy of Prussia
+represents a higher form of human society than the free Constitutions of
+Western Europe.
+
+Whatever the world destiny of Germany may be, we in Great Britain are
+ourselves conscious of a destiny and a duty. That destiny and duty,
+alike for us and for all the English-speaking race, call upon us to
+uphold the rule of common justice between civilized peoples, to defend
+the rights of small nations, and to maintain the free and law-abiding
+ideals of Western Europe against the rule of "Blood and Iron" and the
+domination of the whole Continent by a military caste.
+
+For these reasons and others the undersigned feel bound to support the
+cause of the Allies with all their strength, with a full conviction of
+its righteousness, and with a deep sense of its vital import to the
+future of the world.
+
+[Illustration: Signatures]
+
+[Illustration: Signatures]
+
+
+
+
+*WHO'S WHO AMONG THE SIGNERS.*
+
+WILLIAM ARCHER, dramatic critic and editor of Ibsen's works, author of
+"Life of Macready," "Real Conversations," "The Great Analysis," and
+(with Granville Barker) "A National Theatre."
+
+H. GRANVILLE BARKER, actor, dramatist, and manager, shares with his wife
+management of the Kingsway Theatre, London; author of "The Voysey
+Inheritance," and (with Laurence Housman) "Prunella."
+
+SIR JAMES MATTHEW BARRIE, creator of "Sentimental Tommy" and "Peter
+Pan," famous for his sympathetic studies of Scotch life and his
+fantastic comedies.
+
+HILAIRE BELLOC, best known as a writer on history, politics, and
+economics; a recognized authority on the French Revolution.
+
+ARNOLD BENNETT, author of many popular realistic studies of English
+provincial life, including "Clayhanger" and "Hilda Lessways."
+
+ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER BENSON, chiefly known for "From a College Window,"
+"Beside Still Waters," and other volumes of essays.
+
+EDWARD FREDERIC BENSON, brother of the preceding, author of many novels
+of modern life, including "Dodo."
+
+VERY REV. MONSIGNOR ROBERT HUGH BENSON, the youngest of the three famous
+Benson brothers. Besides numerous devotional and theological works,
+Monsignor Benson has written several widely appreciated historical
+novels.
+
+LAWRENCE BINYON, author of many lyrics and poetic dramas, Assistant
+Keeper in the British Museum, in charge of Oriental Prints and Drawings.
+
+ANDREW CECIL BRADLEY, critic, sometime Professor of Poetry at Oxford
+University, author of a standard work on Shakespeare.
+
+ROBERT BRIDGES, Poet-Laureate. Prominent as a physician before his
+poetry brought him the high honor he now enjoys.
+
+HALL CAINE, one of the most popular of contemporary novelists.
+
+R.C. CARTON, dramatist, author of "Lord and Lady Algy" and "A White
+Elephant."
+
+CHARLES HADDON CHAMBERS, dramatist, author of "John a Dreams," part
+author of "The Fatal Card."
+
+GILBERT K. CHESTERTON, essayist, novelist, poet; defender of orthodox
+thought by unorthodox methods.
+
+HUBERT HENRY DAVIES, dramatist, author of "The Mollusc" and "A Single
+Man."
+
+SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE, creator of "Sherlock Holmes."
+
+HERBERT ALBERT LAURENS FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University,
+author of "The Mediaeval Empire," "Napoleon Bonaparte," and other
+historical works.
+
+JOHN GALSWORTHY, a novelist and dramatist who has come into great
+prominence during the last five years, his plays, "Strife" and
+"Justice," and his novel, "The Dark Flower," being widely known.
+
+ANSTEY GUTHRIE, (F. ANSTEY,) author of "The Brass Bottle," "The Talking
+Horse," and other fantastic and humorous tales.
+
+SIR HENRY RIDER HAGGARD, author of many widely read romances, among them
+being "She."
+
+THOMAS HARDY, generally considered to be the greatest living English
+novelist.
+
+JANE ELLEN HARRISON, sometime Fellow and Lecturer at Newnham College,
+Cambridge University; writer of many standard works on classical
+religion, literature, and life.
+
+ANTHONY HOPE HAWKINS, (ANTHONY HOPE,) author of popular historical
+romance and sketches of modern society, including "The Prisoner of
+Zenda."
+
+MAURICE HEWLETT, poet and romantic novelist, author of "Earthworks Out
+of Tuscany" and other mediaeval tales.
+
+ROBERT HICHENS, novelist, author of "The Garden of Allah," "Bella
+Donna," and other stories.
+
+JEROME K. JEROME, humorist, famous for "Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow"
+and the "Three Men" series, and for his play "The Passing of the Third
+Floor Back."
+
+HENRY ARTHUR JONES, dramatist, author of "The Silver King," "The
+Hypocrites," and other plays.
+
+RUDYARD KIPLING needs no introduction to people who read the English
+language.
+
+WILLIAM J. LOCKE, author of "The Morals of Marcus," "Septimus," and "The
+Beloved Vagabond," which have been made into successful plays.
+
+EDWARD VERRAL LUCAS, associate editor of Punch and editor of several
+popular anthologies, author of "A Wanderer in Holland."
+
+JOHN WILLIAM MACKAIL, Professor of Poetry at Oxford University, author
+and editor of many volumes dealing with ancient Greek and Roman
+literature.
+
+JOHN MASEFIELD, known chiefly for his long poems of life among the
+British poor.
+
+ALFRED EDWARD WOODLEY MASON, writer of romantic novels, of which "The
+Four Feathers" and "The Turnstile" are perhaps the best known, and of
+several popular dramas.
+
+GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek at Oxford University since
+1908, editor and translator of Greek classics, perhaps the greatest
+Greek scholar now living.
+
+HENRY NEWBOLT, "laureate of the British Navy," author of "Drake's Drum"
+and many other songs.
+
+BARRY PAIN, author of "Eliza" and other novels and short stories of
+adventure, of many well-known parodies and poems.
+
+SIR GILBERT PARKER, of Canadian birth, poet and author of romantic
+novels, including "The Judgment House," and "The Right of Way."
+
+EDEN PHILLPOTTS, realistic novelist, noted for his exact portraits of
+the English rustic, author of "Down Dartmoor Way."
+
+SIR ARTHUR WING PINERO, one of the most popular of living dramatists.
+His plays include "Sweet Lavender" and "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray."
+
+SIR ARTHUR QUILLER-COUCH, Professor of English Literature at Cambridge
+University, poet, novelist, and writer of short stories.
+
+SIR OWEN SEAMAN, since 1906 editor of Punch, writer of parodies and
+light verse.
+
+GEORGE R. SIMS, journalist, poet, and author of many popular dramas,
+including "The Lights of London," "Two Little Vagabonds," and "Harbour
+Lights."
+
+MAY SINCLAIR, writer of novels dealing with modern moral problems, "The
+Divine Fire" and "The Combined Maze" being best known.
+
+FLORA ANNIE STEEL, author of "Tales from the Punjab," "On the Face of
+the Waters," "A Prince of Dreamers," and other novels and short stories,
+most of which deal with life in India.
+
+ALFRED SUTRO, dramatist, author of "The Walls of Jericho," "The
+Barrier," and other plays of modern society."
+
+GEORGE MACAULAY TREVELYAN, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge;
+author of "England Under the Stuarts," and other historical and
+biographical works.
+
+RT. HON. GEORGE OTTO TREVELYAN, historian, biographer of Macaulay, and
+author of a four-volume work on the American Revolution.
+
+HUMPHRY WARD, journalist and author, sometime Fellow of Brasenose
+College, editor of several biographical and historical works.
+
+MARY A. WARD, (Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD,) best known of contemporary women
+novelists; her first success was "Robert Elsmere."
+
+H.G. WELLS, novelist, author of "Tono Bungay" and "Ann Veronica."
+
+MARGARET L. WOODS, poet; her "Wild Justice" and "The Invader" have
+placed her in the front rank.
+
+ISRAEL ZANGWILL, novelist, poet, dramatist, interpreter of the modern
+Jewish spirit.
+
+
+
+
+*The Fourth of August--Europe at War*
+
+*By H.G. Wells.*
+
+_Copyright_, 1914, _by The New York Times Company_.
+
+
+Europe is at war!
+
+The monstrous vanity that was begotten by the easy victories of '70 and
+'71 has challenged the world, and Germany prepares to reap the harvest
+Bismarck sowed. That trampling, drilling foolery in the heart of Europe,
+that has arrested civilization and darkened the hopes of mankind for
+forty years. German imperialism, German militarism, has struck its
+inevitable blow. The victory of Germany will mean the permanent
+enthronement of the War God over all human affairs. The defeat of
+Germany may open the way to disarmament and peace throughout the earth.
+
+To those who love peace there can be no other hope in the present
+conflict than the defeat, the utter discrediting of the German legend,
+the ending for good and all of the blood and iron superstition, of
+Krupp, flag-wagging Teutonic Kiplingism, and all that criminal, sham
+efficiency that centres in Berlin. Never was war so righteous as war
+against Germany now. Never has any State in the world so clamored for
+punishment.
+
+But be it remembered that Europe's quarrel is with the German State, not
+with the German people; with a system, and not with a race. The older
+tradition of Germany is a pacific and civilizing tradition. The
+temperament of the mass of German people is kindly, sane, and amiable.
+Disaster to the German Army, if it is unaccompanied by any such
+memorable wrong as dismemberment or intolerable indignity, will mean the
+restoration of the greatest people in Europe to the fellowship of
+Western nations. The role of England in this huge struggle is plain as
+daylight. We have to fight. If only on account of the Luxemburg outrage,
+we have to fight. If we do not fight, England will cease to be a country
+to be proud of; it will be a dirt-bath to escape from. But it is
+inconceivable that we should not fight. And having fought, then in the
+hour of victory it will be for us to save the liberated Germans from
+vindictive treatment, to secure for this great people their right, as
+one united German-speaking State, to a place in the sun.
+
+First we have to save ourselves and Europe, and then we have to stand
+between German on the one hand and the Cossack and revenge on the other.
+
+For my own part, I do not doubt that Germany and Austria are doomed to
+defeat in this war. It may not be catastrophic defeat, though even that
+is possible, but it is defeat. There is no destiny in the stars and
+every sign is false if this is not so.
+
+They have provoked an overwhelming combination of enemies. They have
+underrated France. They are hampered by a bad social and military
+tradition. The German is not naturally a good soldier; he is orderly and
+obedient, but he is not nimble nor quick-witted; since his sole
+considerable military achievement, his not very lengthy march to Paris
+in '70 and '71, the conditions of modern warfare have been almost
+completely revolutionized and in a direction that subordinates the
+massed fighting of unintelligent men to the rapid initiative of
+individualized soldiers. And, on the other hand, since those years of
+disaster, the Frenchman has learned the lesson of humility; he is
+prepared now sombrely for a sombre struggle; his is the gravity that
+precedes astonishing victories. In the air, in the open field, with guns
+and machines, it is doubtful if any one fully realizes the superiority
+of his quality to the German. This sudden attack may take him aback for
+a week or so, though I doubt even that, but in the end I think he will
+hold his own; even without us he will hold his own, and with us then I
+venture to prophesy that within three months from now his tricolor will
+be over the Rhine. And even suppose his line gets broken by the first
+rush. Even then I do not see how the Germans are to get to Paris or
+anywhere near Paris. I do not see how against the strength of the modern
+defensive and the stinging power of an intelligent enemy in retreat, of
+which we had a little foretaste in South Africa, the exploit of Sedan
+can be repeated. A retiring German army, on the other hand, will be far
+less formidable than a retiring French army, because it has less "devil"
+in it, because it is made up of men taught to obey in masses, because
+its intelligence is concentrated in its aristocratic officers, because
+it is dismayed when it breaks ranks. The German Army is everything the
+conscriptionists dreamed of making our people; it is, in fact, an army
+about twenty years behind the requirements of contemporary conditions.
+
+On the eastern frontier the issue is more doubtful because of the
+uncertainty of Russian things. The peculiar military strength of Russia,
+a strength it was not able to display in Manchuria, lies in its vast
+resources of mounted men. A set invasion of Prussia may be a matter of
+many weeks, but the raiding possibilities in Eastern Germany are
+enormous. It is difficult to guess how far the Russian attack will be
+guided by intelligence, and how far Russia will blunder, but Russia will
+have to blunder very disastrously indeed before she can be put upon the
+defensive. A Russian raid is far more likely to threaten Berlin than a
+German to reach Paris.
+
+Meanwhile there is the struggle on the sea. In that I am prepared for
+some rude shocks. The Germans have devoted an amount of energy to the
+creation of an aggressive navy that would have been spent more wisely in
+consolidating their European position. It is probably a thoroughly good
+navy and ship for ship the equal of our own. But the same lack of
+invention, the same relative uncreativeness that has kept the German
+behind the Frenchman in things aerial has made him, regardless of his
+shallow seas, follow our lead in naval matters, and if we have erred,
+and I believe we have erred, in overrating the importance of the big
+battleship, the German has at least very obligingly fallen in with our
+error. The safest, most effective place for the German fleet at the
+present time is the Baltic Sea. On this side of the Kiel Canal, unless I
+overrate the powers of the waterplane, there is no safe harbor for it.
+If it goes into port anywhere that port can be ruined, and the
+bottled-up ships can be destroyed at leisure by aerial bombs. So that if
+they are on this side of the Kiel Canal they must keep the sea and
+fight, if we let them, before their coal runs short. Battle in the open
+sea in this case is their only chance. They will fight against odds, and
+with every prospect of a smashing, albeit we shall certainly have to pay
+for that victory in ships and men. In the Baltic we shall not be able to
+get at them without the participation of Denmark, and they may have a
+considerable use against Russia. But in the end even there mine and
+aeroplane and destroyer should do their work.
+
+So I reckon that Germany will be held east and west, and that she will
+get her fleet practically destroyed. We ought also to be able to sweep
+her shipping off the seas, and lower her flag forever in Africa and Asia
+and the Pacific. All the probabilities, it seems to me, point to that.
+There is no reason why Italy should not stick to her present neutrality,
+and there is considerable inducement close at hand for both Denmark and
+Japan to join in, directly they are convinced of the failure of the
+first big rush on the part of Germany. All these issues will be more or
+less definitely decided within the next two or three months. By that
+time I believe German imperialism will be shattered, and it may be
+possible to anticipate the end of the armaments phase of European
+history. France, Italy, England, and all the smaller powers of Europe
+are now pacific countries; Russia, after this huge war, will be too
+exhausted for further adventure; a shattered Germany will be a
+revolutionary Germany, as sick of uniforms and the imperialist idea as
+France was in 1871, as disillusioned about predominance as Bulgaria is
+today. The way will be open at last for all these western powers to
+organize peace. That is why I, with my declared horror of war, have not
+signed any of these "stop-the-war" appeals and declarations that have
+appeared in the last few days. Every sword that is drawn against Germany
+now is a sword drawn for peace.
+
+
+
+
+*If the Germans Raid England*
+
+*By H.G. Wells.*
+
+*From The Times of London, Oct. 31, 1914.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: At the outset of the war I made a suggestion in your columns for
+the enrollment of all that surplus of manhood and patriotic feeling
+which remains after every man available for systematic military
+operations has been taken. My idea was that comparatively undrilled boys
+and older men, not sound enough for campaigning, armed with rifles, able
+to shoot straight with them, and using local means of transport,
+bicycles, cars, and so forth, would be a quite effective check upon an
+enemy's scouting, a danger to his supplies, and even a force capable of
+holding up a raiding advance--more particularly if that advance was poor
+in horses and artillery, as an overseas raid was likely to be. I
+suggested, too, that the mere enrollment and arming of the population
+would have a powerful educational effect in steadying and unifying the
+spirit of our people. My proposals were received with what seemed even a
+forced amusement by the "experts." I was told that I knew nothing about
+warfare, and that the Germans would not permit us to do anything of the
+sort. The Germans, it seems, are the authorities in these matters, a
+point I had overlooked. They would refuse to recognize men with only
+improvised uniforms, they would shoot their prisoners--not that I had
+proposed that my irregulars should become prisoners--and burn the
+adjacent villages. This seemed to be an entirely adequate reply from the
+point of view of the expert mind, and I gathered that the proper rôle
+for such an able-bodied civilian as myself was to keep indoors while the
+invader was about and supply him as haughtily as possible with light
+refreshments and anything else he chose to requisition. I was also
+reminded that if only men like myself had obeyed their expert advice and
+worked in the past for national service and the general submission of
+everything to expert military direction, these troubles would not have
+arisen. There would have been no surplus of manhood and everything would
+have gone as smoothly and as well for England as--the Press Censorship.
+
+
+*An Improbable Invasion.*
+
+For a time I was silenced. Under war conditions it is always a difficult
+question to determine how far it is better to obey poor, or even bad,
+directions or to criticise them in the hope of getting better. But the
+course of the war since that correspondence and the revival of the idea
+of a raid by your military correspondent provoke me to return to this
+discussion. Frankly, I do not believe in that raid, and I think we play
+the German game in letting our minds dwell upon it. I am supposed to be
+a person of feverish imagination, but even by lashing my imagination to
+its ruddiest I cannot, in these days of wireless telegraphy, see a
+properly equipped German force, not even so trivial a handful as 20,000
+of them, getting itself with guns, motors, ammunition, and provisions
+upon British soil. I cannot even see a mere landing of infantrymen. I
+believe in that raid even less than I do in the suggested raid of
+navigables that has darkened London. I admit the risk of a few aeroplane
+bombs in London, but I do not see why people should be subjected to
+danger, darkness, and inconvenience on account of that one-in-a-million
+risk. Still, as the trained mind does insist upon treating all
+unenlisted civilians as panicstricken imbeciles and upon frightening old
+ladies and influential people with these remote possibilities, and as it
+is likely that these alarms may even lead to the retention of troops in
+England when their point of maximum effectiveness is manifestly in
+France, it becomes necessary to insist upon the ability of our civilian
+population, if only the authorities will permit the small amount of
+organization and preparation needed, to deal quite successfully with any
+raid that in an extremity of German "boldness" may be attempted.
+
+And, in the first place, let the expert have no illusions as to what we
+ordinary people are going to do if we find German soldiers in England
+one morning. We are going to fight. If we cannot fight with rifles, we
+shall fight with shotguns, and if we cannot fight according to rules of
+war apparently made by Germans for the restraint of British military
+experts, we will fight according to our inner light. Many men, and not a
+few women, will turn out to shoot Germans. There will be no preventing
+them after the Belgian stories. If the experts attempt any pedantic
+interference, we will shoot the experts. I know that in this matter I
+speak for so sufficient a number of people that it will be quite useless
+and hopelessly dangerous and foolish for any expert-instructed minority
+to remain "tame." They will get shot, and their houses will be burned
+according to the established German rules and methods on our account, so
+they may just as well turn out in the first place, and get some shooting
+as a consolation in advance for their inevitable troubles. And if the
+raiders, cut off by the sea from their supports, ill-equipped as they
+will certainly be, and against odds, are so badly advised as to try
+terror-striking reprisals on the Belgian pattern, we irregulars will, of
+course, massacre every German straggler we can put a gun to. Naturally.
+Such a procedure may be sanguinary, but it is just the common sense of
+the situation. We shall hang the officers and shoot the men. A German
+raid to England will in fact not be fought--it will be lynched. War is
+war, and reprisals and striking terror are games that two can play at.
+This is the latent temper of the British countryside, and the sooner the
+authorities take it in hand and regularize it the better will be the
+outlook in the remote event of that hypothetical raid getting home to
+us. Levity is a national characteristic, but submissiveness is not.
+Under sufficient provocation the English are capable of very dangerous
+bad temper, and the expert is dreaming who thinks of a German expedition
+moving through an apathetic Essex, for example, resisted only by the
+official forces trained and in training.
+
+And whatever one may think of the possibility of raids, I venture to
+suggest that the time has come when the present exclusive specialization
+of our combatant energy upon the production of regulation armies should
+cease. The gathering of these will go on anyhow; there are unlimited men
+ready for intelligent direction. Now that the shortage of supplies and
+accommodation has been remedied the enlistment sluices need only be
+opened again. The rank and file of this country is its strength; there
+is no need, and there never has been any need, for press hysterics about
+recruiting. But there is wanted a far more vigorous stimulation of the
+manufacture of material--if only experts and rich people would turn
+their minds to that. It is the trading and manufacturing class that
+needs goading at the present time. It is very satisfactory to send
+troops to France, but in France there are still great numbers of
+able-bodied, trained Frenchmen not fully equipped. It is our national
+duty and privilege to be the storehouse and arsenal of the Allies. Our
+factories for clothing and material of all sorts should be working day
+and night. There is the point to which enthusiasm should be turned. It
+is just as heroic and just as useful to the country to kill yourself
+making belts and boots as it is to die in a trench. But our organization
+for the enrollment and utilization of people not in the firing line is
+still amazingly unsatisfactory. The one convenient alternative to
+enlistment as a combatant at present is hospital work. But it is really
+far more urgent to direct enthusiasm and energy now to the production of
+war material. If this war does not end, as all the civilized world hopes
+it will end, in the complete victory of the Allies, our failure will not
+be through any shortage of men, but through a shortage of gear and
+organizing ability. It will not be through a default of the people, but
+through the slackness of the governing class.
+
+
+*Arms and Equipment Needed.*
+
+Now so far as the enrollment of us goes, of the surplus people who are
+willing to be armed and to be used for quasi-military work at home, but
+who are not of an age or not of a physique or who are already in shop or
+office serving some quite useful purpose at home, we want certain very
+simple things from the authorities. We want the military status that is
+conferred by a specific enrollment and some sort of uniform. We want
+accessible arms. They need not be modern service weapons; the rifles of
+ten years ago are quite good enough for the possible need we shall have
+for them. And we want to be sure that in the possible event of an
+invasion the Government will have the decision to give every man in the
+country a military status by at once resorting to the levée en masse.
+Given a recognized local organization and some advice--it would not take
+a week of Gen. Baden-Powell's time, for example, to produce a special
+training book for us--we could set to work upon our own local drill,
+rifle practice, and exercises, in such hours and ways as best suited our
+locality. We could also organize the local transport, list local
+supplies, and arrange for their removal or destruction if threatened.
+Finally, we could set to work to convert a number of ordinary cars into
+fighting cars by reconstructing and armoring them and exercising crews.
+And having developed a discipline and self-respect as a fighting force,
+we should be available not only for fighting work at home, in the
+extremely improbable event of a raid, but also for all kinds of
+supplementary purposes, as a reserve of motor drivers, as a supply of
+physically exercised and half-trained recruits in the events of an
+extended standard, and as a guarantee of national discipline under any
+unexpected stress. Above all, we should be relieving the real fighting
+forces of the country for the decisive area, which is in France and
+Belgium now and will, I hope, be in Westphalia before the Spring.
+
+At present we non-army people are doing only a fraction of what we would
+like to do for our country. We are not being used. We are made to feel
+out of it, and we watch the not always very able proceedings of the
+military authorities and the international mischief-making of the
+Censorship with a bitter resentment that is restrained only by the
+supreme gravity of the crisis. For my own part I entertain three
+Belgians and make a young officer possible by supplementing his
+expenses, and my wife knits things. A neighbor, an able-bodied man of 42
+and an excellent shot, is occasionally permitted to carry a recruit to
+Chelmsford. If I try to use my pen on behalf of my country abroad, where
+I have a few friends and readers, what I write is exposed to the clumsy
+editing and delays of anonymous and apparently irresponsible officials.
+So practically I am doing nothing, and a great number of people are
+doing very little more. The authorities are concentrated upon the
+creation of an army numerically vast, and for the rest they seem to
+think that the chief function of government is inhibition. Their
+available energy and ability is taxed to the utmost in maintaining the
+fighting line, and it is sheer greed for direction that has led to their
+systematic thwarting of civilian co-operation. Let me warn them of the
+boredom and irritation they are causing. This is a people's war, a war
+against militarism; it is not a war for the greater glory of British
+diplomatists, officials, and people in uniforms. It is our war, not
+their war, and the last thing we intend to result from it is a
+permanently increased importance for the military caste.
+
+Yours very sincerely,
+
+H.G. WELLS.
+
+
+
+
+*Sir Oliver Lodge's Comment*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: In a strikingly vigorous letter Mr. H.G. Wells claims that a nation
+of which every individual prefers death to submission is unconquerable
+and cannot be successfully invaded. Ways of hampering an army are too
+numerous, if people are willing to run every risk, not only for
+themselves but for those dependent on them.
+
+This may be admitted. And we may also agree that the British race would
+be likely to risk everything if the consequences of carefully engendered
+hate were loosed upon us. But here comes a point worthy of
+consideration. An invasion of England is, to say the least, unlikely; an
+invasion of Germany may soon have to be undertaken. May it not add to
+the difficulties of our troops if a policy of "arming every woman,
+child, and cat and dog" is favorably regarded by us? Is not such a
+policy a sort of left-handed outcome of the Prussian contention that
+even their own unarmed civilian populace is contemptible and may be
+slaughtered without mercy if military procedure is resisted, or even if
+supplies are not forthcoming?
+
+It will be difficult, and I hope impossible, for the Allies to act in
+accordance with this latter view; though the German peasantry may have
+been so fed with lies that it will be unable to believe that our
+soldiers can be trusted to behave like civilized beings when the time
+has come for a forward march. It is clear that riotous license is
+subversive of discipline, and conduces to defeat--as it probably has in
+recent Continental experience. For, although ancient warriors used to
+ravage a country, and although women have occasionally intervened in
+order to stop a battle, surely never before in the history of the world
+have women and children been forced forward in defense of a fighting
+line! Yet undoubtedly war can be so conducted that foes mutually respect
+each other; indeed, save for the cowardly abomination of floating mines,
+this present war has been so conducted at sea. I suggest that the fair
+procedure in case of invasion is for each civilian to choose whether to
+be a combatant or not, and to incur the danger of an affirmative choice
+in a sufficiently conspicuous and permanent manner. I am, Sir,
+faithfully yours,
+
+*OLIVER LODGE,* The University, Birmingham, Oct. 31.
+
+
+
+
+*What the German Conscript Thinks*
+
+*By Arnold Bennett.*
+
+_Copyright_, 1914, _by The New York Times Company_.
+
+
+Some hold that this is a war of Prussian militarism, and not a war of
+the German people. This view has the merits of kindliness and
+convenience. Others warn us not to be misled by such sentimentalists,
+and assert that the heart of the German people is in the war. The point
+is of importance to us, because the work of the conscript in the field
+must be influenced by his private feelings. Notwithstanding all drill
+and sergeantry, the German Army remains a collection of human
+beings--and human beings more learned, if not better educated, than our
+own race! It is not a mere fighting machine, despite the efforts of its
+leaders to make it into one.
+
+Among those who assert that the heart of the German people is in the war
+are impartial and experienced observers who have carefully studied
+Germany for many years. For myself, I give little value to their
+evidence. To come at the truth by observation about a foreign country is
+immensely, overpoweringly difficult. I am a professional observer: I
+have lived in Paris and in the French provinces for nine years; I am
+fairly familiar with French literature and very familiar with the French
+language--and I honestly would not trust myself to write even a shilling
+handbook about French character and life. Nearly all newspapers are
+conservative; nearly all foreign correspondents adopt the official or
+conventional point of view; and the pictures of foreign life which get
+into the press are, as a rule--shall I say incomplete?
+
+Even when the honest observer says, "These things I saw with my own eyes
+and will vouch for," I am not convinced that he saw enough. An
+intelligent foreigner with first-class introductions might go through
+England and see with his own eyes that England was longing for
+protection, the death of home rule, and the repeal of the Insurance act.
+The unfortunate Prince Lichnowsky, after an exhaustive inquiry and
+access to the most secret sources of exclusive information telegraphed
+to the Kaiser less than a month ago that civil war was an immediate
+certainty throughout Ireland. Astounding fatuity? Not at all. English
+observers of England have made, and constantly do make, mistakes equally
+prodigious. See Hansard every month. So that when I read demonstrations
+of the thesis that the heart of the German people is in the war, I am
+not greatly affected by them.
+
+
+*German Heart Is In the War.*
+
+Still, I do myself believe that the heart of the German people is in the
+war, and that that heart is governed by two motives--the motive of
+self-defense against Russia and the motive of overbearing
+self-aggrandizement. I do not base my opinion on phenomena which I have
+observed. Beyond an automobile journey through Schleswig-Holstein, which
+was formidably tedious, and a yacht journey through the Kiel Canal and
+Kiel Bay, which was somewhat impressive, I have never traveled in
+Germany at all. I base my opinion on general principles. In a highly
+educated and civilized country such as Germany (the word "civilized"
+must soon take on a new significance!) it is impossible that an
+autocracy, even a military autocracy, could exist unrooted in the
+people. "Prussian militarism" may annoy many Germans, but it pleases
+more than it annoys, and there can be few Germans who are not flattered
+by it. That the lower classes have an even more tremendous grievance
+against the upper classes in Germany than in England or France is a
+certitude. But the existence and power of the army are their reward,
+their sole reward, for all that they have suffered in hardship and
+humiliation at the hands of the autocracy. It is the autocracy's bribe
+and sweetmeat to them.
+
+The Germans are a great nation; they have admirable qualities, but they
+have also defects, and among their defects is a clumsy arrogance, which
+may be noticed in any international hotel frequented by Germans. It is a
+racial defect, and to try to limit it to the military autocracy is
+absurd. An educated and civilized nation has roughly the Government that
+it wants and deserves. And it has in the end ways of imposing itself on
+its apparent rulers that are more effective than the ballot box or the
+barricade, and just as sure. No election was needed to prove to the
+Italian Government that Italy did not want to fight for the Triple
+Alliance, and would not fight for it. The fact was known; it was
+immanent in the air, beyond all arguments and persuasions. Italy
+breathed a negative, and war was not. So in Germany the mass of Germans
+have for years breathed war, and war is. The war may be autocratic,
+dynastic, what you will; but it is also national, and it symbolizes the
+national defect.
+
+
+*How About the Leaders?*
+
+Does the German conscript believe in the efficacy of his leaders? I mean
+when he is lying awake and fatigued at night, not when he is shouting
+"Hoch!" or watching the demeanor of women in front of him. Does no doubt
+ever lancinate him? Again I would answer the question from general
+principles and not from observation. The German conscript must know what
+everybody knows--that in almost every bully there is a coward. And he
+must know that he is led by bullies. He learned that in the barrack
+yard. An enormous number of conscripts must also know that there is
+something seriously wrong with a system that for the sake of its own
+existence has killed freedom of the press. And the million little things
+that are wrong in the system he also knows out of his own daily life as
+a conscript. Further, he must be aware that there is a dearth of really
+great men in his system. In the past there were in Germany men great
+enough to mesmerize Europe--Bismarck and von Moltke. There is none today
+that appeals to the popular imagination as Kitchener does in England or
+Joffre in France. Alone, in Germany, the Kaiser has been able to achieve
+a Continental renown. The Kaiser has good qualities. But twenty-four
+years ago he committed an act of folly and (one may say) "bad form"
+which nothing but results could justify, and which results have not
+justified. Whatever his good qualities may be it is an absolute
+certainty that common sense, foresight, and mental balance are not among
+them. The conscript feels that, if he does not state it clearly to
+himself. And as for the military organization of which the Kaiser is the
+figurehead, it has shown for many years past precisely those signs which
+history teaches us are signs of decay. It has not withstood the fearful
+ordeal of success. Just lately, if not earlier, the conscript must have
+felt that, too.
+
+What is the conclusion? Take the average conscript, the member of the
+lower middle class. He is accustomed to think politically, because at
+least fifty out of every hundred of him are professed Socialists with a
+definite and bitter political programme against certain manifestations
+of the autocracy. (It is calculated that two-fifths of the entire army
+is Socialist.) He may not argue very closely while in the act of war;
+indeed, he could not. But enormous experience is accumulated in his
+subconsciousness--experience of bullying and cowardice, of humiliation,
+of injustice, of lying, and of his own most secret shortcomings--for he,
+too, is somewhat of the bully, out for self-aggrandisement as well as
+for self-defense, and his conscience privately tells him so. The
+organization is still colossal, magnificent, terrific. In the general
+fever of activity he persuades himself that nothing can withstand the
+organization; but at the height of some hand-to-hand crisis, when
+one-hundredth of a dogged grain of obstinacy will turn the scale, he may
+remember an insult from an incompetent officer, or the protectionism at
+home which puts meat beyond his purse in order to enrich the landowner,
+or even the quite penal legislation of the autocracy against the
+co-operative societies of the poor, and the memory (in spite of him) may
+decide a battle. Men think of odd matters in a battle, and it is a
+scientific certainty that, at the supreme pinch, the subconscious must
+react.
+
+
+
+
+*Felix Adler's Comment*
+
+*From The Standard, Oct. 14, 1914.*
+
+
+Apropos of a recent article by Mr. Arnold Bennett, wherein he speaks of
+the resentment which the German soldiers--two-fifths of them
+Socialists--must feel against the bullying discipline to which they have
+been subjected, the following reflections are jotted down. The reader
+who is interested in pursuing the subject further may profitably consult
+a book entitled "Imperial Germany," by Prince von Bülow, which contains
+some penetrating observations on the workings of the German mind, as
+well as the chapter on Germany in Alfred Fouillée's notable work,
+"Esquisse Psychologique des Peuples Européens."
+
+The precision which characterizes the operations of the German military
+machine is due to the German notion of discipline. Discipline in Germany
+is based on the peculiar place assigned to the expert. Military experts
+exercise in their branch an authority different in degree but not in
+kind from that belonging to experts in other departments--strategy,
+tactics, improvements of armament, methods of mobilization. The inexpert
+soldier submits to the military expert as a person about to undergo a
+necessary operation would submit to a surgeon. It is a mistake to
+suppose that the Germans, a highly intelligent and educated people, are
+being cowed into submission by brutal non-commissioned officers.
+Brutality, when it occurs, is looked upon as exceptional and incidental
+to a system on the whole approved. The Germans would never tolerate the
+severe discipline to which they are subjected did they not willingly
+submit to it. They regard a highly efficient army as necessary to the
+safety of the Fatherland, and they are willing to leave the
+responsibility for the means of securing efficiency to the experts.
+During the Franco-German war, when a student in the University of
+Berlin, I talked with some of the brightest of the younger men about
+their military obligations, and I found that they took precisely the
+view just stated. The Pomeranian peasant may submit to military
+dictation in a dull, half-instinctive fashion. The flower and élite of
+German intelligence submit to it no less--from conviction.
+
+How shall we account for the unique predominance of the expert in German
+life? The explanation would seem to lie in the phrase invented by a
+brilliant writer of the last century, "Deutschland ist Hamlet" (Germany
+is Hamlet). The Germans are a resolute people--not at all, as has been
+erroneously supposed, a nation of dreamers--just as Hamlet, according to
+recent criticism, was essentially of a resolute character. In the days
+of the Hansa and of the Hohenstaufen the Germans cut a great figure in
+oversea commerce and in war. They were great doers of deeds. The Germans
+are intensely volitional, but also intensely intellectual. Hence the
+native hue of resolution has sometimes been sicklied o'er by too much
+thinking. The intellect of the German refuses to sanction action until
+the successive steps to be taken have been worked out with logical
+accuracy, and a scientific groove, so to speak, has been hollowed out
+along which action can proceed. As soon as this is accomplished, the
+flood of volitional impulse enters gladly into the channel prepared for
+it and moves on in it with irresistible force. Bismarck represents the
+active side, as the eminent philosophers of the German people represent
+the side of logical construction. The two sides must be taken together
+to understand German history and the tendencies prevailing in Germany
+today.
+
+Underneath it all, of course, is German sentiment, but of this we need
+take no account in discussing German discipline, except in so far as
+love for the Fatherland enters in to sustain the patience of the people
+under the burden of their military establishment.
+
+Discipline, or the subordination of the inexpert to the expert, likewise
+accounts for certain peculiarities of the German political parties.
+Prince von Bülow mentions three examples of supremely efficient
+organization--the Prussian Army, the Roman Catholic hierarchy, and the
+German Social Democracy. There are some 4,200 Socialist associations,
+subject to the orders of forty-two district associations, these in turn
+being ruled by the Central Committee. The working of the Social
+Democratic machine is almost flawless. The discipline, it is said, is
+iron.
+
+Again, the conception of Government in Germany, unlike that which
+prevails in England, France, or America, is determined by the idea of
+expertness. The Government is the political expert par excellence. Its
+business is to study the interests of the State as a whole. In all
+matters of economic theory, of finance, of administration, of social
+reform, it invokes the advice of specialists. But it is itself the
+supreme political specialist. It stands high above all the political
+parties. It does not depend for its existence on majorities in
+Parliament. It seeks the co-operation of Parliament, but reserves to
+itself the right of initiative and leadership.
+
+The object of the above remarks is to explain, not to justify, and in
+the face of much uninstructed criticism to point out the deep sources in
+the nature of the German people from which spring the influences that
+have molded their life. The chief objections to their system may be
+summarized in the statements, that it takes too little account of the
+value of the inexpert; that it tends to suppress latent spontaneity;
+and, especially in the sphere of government, that it ascribes to the
+expert a knowledge of the needs of the people such as no ruling class
+can ever possess. And it overlooks the highest aim of political life and
+activity, which is the education of the inexpert to such a point that
+they may become more or less expert in understanding and promoting the
+public weal.
+
+FELIX ADLER.
+
+[Illustration: MAURICE MAETERLINCK. _See Page_ 144]
+
+[Illustration: EMILE BOUTROUX. _(Photo from Bain News Service.) See Page
+160_]
+
+
+
+
+*When Peace Is Seriously Desired*
+
+*By Arnold Bennett.*
+
+*From The Daily News of London.*
+
+
+When peace is seriously desired in any quarter, the questions to be
+discussed by the plenipotentaries will fall into three groups:
+
+1. Those which affect all Europe.
+
+2. Those which chiefly affect Western Europe.
+
+3. Those which chiefly affect Eastern Europe.
+
+The first group is, of course, the most important, both practically and
+sentimentally. And the main question in it is the question of Belgium.
+The original cause of the war was Germany's deliberate and advertised
+bellicosity, and it might be thought that the first aim of peace would
+be by some means to extinguish that bellicosity. But relative values may
+change during the progress of a war, and the question of Belgium--which
+means the question of the sanction of international pledges--now stands
+higher in the general view than the question of disarmament. Germany has
+outraged the public law of Europe, and she has followed up her outrage
+with a series of the most cowardly and wanton crimes. She ought to pay,
+and she ought to apologize. Only by German payment and German apology
+can international law be vindicated. Germany should pay a sum large
+enough to do everything that money can do toward the re-establishment of
+Belgium's well-being. I have no competence to suggest the amount of the
+indemnity. A hundred million pounds does not appear to me too large.
+
+Then the apology. It may be asked: Why an apology? Would not an apology
+be implied in the payment of an indemnity?
+
+It is undeniable that Germany is now directed by hysteric stupidity
+wielding a bludgeon. Granted, if you will, that half the nation is at
+heart against the stupidity and the bludgeon. So much the worse for the
+half. Citizens who have not had the wit to get rid of the Prussian
+franchise law must accept all the consequences of their political
+ineffectiveness. The peacemakers will not be able to divide Germany into
+two halves.
+
+For Potsdam a first-rate spectacular effect is needed, and that effect
+would best be produced by a German national apology carried by a
+diplomatic mission with ceremony to Brussels and published in all German
+official papers, and emphasized by a procession of Belgian troops down
+Unter den Linden. This visible abasement of German arms in front of the
+Socialists of Berlin would be an invaluable aid to the breaking of
+military tyranny in Prussia.
+
+So much for the Belgium question and the sanction of international
+pledges. The other question affecting the whole of Europe is the hope of
+a universal limitation of armaments. But there is a particular question,
+touching France, which in practice would come before that. I mean
+Alsace-Lorraine. Unless Germany conquers Europe, Alsace-Lorraine should
+be restored to France. A profound national sentiment, to which all
+conceivable considerations of expediency or ultimate advantage are
+unimportant, demands imperatively the return of the plunder. And in the
+councils of the Allies, either alone or with German representatives, the
+attitude of French diplomacy would be: "Is it clear about
+Alsace-Lorraine? If so, we may proceed. If not, it's no use going any
+further."
+
+
+*Question of Armaments.*
+
+We now come to armaments. I have seen it suggested that the destruction
+of Essen, Wilhelmshaven, and Heligoland ought to be a condition of peace
+with Germany. Certainly the disappearance of these phenomena would be a
+gain to the world. So would the disappearance of Rosyth and Toulon. It
+seems to me, however, very improbable that their destruction or
+dismantling by international command would occur after hostilities have
+ceased, or could usefully so occur. If the French Army on its way to
+Berlin can treat the Krupp factory as the German Army on its way to
+Paris treated Rheims Cathedral, well and good! In fact, most excellent!
+And if the British Navy can somehow emasculate Wilhelmshaven and
+Heligoland I shall not complain that its behavior has been purely
+doctrinaire. But otherwise I see nothing practical in the
+Essen-Wilhelmshaven-Heligoland suggestion. Nor in the project for
+dethroning the Kaiser and sending him and his eldest son to settle their
+differences in St. Helena! The Kaiser--happily--is not a Napoleon, nor
+has he yet himself accomplished anything big enough or base enough to
+merit Napoleon's fate. Any dethroning that may enliven the gray monotony
+of the post-bellum era at Potsdam should and will be done by the German
+soldiers themselves. Even in international politics it is futile to try
+to meddle in other people's private affairs.
+
+Disarmament in Germany can be achieved by the exercise of one principle,
+and one principle only. That principle is the principle of mutuality. A
+scheme in which every nation will proportionately share should be
+presented to Germany, and she should be respectfully but quite firmly
+asked to participate in it. There would be no sense in saying to
+Germany: "You must disarm." The magic words would be: "We are going to
+disarm, and so are you, whether you want to or not." As to the procedure
+of disarmament--whether it shall be slow or fast, whether it shall
+include destruction or be content with mere omission to renew, how the
+proportions shall be decided, who shall give the signal to begin--here
+are matters which I am without skill or desire to discuss. All I know
+about them is that they are horribly complicated, unprecedentedly
+difficult, and bursting with danger; and that they will strain the
+wisdom, patience, and ingenuity of the negotiators to the very utmost.
+
+
+*Three Vital Points.*
+
+Compared to disarmament, all remaining questions whatsoever affecting
+peace are simple and secondary. Indemnities for France or Russia, or
+both, a Polish Kingdom, a Balkan United States, the precise number of
+nations into which Austria-Hungary is to be shattered, the ownership of
+the east coast of the Adriatic, even the reparation of the infamy by
+which Denmark was robbed of Schleswig-Holstein--what are these but
+favorable ground for the art of compromise? The vital points, at any
+rate for us Westerners, are only three: Belgium, Alsace-Lorraine, and
+disarmament. * * * Stay, there is another. It is vital to Great
+Britain's reputation that she should accept nothing--neither indemnity,
+nor colonies; not a single pound, not a single square mile.
+
+Many persons, I gather, find it hard to believe that Prussia will ever
+admit that she is beaten or consent to her own humiliation. Naturally
+her conduct will depend upon the degree to which she is beaten. She has
+admitted defeat and swallowed the leek before, though it is a long time
+ago. Meanwhile she has forgotten, and her opponents seem to have
+forgotten also, that though her name is Prussia she is subject to the
+limitations of the human race. Out of her prodigious score off little
+Denmark, her thrashing of Austria--a country which never wins a war--and
+her victory over France, there grew a legend that Prussia, and therefore
+Germany, was not as other nations. This legend is contrary to fact.
+Every nation must yield to force--here, indeed, is Germany's
+contribution to our common knowledge.
+
+If in July, 1870, it had been prophesied that France would give up
+Alsace-Lorraine and pay two hundred millions to get rid of a foreign
+army of occupation, France would have protested that she would fight to
+the last man and to the last franc first. But nations don't do these
+things. If Germany won the present war and fulfilled her dream of
+establishing an army in this island, we should yield, and we should
+submit to her terms, we who have never been beaten save by our own
+colonies--that is a scientific certainty. And Germany's terms would not
+be amusing; in their terribleness they would outrun our poor Anglo-Saxon
+imagination. Similarly, if Germany is beaten, she will bow the head, and
+to precisely the extent to which she is walloped. We need not worry
+about that. Were she recalcitrant we need not even murmur in her ear:
+"What would you have extorted if you'd won?" A gesture of the still
+uplifted sword would suffice to convince her that facts are facts.
+
+Assuming that the tide turns not again, the chances of a thorough,
+workmanlike common sense peace can only be imperiled by one thing--the
+deep desire of France and of Belgium for repose and recuperation. We in
+England do not know what war is. We have not lived in hell. Our plains
+have not been devastated, nor our women and children shot, nor our ears
+deafened by the boom of cannon, nor our cathedrals shelled, nor our land
+turned into a vast and bloody hospital; and we have not experienced the
+appalling terror and shame of the foe's absolute dominion in our streets
+and lanes. We have suffered; we shall suffer; but our suffering is
+nought and less than nought weighed against the suffering on the
+Continent. Why, in the midst of a war of unparalleled horror, we grumble
+if a train is late! We can talk calmly of fighting Germany to a
+stand-still, even if the job takes two years, and it behooves us to talk
+so, and to prepare for the task; and for myself I am convinced that we
+could make good the word. But France and Belgium will not use that tone,
+if Russia does. Once the German armies are across the frontiers, the
+instinctive pressure in favor of peace would be enormous, and
+considerations of the distant future, of the welfare of our descendants
+and the progress of mankind, would count little in the scale. In that
+moment, if it happily comes, our part and Russia's would be to sustain
+and encourage and salve the supreme victims of fate. A tremendous factor
+in our favor would be the exhaustion of Germany; and the measure of our
+power and of the fear we inspire is the furious intensity of Germany's
+anger against our inconvenient selves. Without us the war could not last
+beyond the end of this year, and the peace would be unsatisfactory.
+
+And even with us, insisting on our own terms of reconciliation, I do not
+see how it can last over six months more on anything like the present
+scale, for the Kaiser, despite his kinship with Deity, can neither
+create men nor extract gold coins out of an empty hat. Military
+arguments, in Germany as elsewhere, hold good only for a certain period.
+
+
+
+
+*Barrie at Bay: Which Was Brown?*
+
+
+*An Interview on the War.*
+
+*From The New York Times, Oct. 1, 1914.*
+
+
+As our reporter entered Sir James Barrie's hotel room by one door, the
+next door softly closed. "I was alone," writes our reporter. "I sprang
+into the corridor and had just time to see him fling himself down the
+elevator. Then I understood what he had meant when he said on the
+telephone that he would be ready for me at 10:30.
+
+I returned thoughtfully to the room, where I found myself no longer
+alone. Sir James Barrie's "man" was there; a stolid Londoner, name of
+Brown, who told me he was visiting America for the first time.
+
+"Sir James is very sorry, but has been called away," he assured me
+without moving a muscle. Then he added: "But this is the pipe," and he
+placed a pipe of the largest size on the table.
+
+"The pipe he smokes?" I asked.
+
+Brown is evidently a very truthful man, for he hesitated. "That is the
+interview pipe," he explained. "When we decided to come to America, Sir
+James said he would have to be interviewed, and that it would be wise to
+bring something with us for the interviewers to take notice of. So he
+told me to buy the biggest pipe I could find, and he practiced holding
+it in his mouth in his cabin on the way across. He is very pleased with
+the way the gentlemen of the press have taken notice of it."
+
+"So that is not the pipe he really smokes?" I said, perceiving I was on
+the verge of a grand discovery. "I suppose he actually smokes an
+ordinary small pipe."
+
+Again Brown hesitated, but again truth prevailed.
+
+"He does not smoke any pipe," he said, "nor cigars, nor cigarettes; he
+never smokes at all; he just puts that one in his mouth to help the
+interviewers."
+
+"It has the appearance of having been smoked," I pointed out.
+
+"I blackened it for him," the faithful fellow replied.
+
+"But he has written a book in praise of My Lady Nicotine."
+
+"So I have heard," Brown said guardedly. "I think that was when he was
+hard up and had to write what people wanted; but he never could abide
+smoking himself. Years after he wrote the book he read it; he had quite
+forgotten it, and he was so attracted by what it said about the delights
+of tobacco that he tried a cigarette. But it was no good; the mere smell
+disgusted him."
+
+
+*Strange Forgetfulness.*
+
+"Odd that he should forget his own book," I said.
+
+"He forgets them all," said Brown. "There is this Peter Pan foolishness,
+for instance. I have heard people talking to him about that play and
+mentioning parts in it they liked, and he tried to edge them off the
+subject; they think it is his shyness, but I know it is because he has
+forgotten the bits they are speaking about. Before strangers call on him
+I have seen him reading one of his own books hurriedly, so as to be able
+to talk about it if that is their wish. But he gets mixed up, and thinks
+that the little minister was married to Wendy."
+
+"Almost looks as if he hadn't written his own works," I said.
+
+"Almost," Brown admitted uncomfortably.
+
+I asked a leading question. "You don't suppose," I said, "that any one
+writes them for him? Such things have been. You don't write them for him
+by any chance, just as you blackened the pipe, you know?"
+
+Brown assured me stolidly that he did not. Suddenly, whether to get away
+from a troublesome subject I cannot say, he vouchsafed me a startling
+piece of information. "The German Kaiser was on our boat coming across,"
+he said.
+
+"Sure?" I asked, wetting my pencil.
+
+He told me he had Sir James's word for it. There was on board, it seems,
+a very small, shrunken gentleman with a pronounced waist and tiny,
+turned-up mustache, who strutted along the deck trying to look fierce
+and got in the other passengers' way to their annoyance until Sir James
+discovered that he was the Kaiser Reduced to Life Size. After that Sir
+James liked to sit with him and talk to him.
+
+Sir James is a great admirer of the Kaiser, though he has not, like Mr.
+Carnegie, had the pleasure of meeting him in society. When he read in
+the papers on arriving here that the Kaiser had wept over the
+destruction of Louvain, he told Brown a story. It was of a friend who
+had gone to an oculist to be cured of some disease in one eye. Years
+afterward he heard that the oculist's son had been killed in some Indian
+war, and he called on the oculist to commiserate with him.
+
+"You cured my eye," he said to him, "and when I read of your loss I wept
+for you, Sir; I wept for you with that eye."
+
+"Sir James," Brown explained, "is of a very sympathetic nature, and he
+wondered which eye it was that the Kaiser wept with."
+
+I asked Brown what his own views were about the war, and before replying
+he pulled a paper from his pocket and scanned it. "We are strictly
+neutral," he then replied.
+
+"Is that what is written on the paper?" I asked. He admitted that Sir
+James had written out for him the correct replies to possible questions.
+"Why was he neutral?" I asked, and he again found the reply on the piece
+of paper: "Because it is the President's wish."
+
+
+*Brown Must Be Neutral.*
+
+So anxious, I discovered, is Sir James to follow the President's bidding
+that he has enjoined Brown to be neutral on all other subjects besides
+the war; to express no preference on matters of food, for instance, and
+always to eat oysters and clams alternately, so that there can be no
+ill-feeling. Also to walk in the middle of the streets lest he should
+seem to be favoring either sidewalk, and to be very cautious about
+admitting that one building in New York is higher than another. I
+assured him that the Woolworth Building was the highest, but he replied
+politely, "that he was sure the President would prefer him to remain
+neutral." I naturally asked if Sir James had given him any further
+instructions as to proper behavior in America, and it seems that he had
+done so. They amount, I gather, to this, that Americans have a sense of
+humor which they employ, when they can, to the visitor's undoing.
+
+"When we reach New York," Sir James seems to have told Brown in effect,
+"we shall be met by reporters who will pretend that America is eager to
+be instructed by us as to the causes and progress of the war; then, if
+we are fools enough to think that America cannot make up its mind for
+itself, we shall fall into the trap and preach to them, and all the time
+they are taking down our observations they will be saying to themselves,
+'Pompous asses.'
+
+"It is a sort of game between us and the reporters. Our aim is to make
+them think we are bigger than we are, and theirs is to make us smaller
+than we are; and any chance we have of succeeding is to hold our
+tongues, while they will probably succeed if they make us jabber. Above
+all, oh, Brown, if you write to the papers giving your views of why we
+are at war--and if you don't you will be the only person who
+hasn't--don't be lured into slinging vulgar abuse at our opponents, lest
+America takes you for another university professor."
+
+There is, I learned, only one person in America about whom it is
+impossible, even in Sir James's opinion, to preserve a neutral attitude.
+This is the German Ambassador, whose splendid work for England day by
+day and in every paper and to all reporters cannot, Sir James thinks, be
+too cordially recognized. Brown has been told to look upon the German
+Ambasador as England's greatest asset in America just now, and to hope
+heartily that he will be long spared to carry on his admirable work.
+
+Lastly, it was pleasant to find that Brown has not a spark of sympathy
+with those who say that, because Germany has destroyed art treasures in
+Belgium and France, the Allies should retaliate with similar rudeness if
+they reach Berlin. He holds that if for any reason best known to
+themselves (such as the wish for a sunnier location) the Hohenzollerns
+should by and by vacate their present residence, a nice villa should be
+provided for them, and that all the ancestral statues in the
+Sieges-Allee should be conveyed to it intact, and perhaps put up in the
+back garden. There the Junkers could drop in of an evening, on their way
+home from their offices, and chat pleasantly of old times. Brown thinks
+they should be allowed to retain all their iron crosses, and even given
+some more, with which, after smart use of their pocket combs, they would
+cut no end of a dash among the nursemaids.
+
+As for the pipe, I was informed that it had now done its work, and I
+could take it away as a keepsake. I took it, but wondered afterward at
+Brown's thinking he had the right to give it me.
+
+A disquieting feeling has since come over me that perhaps it was Sir
+James I had been interviewing all the time, and Brown who had escaped
+down the elevator.
+
+
+
+
+*A "Credo" for Keeping Faith*
+
+*By John Galsworthy.*
+
+
+I believe in peace with all my heart. I believe that war is outrage--a
+black stain on the humanity and the fame of man. I hate militarism and
+the god of force. I would go any length to avoid war for material
+interests, war that involved no principles, distrusting profoundly the
+common meaning of the phrase "national honor."
+
+But I believe there is a national honor charged with the future
+happiness of man, that loyalty is due from those living to those that
+will come after; that civilization can only wax and flourish in a world
+where faith is kept; that for nations, as for individuals, there are
+laws of duty, whose violation harms the whole human race; in sum, that
+stars of conduct shine for peoples, as for private men.
+
+And so I hold that without tarnishing true honor, endangering
+civilization present and to come, and ruining all hope of future
+tranquillity, my country could not have refused to take up arms for the
+defense of Belgium's outraged neutrality, solemnly guaranteed by herself
+and France.
+
+I believe, and claim in proof, the trend of events and of national
+character during the last century, that in democracy alone lies any
+coherent hope of progressive civilization or any chance of lasting peace
+in Europe, or the world.
+
+I believe that this democratic principle, however imperfectly developed,
+has so worked in France, in England, in the United States, that these
+countries are already nearly safe from inclination to aggress, or to
+subdue other nationalities.
+
+And I believe that while there remain autocratic Governments basing
+themselves on militarism, bitterly hostile to the democratic principle,
+Europe will never be free of the surcharge of swollen armaments, the
+nightmare menace of wars like this--the paralysis that creeps on
+civilizations which adore the god of force.
+
+And so I hold that, without betrayal of trusteeship, without shirking
+the elementary defense of beliefs coiled within its fibre, or beliefs
+vital to the future welfare of all men, my country could not stand by
+and see the triumph of autocratic militarism over France, that very
+cradle of democracy.
+
+I believe that democratic culture spreads from west to east, that only
+by maintenance of consolidate democracy in Western Europe can democracy
+ever hope to push on and prevail till the Eastern powers have also that
+ideal under which alone humanity can flourish.
+
+And so I hold that my country is justified at this juncture in its
+alliance with the autocratic power of Russia, whose people will never
+know freedom till her borders are joined to the borders of democracy.
+
+I do not believe that jealous, frightened jingoism has ever been more
+than the dirty fringe of England's peace-loving temper, and I profess my
+sacred faith that my country has gone to war at last, not from fear, not
+from hope of aggrandizement, but because she must--for honor, for
+democracy, and for the future of mankind.
+
+
+
+
+*Hard Blows, Not Hard Words*
+
+*By Jerome K. Jerome.*
+
+*From The London Daily News.*
+
+
+In one of Shaw's plays--I think it is "Superman"--one of the characters
+hints, toward the end of the last act, that the hero is a gentleman
+somewhat prone to talking. The hero admits it, but excuses himself on
+the ground that it is the only way he knows of explaining his opinions.
+
+Times of stress and struggle, whether individual or national, afford men
+and women other methods of expressing their views, and a large number of
+our citizens are, very creditably, taking the present opportunity to act
+instead of shout. There are the young fellows who in their thousands are
+pressing around the door of the recruiting offices. They are throwing
+up, many of them, good jobs for the privilege of drilling for the next
+six months for eight hours a day. Their reward will be certain hardship,
+their share of sickness and wounds, the probability of lying ten deep in
+a forgotten grave, their chance of glory a name printed in small type
+among a thousand others on a War Office report.
+
+There are the mothers and wives and children who are encouraging them to
+go; to whom their going means semi-starvation. The old, bent crones
+whose feeble hands will have to grasp again the hoe and the scrubbing
+brush. The young women who know only too well what is before them--the
+selling of the home just got together; first the easy chair and the
+mirror, and then the bed and the mattress; the weary tramping of the
+streets, looking for work. The children awestruck and wondering.
+
+There are the men who are quietly going on with their work, doing their
+best with straitened means to keep their business going; giving
+employment; getting ready to meet the income tax collector, who next
+year one is inclined to expect will be demanding anything from half a
+crown to five shillings in the pound. There are others. But there is a
+certain noisy and, to me, particularly offensive man (and with him, I am
+sorry to say, one or two women) very much to the fore just now with
+whose services the country could very well dispense. He is the man who
+does his fighting with his mouth. Unable for reasons of his own to get
+at the foe in the field, he thirsts for the blood of the unfortunate
+unarmed and helpless Germans that the fortunes of war have left stranded
+in England. He writes to the paper thoughtfully suggesting plans that
+have occurred to him for making their existence more miserable than it
+must be. He generally concludes his letter with a short homily directed
+against the Prussian Military Staff for their lack of the higher
+Christian principles.
+
+He has spies on the brain. Two quite harmless English citizens have
+already been shot in consequence of the funk this spy mania has created
+among us. The vast majority of Germans in England have come to live in
+England because they dislike Germany. That a certain number of spies are
+among us I take to be highly probable. I take it that if the Allies know
+their business a certain number of English spies are doing what they can
+for us at great personal risk to themselves in Germany. Until the German
+Army has landed on our shores German spies can do little or no harm to
+us. The police can be trusted to know something about them, and if any
+are caught red-handed the rules of war are not likely to be strained for
+their benefit.
+
+
+*A Story from the South.*
+
+From a small town in the South of England comes a story I can vouch for.
+A couple of Boy Scouts had been set to guard the local reservoir. About
+noon one sunny day they remarked the approach, somewhat ostentatious, of
+a desperate-looking character. Undoubtedly a German spy! What can he be
+up to! The boys approached him and he fled, leaving behind him the
+damning evidence--a tin suggestive of sardines and labeled "Poison!"
+That the gentleman should have chosen broad daylight for his nefarious
+design, should have been careful to label his tin, seemed to the good
+townsfolk under present scare conditions proof that they had at last
+discovered the real German spy, full of his devilish cunning. The tin
+was taken possession of by the police. And then the Sergeant's little
+daughter, who happened to have had a few lessons in French, suggested
+that the word on the tin was "Poisson," and the town now breathes again.
+
+So long as the war continues the spy will be among us. I suggest that we
+face the problem of his activities without blue funk and hysteria. The
+men and women who are shrieking for vicarious vengeance upon all the
+Germans remaining in our midst must remember that there are thousands of
+English families at the present moment residing in Germany and Austria.
+The majority of them, comparatively poor people, with all their
+belongings around them, were unable to get away. I shall, until I
+receive convincing proof to the contrary, continue to believe that they
+are living among their German neighbors unmolested. Even were it not so,
+I would suggest our setting the example of humanity rather than our
+slavishly following an example of barbarity.
+
+We are fighting for an idea--an idea of some importance to the
+generations that will come after us. We are fighting to teach the
+Prussian Military Staff that other laws have come to stay--laws
+superseding those of Attila the Hun. We are fighting to teach the German
+people that, free men with brains to think with, they have no right to
+hand themselves over body and soul to their rulers to be used as mere
+devil's instruments; that if they do so they shall pay the penalty, and
+the punishment shall go hard. We are fighting to teach the German Nation
+respect for God! Our weapons have got to be hard blows, not hard words.
+We are tearing at each other's throats; it has got to be done. It is not
+a time for yelping.
+
+Jack Johnson as a boxer I respect. The thing I do not like about him is
+his habit of gibing and jeering at his opponent while he is fighting
+him. It isn't gentlemanly, and it isn't sporting. The soldiers are
+fighting in grim silence. When one of them does talk, it is generally to
+express admiration of German bravery. It is our valiant stay-at-homes,
+our valiant clamorers for everybody else to enlist but themselves, who
+would have us fight like some drunken fish hag, shrieking and spitting
+while she claws.
+
+
+*Incredible Reports of Atrocities.*
+
+Half of these stories of atrocities I do not believe. I remember when I
+was living in Germany at the time of the Boer war the German papers were
+full of accounts of Tommy Atkins's brutality. He spent his leisure time
+in tossing babies on bayonets. There were photographs of him doing it.
+Detailed accounts certified by most creditable witnesses. Such lies are
+the stock in trade of every tenth-rate journalist, who, careful not to
+expose himself to danger, slinks about the byways collecting hearsay. In
+every war each side, according to the other, is supposed to take a
+fiendish pleasure in firing upon hospitals--containing always a
+proportion of their own wounded. An account comes to us from a
+correspondent with the Belgian Army. He tells us that toward the end of
+the day a regrettable incident occurred. The Germans were taking off
+their wounded in motor cars. The Belgian sharpshooters, not noticing the
+red flag in the dusk, kept up a running fire, and a large number of the
+wounded were killed. Had the incident been the other way about it would
+have been cited as a deliberate piece of villainy on the part of the
+Germans. According to other accounts, the Germans always go into action
+with screens of women and children before them. The explanation, of
+course, is that a few poor terrified creatures are rushing along the
+road. They get between the approaching forces, and I expect the bullets
+that put them out of their misery come pretty even from both sides.
+
+The men are mad. Mad with fear, mad with hate, blinded by excitement.
+Take a mere dog fight. If you interfere you have got to be prepared for
+your own dog turning upon you. In war half the time the men do not know
+what they are doing. They are little else than wild beasts. There was
+great indignation at the dropping of bombs into Antwerp. One now hears
+that a French dirigible has been dropping bombs into Luxembourg--a much
+more dignified retort. War is a grim game. Able editors and club-chair
+politicians have been clamoring for it for years past. They thought it
+was all goose-step and bands.
+
+The truth is bad enough, God knows. There is no sense in making things
+out worse than they are. When this war is over we have got to forget it.
+To build up barriers of hatred that shall stand between our children and
+our foemen's children is a crime against the future.
+
+These stories of German naval officers firing on their wounded sailors
+in the water! They are an insult to our intelligence. At Louvain fifty
+of the inhabitants were taken out and shot. On Monday the fifty had
+grown to five hundred; both numbers vouched for by eye-witnesses,
+"Dutchmen who would have had no interest," &c. That the beautiful old
+town has been laid in ashes is undoubted. Some criminal lunatic
+strutting in pipeclay and mustachios was given his hour of authority and
+took the chance of his life. If I know anything of the German people it
+will go hard with him when the war is over, if he has not had the sense
+to get killed. But that won't rear again the grand old stones or wipe
+from Germany's honor the stain of that long line of murdered men and
+women--whatever its actual length may have been. War puts a premium on
+brutality and senselessness. Men with the intelligence and instincts of
+an ape suddenly find themselves possessed of the powers of a god. And we
+are astonished that they do not display the wisdom of a god!
+
+There are other stories that have filtered through to us. There was a
+dying Uhlan who caught a child to his arms and kissed him. One would
+like to be able to kiss one's own child before one dies, but failing
+that--well, after all, there is a sort of family likeness between them.
+The same deep wondering eyes, the same--and then the mist grows deeper.
+Perhaps after all it was Baby Fritz that he kissed.
+
+And of a Belgian woman. She had seen her two sons killed before her
+eyes. She tells of that and of other horrors. Among such, of the German
+lads she had stepped over, their blue eyes quiet in death. The passion
+and the fear and the hate cleansed out of them. Just boys with their
+clothes torn--so like boys.
+
+"They, too, have got mothers, poor lads!" is all she says, thinking of
+them lying side by side with her own.
+
+When the madness and the folly are over, when the tender green is
+creeping in and out among the blackened ruins, it will be well for us to
+think of that dying Uhlan who had to put up with a French baby instead
+of his own; of that Belgian mother to whom the German youngsters were
+just "poor lads"--with their clothes torn.
+
+And the savagery and the cruelty and the guiltiness that go to the
+making of war we will seek to forget.
+
+
+
+
+*"As They Tested Our Fathers"*
+
+*By Rudyard Kipling.*
+
+ _Following is the text of an address by Mr. Kipling to a mass
+ meeting at Brighton, Sept. 8, 1914:_
+
+
+Through no fault nor wish of ours we are at war with Germany, the power
+which owes its existence to three well-thought-out wars; the power which
+for the last twenty years has devoted itself to organizing and preparing
+for this war; the power which is now fighting to conquer the civilized
+world.
+
+For the last two generations the Germans in their books, teachers,
+speeches, and schools have been carefully taught that nothing less than
+this world conquest was the object of their preparations and their
+sacrifices. They have prepared carefully and sacrificed greatly.
+
+We must have men, and men, and men, if we with our allies are to check
+the onrush of organized barbarism.
+
+Have no illusions. We are dealing with a strong and magnificently
+equipped enemy, whose avowed aim is our complete destruction.
+
+The violation of Belgium, the attack on France, and the defense against
+Russia are only steps by the way. The Germans' real objective, as she
+has always told us, is England and England's wealth, trade, and
+worldwide possessions.
+
+If you assume for an instant that that attack will be successful,
+England will not be reduced, as some people say, to the rank of a
+second-rate power, but we shall cease to exist as a nation. We shall
+become an outlying province of Germany, to be administered with what
+severity German safety and interest require.
+
+We arm against such a fate. We enter into a new life in which all the
+facts of war that we had put behind or forgotten for the past hundred
+years have returned to the front and test us as they tested our fathers.
+It will be a long and a hard road, beset with difficulties and
+discouragements, but we tread it together and we will tread it together
+to the end.
+
+Our petty social divisions and barriers have been swept away at the
+outset of our mighty struggle. All the interests of our life of six
+weeks ago are dead. We have but one interest now, and that touches the
+naked heart of every man in this island and in the empire.
+
+If we are to win the right for ourselves and for freedom to exist on
+earth, every man must offer himself for that service and that sacrifice.
+
+
+
+
+*Kipling and "The Truce of the Bear"*
+
+ _STAUNTON, Va., Sept. 25, 1914.--On Sept. 5 The Staunton News
+ printed some verses by Dr. Charles Minor Blackford, an associate
+ editor, addressed to Rudyard Kipling, calling attention to the
+ apparent inconsistency of his attitude of distrust of Russia as
+ shown in his well-known poem, "The Truce of the Bear," and his
+ present advocacy of the alliance between Russia and Great Britain.
+ A copy of the verses was sent to Mr. Kipling and the following
+ reply was received from him:_
+
+Bateman's Burwash, Sussex.
+
+Dear Sir: I am much obliged for your verses of Sept. 4. "The Truce of
+the Bear," to which they refer, was written sixteen years ago, in 1898.
+It dealt with a situation and a menace which have long since passed
+away, and with issues that are now quite dead.
+
+The present situation, as far as England is concerned, is Germany's
+deliberate disregard of the neutrality of Belgium, whose integrity
+Germany as well as England guaranteed. She has filled Belgium with every
+sort of horror and atrocity, not in the heat of passion, but as a part
+of settled policy of terrorism. Her avowed object is the conquest of
+Europe on these lines.
+
+As you may prove for yourself if you will consult her literature of the
+last generation, Germany is the present menace, not to Europe alone, but
+to the whole civilized world. If Germany, by any means, is victorious
+you may rest assured that it will be a very short time before she turns
+her attention to the United States. If you could meet the refugees from
+Belgium flocking into England and have the opportunity of checking their
+statements of unimaginable atrocities and barbarities studiously
+committed, you would, I am sure, think as seriously on these matters as
+we do, and in your unpreparedness for modern war you would do well to
+think very seriously indeed. Yours truly,
+
+RUDYARD KIPLING.
+
+
+
+
+*On the Impending Crisis*
+
+*By Norman Angell.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The London Times:_
+
+Sir: A nation's first duty is to its own people. We are asked to
+intervene in the Continental war because unless we do so we shall be
+"isolated." The isolation which will result for us if we keep out of
+this war is that, while other nations are torn and weakened by war, we
+shall not be, and by that fact might conceivably for a long time be the
+strongest power in Europe, and, by virtue of our strength and isolation,
+its arbiter, perhaps, to useful ends.
+
+We are told that if we allow Germany to become victorious she would be
+so powerful as to threaten our existence by the occupation of Belgium,
+Holland, and possibly the North of France. But, as your article of
+today's date so well points out, it was the difficulty which Germany
+found in Alsace-Lorraine which prevented her from acting against us
+during the South African War. If one province, so largely German in its
+origin and history, could create this embarrassment, what trouble will
+not Germany pile up for herself if she should attempt the absorption of
+a Belgium, a Holland, and a Normandy? She would have created for herself
+embarrassments compared with which Alsace and Poland would be a trifle;
+and Russia, with her 160,000,000, would in a year or two be as great a
+menace to her as ever.
+
+The object and effect of our entering into this war would be to insure
+the victory of Russia and her Slavonic allies. Will a dominant Slavonic
+federation of, say, 200,000,000 autocratically governed people, with a
+very rudimentary civilization, but heavily equipped for military
+aggression, be a less dangerous factor in Europe than a dominant Germany
+of 65,000,000 highly civilized and mainly given to the arts of trade and
+commerce?
+
+The last war we fought on the Continent was for the purpose of
+preventing the growth of Russia. We are now asked to fight one for the
+purpose of promoting it. It is now universally admitted that our last
+Continental war--the Crimean war--was a monstrous error and
+miscalculation. Would this intervention be any wiser or likely to be
+better in its results?
+
+On several occasions Sir Edward Grey has solemnly declared that we are
+not bound by any agreement to support France, and there is certainly no
+moral obligation on the part of the English people so to do. We can best
+serve civilization, Europe--including France--and ourselves by remaining
+the one power in Europe that has not yielded to the war madness.
+
+This, I believe, will be found to be the firm conviction of the
+overwhelming majority of the English people.
+
+Yours faithfully,
+
+NORMAN ANGELL.
+
+4 Kings Bench Walk, Temple, E.C., July 31.
+
+
+
+
+*Why England Came To Be In It*
+
+*By Gilbert K. Chesterton.*
+
+
+*I.*
+
+
+Unless we are all mad, there is at the back of the most bewildering
+business a story; and if we are all mad, there is no such thing as
+madness. If I set a house on fire, it is quite true that I may
+illuminate many other people's weaknesses as well as my own. It may be
+that the master of the house was burned because he was drunk; it may be
+that the mistress of the house was burned because she was stingy, and
+perished arguing about the expense of the fire-escape. It is,
+nevertheless, broadly true that they both were burned because I set fire
+to their house. That is the story of the thing. The mere facts of the
+story about the present European conflagration are quite as easy to
+tell.
+
+Before we go on to the deeper things which make this war the most
+sincere war of human history, it is easy to answer the question of why
+England came to be in it at all; as one asks how a man fell down a coal
+hole, or failed to keep an appointment. Facts are not the whole truth.
+But facts are facts, and in this case the facts are few and simple.
+
+Prussia, France, and England had all promised not to invade Belgium,
+because it was the safest way of invading France. But Prussia promised
+that if she might break in through her own broken promise and ours she
+would break in and not steal. In other words, we were offered at the
+same instant a promise of faith in the future and a proposal of perjury
+in the present.
+
+Those interested in human origins may refer to an old Victorian writer
+of English, who in the last and most restrained of his historical essays
+wrote of Frederick the Great, the founder of this unchanging Prussian
+policy. After describing how Frederick broke the guarantee he had signed
+on behalf of Maria Theresa he then describes how Frederick sought to put
+things straight by a promise that was an insult. "If she would but let
+him have Silesia, he would, he said, stand by her against any power
+which should try to deprive her of her other dominions; as if he was not
+already bound to stand by her, or as if his new promise could be of more
+value than the old one." That passage was written by Macaulay; but so
+far as the mere contemporary facts are concerned, it might have been
+written by me.
+
+
+*Diplomacy That Might Have Been.*
+
+Upon the immediate logical and legal origin of the English interest
+there can be no rational debate. There are some things so simple that
+one can almost prove them with plans and diagrams, as in Euclid. One
+could make a kind of comic calendar of what would have happened to the
+English diplomatist if he had been silenced every time by Prussian
+diplomacy. Suppose we arrange it in the form of a kind of diary:
+
+ July 24--Germany invades Belgium.
+
+ July 25--England declares war.
+
+ July 26--Germany promises not to annex Belgium.
+
+ July 27--England withdraws from the war.
+
+ July 28--Germany annexes Belgium. England declares war.
+
+ July 29--Germany promises not to annex France. England withdraws
+ from the war.
+
+ July 30--Germany annexes France. England declares war.
+
+ July 31--Germany promises not to annex England.
+
+ Aug. 1--England withdraws from the war. Germany invades England.
+
+How long is anybody expected to go on with that sort of game, or keep
+peace at that illimitable price? How long must we pursue a road in which
+promises are all fetiches in front of us and all fragments behind us?
+No; upon the cold facts of the final negotiations, as told by any of the
+diplomatists in any of the documents, there is no doubt about the story.
+And no doubt about the villain of the story.
+
+These are the last facts, the facts which involved England. It is
+equally easy to state the first facts--the facts which involved Europe.
+The Prince who practically ruled Austria was shot by certain persons
+whom the Austrian Government believed to be conspirators from Servia.
+The. Austrian Government piled up arms and armies, but said not a word
+either to Servia, their suspect, or Italy, their ally. From the
+documents it would seem that Austria kept everybody in the dark, except
+Prussia. It is probably nearer the truth to say that Prussia kept
+everybody in the dark, including Austria.
+
+
+*The Demands on Servia.*
+
+But all that is what is called opinion, belief, conviction, or common
+sense, and we are not dealing with it here. The objective fact is that
+Austria told Servia to permit Servian officers to be suspended by the
+authority of Austrian officers, and told Servia to submit to this within
+forty-eight hours. In other words, the Sovereign of Servia was
+practically told to take off not only the laurels of two great
+campaigns, but his own lawful and national crown, and to do it in a time
+in which no respectable citizen is expected to discharge a hotel bill.
+Servia asked for time for arbitration--in short, for peace. But Russia
+had already begun to mobilize, and Prussia, presuming that Servia might
+thus be rescued, declared war.
+
+
+Between these two ends of fact, the ultimatum to Servia, the ultimatum
+to Belgium, any one so inclined can, of course, talk as if everything
+were relative. If any one asks why the Czar should rush to the support
+of Servia, it is easy to ask why the Kaiser should rush to the support
+of Austria. If any one say that that the French would attack the
+Germans, it is sufficient to answer that the Germans did attack the
+French.
+
+There remain, however, two attitudes to consider, even perhaps two
+arguments to counter, which can best be considered and countered under
+this general head of facts. First of all, there is a curious, cloudy
+sort of argument, much affected by the professional rhetoricans of
+Prussia, who are sent out to instruct and correct the minds of Americans
+or Scandinavians. It consists of going into convulsions of incredulity
+and scorn at the mention of Russia's responsibility for Servia or
+England's responsibility for Belgium; and suggesting that, treaty or no
+treaty, frontier or no frontier, Russia would be out to slay Teutons or
+England to steal colonies.
+
+
+*England Kept Her Contracts.*
+
+Here, as elsewhere, I think the professors dotted all over the Baltic
+plain fail in lucidity and in the power of distinguishing ideas. Of
+course, it is quite true that England has material interests to defend,
+and will probably use the opportunity to defend them; or, in other
+words, of course England, like everybody else, would be more comfortable
+if Prussia were less predominant. The fact remains that we did not do
+what the Germans did. We did not invade Holland to seize a naval and
+commercial advantage; and whether they say that we wished to do it in
+our greed or feared to do it in our cowardice, the fact remains that we
+did not do it. Unless this common sense principle be kept in view, I
+cannot conceive how any quarrel can possibly be judged. A contract may
+be made between two persons solely for material advantages on each side;
+but the moral advantage is still generally supposed to lie with the
+person who keeps the contract. Surely, it cannot be dishonest to be
+honest--even if honesty is the best policy. Imagine the most complex
+maze of indirect motives, and still the man who keeps faith for money
+cannot possibly be worse than the man who breaks faith for money.
+
+It will be noted that this ultimate test applies in the same way to
+Servia as to Belgium and Britain. The Servians may not be a very
+peaceful people; but on the occasion under discussion it was certainly
+they who wanted peace. You may choose to think the Serb a sort of a born
+robber; but on this occasion it was certainly the Austrian who was
+trying to rob. Similarly, you may call England perfidious as a sort of
+historical summary, and declare your private belief that Mr. Asquith was
+vowed from infancy to the ruin of the German Empire--a Hannibal and
+hater of the eagles. But when all is said, it is nonsense to call a man
+perfidious because he keeps his promise. It is absurd to complain of the
+sudden treachery of a business man in turning up punctually to his
+appointment, or the unfair shock given to a creditor by the debtor
+paying his debts. Lastly, there is an attitude not unknown in the crisis
+against which I should particularly like to protest. I should address my
+protest especially to those lovers and pursuers of peace who, very
+shortsightedly, have occasionally adopted it. I mean the attitude which
+is impatient of these preliminary details about who did this or that and
+whether it was right or wrong. They are satisfied with saying that an
+enormous calamity called war has been begun by some or all of us, and
+should be ended by some or all of us. To these people this preliminary
+chapter about the precise happenings must appear not only dry (and it
+must of necessity be the dryest part of the task), but essentially
+needless and barren. I wish to tell these people that they are wrong;
+that they are wrong upon all principles of human justice and historic
+continuity; but that they are especially and supremely wrong upon their
+own principles of arbitration and international peace.
+
+
+*As to Certain Peace Lovers.*
+
+These sincere and high-minded peace lovers are always telling us that
+citizens no longer settle their quarrels by private violence, and that
+nations should no longer settle theirs by public violence. They are
+always telling us that we no longer fight duels, and need no longer wage
+wars. In short, they perpetually base their peace proposals on the fact
+that an ordinary citizen no longer avenges himself with an axe.
+
+But how is he prevented from avenging himself with an axe? If he hits
+his neighbor on the head with the kitchen chopper what do we do? Do we
+all join hands, like children playing mulberry bush, and say: "We are
+all responsible for this, but let us hope it will not spread. Let us
+hope for the happy, happy day when he shall leave off chopping at the
+man's head, and when nobody shall ever chop anything forever and ever."
+Do we say: "Let bygones be bygones. Why go back to all the dull details
+with which the business began? Who can tell with what sinister motives
+the man was standing there within reach of the hatchet?"
+
+We do not. We keep the peace in private life by asking for the facts of
+provocation and the proper object of punishment. We do not go into the
+dull details; we do inquire into the origins; we do emphatically inquire
+who it was that hit first. In short, we do what I have done very briefly
+in this place.
+
+Given this, it is indeed true that behind these facts there are
+truths--truths of a terrible, of a spiritual sort. In mere fact the
+Germanic power has been wrong about Servia, wrong about Russia, wrong
+about Belgium, wrong about England, wrong about Italy. But there was a
+reason for its being wrong everywhere, and of that root reason, which
+has moved half the world against it, I shall speak later in this series.
+For that is something too omnipresent to be proved, too indisputable to
+be helped by detail. It is nothing less than the locating, after more
+than a hundred years of recriminations and wrong explanations, of the
+modern European evil--the finding of the fountain from which poison has
+flowed upon all the nations of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+*II.*
+
+*Russian or Prussian Barbarism?*
+
+
+It will hardly be denied that there is one lingering doubt in many who
+recognize unavoidable self-defense in the instant parry of the English
+sword and who have no great love for the sweeping sabre of Sadowa and
+Sedan. That doubt is the doubt of whether Russia, as compared with
+Prussia, is sufficiently decent and democratic to be the ally of liberal
+and civilized powers. I take first, therefore, this matter of
+civilization.
+
+It is vital in a discussion like this that we should make sure we are
+going by meanings and not by mere words. It is not necessary in any
+argument to settle what a word means or ought to mean. But it is
+necessary in every argument to settle what we propose to mean by the
+word. So long as our opponent understands what is the thing of which we
+are talking, it does not matter to the argument whether the word is or
+is not the one he would have chosen. A soldier does not say, "We were
+ordered to go to Mechlin, but I would rather go to Malines." He may
+discuss the etymology and archaeology of the difference on the march,
+but the point is that he knows where to go. So long as we know what a
+given word is to mean in a given discussion, it does not even matter if
+it means something else in some other and quite distinct discussion. We
+have a perfect right to say that the width of a window comes to four
+feet, even if we instantly and cheerfully change the subject to the
+larger mammals and say that an elephant has four feet. The identity of
+the words does not matter, because there is no doubt at all about the
+meanings, because nobody is likely to think of an elephant as four feet
+long, or of a window as having tusks and a curly trunk.
+
+
+*Two Meanings of "Barbarian."*
+
+It is essential to emphasize this consciousness of the thing under
+discussion in connection with two or three words that are, as it were,
+the keywords of this war. One of them is the word "barbarian." The
+Prussians apply it to the Russians, the Russians apply it to the
+Prussians. Both, I think, really mean something that really exists, name
+or no name. Both mean different things. And if we ask what these
+different things are we shall understand why England and France prefer
+Russia, and consider Prussia the really dangerous barbarian of the two.
+
+To begin with, it goes so much deeper even than atrocities; of which, in
+the past, at least, all the three empires of Central Europe have
+partaken pretty equally; as they partook of Poland. An English writer,
+seeking to avert the war by warnings against Russian influence, said
+that the flogged backs of Polish women stood between us and the
+Alliance. But not long before the flogging of women by an Austrian
+General led to that officer being thrashed in the streets of London by
+Barclay and Perkins draymen. And as for the third power, the Prussians,
+it seems clear that they have treated Belgian women in a style compared
+with which flogging might be called an official formality.
+
+But, as I say, something much deeper than any such recrimination lies
+behind the use of the word on either side. When the German Emperor
+complains of our allying ourselves with a barbaric and half Oriental
+power, he is not (I assure you) shedding tears over the grave of
+Kosciusko. And when I say (as I do most heartily) that the German
+Emperor is a barbarian, I am not merely expressing any prejudices I may
+have against the profanation of churches or of children. My countrymen
+and I mean a certain and intelligible thing when we call the Prussians
+barbarians. It is quite different from the thing attributed to Russians;
+and it could not possibly be attributed to Russians. It is very
+important that the neutral world should understand what this thing is.
+
+If the German calls the Russian barbarous, he presumably means
+imperfectly civilized. There is a certain path along which Western
+nations have proceeded in recent times; and it is tenable that Russia
+has not proceeded so far as the others; that she has less of the special
+modern system in science, commerce, machinery, travel, or political
+constitution. The Russ plows with an old plow; he wears a wild beard; he
+adores relics; his life is as rude and hard as that of a subject of
+Alfred the Great. Therefore, he is, in the German sense, a barbarian.
+Poor fellows, like Gorky and Dostoieffsky, have to form their own
+reflections on the scenery, without the assistance of large quotations
+from Schiller on garden seats; or inscriptions directing them to pause
+and thank the All-Father for the finest view in Hesse-Pumpernickel. The
+Russians, having nothing but their faith, their fields, their great
+courage, and their self-governing communes, are quite cut off from what
+is called (in the fashionable street in Frankfort) the true, the
+beautiful, and the good. There is a real sense in which one can call
+such backwardness barbaric, by comparison with the Kaiserstrasse; and in
+that sense it is true of Russia.
+
+Now we, the French and English, do not mean this when we call the
+Prussians barbarians. If their cities soared higher than their flying
+ships, if their trains traveled faster than their bullets, we should
+still call them barbarians. We should know exactly what we meant by it;
+and we should know that it is true. For we do not mean anything that is
+an imperfect civilization by accident. We mean something that is the
+enemy of civilization by design. We mean something that is willfully at
+war with the principles by which human society has been made possible
+hitherto. Of course, it must be partly civilized even to destroy
+civilization. Such ruin could not be wrought by the savages that are
+merely undeveloped or inert. You could not have even Huns without horses
+or horses without horsemanship. You could not have even Danish pirates
+without ships, or ships without seamanship.
+
+
+*The "Positive Barbarian."*
+
+This person, whom I may call the positive barbarian, must be rather more
+superficially up to date than what I may call the negative barbarian.
+Alaric was an officer in the Roman legions, but for all that he
+destroyed Rome. Nobody supposes that Eskimos could have done it at all
+neatly. But (in our meaning) barbarism is not a matter of methods but of
+aims. We say that these veneered vandals have the perfectly serious aim
+of destroying certain ideas which, as they think, the world has
+outgrown; without which, as we think, the world will die.
+
+It is essential that this perilous peculiarity in the Pruss, or positive
+barbarian, should be seized. He has what he fancies is a new idea, and
+he is going to apply it to everybody. As a fact, it is simply a false
+generalization, but he is really trying to make it general. This does
+not apply to the negative barbarian; it does not apply to the Russian or
+the Servian, even if they are barbarians. If a Russian peasant does beat
+his wife, he does it because his fathers did it before him; he is likely
+to beat less rather than more as the past fades away. He does not think,
+as the Prussian would, that he has made a new discovery in physiology in
+finding that a woman is weaker than a man. If a Servian does knife his
+rival without a word, he does it because other Servians have done it. He
+may regard it even as piety--but certainly not as progress. He does not
+think, as the Prussian does, that he founds a new school of horology by
+starting before the word "Go." He does not think he is in advance of the
+world in militarism--merely because he is behind it in morals.
+
+No; the danger of the Pruss is that he is prepared to fight for old
+errors as if they were new truths. He has somehow heard of certain
+shallow simplifications, and imagines that we have never heard of them.
+And, as I have said, his limited but very sincere lunacy concentrates
+chiefly in a desire to destroy two ideas, the twin root ideas, of
+national society. The first is the idea of record and promise; the
+second is the idea of reciprocity.
+
+It is plain that the promise, or extension of responsibility through
+time, is what chiefly distinguishes us, I will not say from savages, but
+from brutes and reptiles. This was noted by the shrewdness of the Old
+Testament when it summed up the dark, irresponsible enormity of
+Leviathan in the words, "Will he make a pact with thee?" The promise,
+like the wind, is unknown in nature and is the first mark of man.
+Referring only to human civilization, it may be said with seriousness
+that in the beginning was the Word. The vow is to the man what the song
+is to the bird or the bark to the dog; his voice, whereby he is known.
+Just as a man who cannot keep an appointment is not fit to fight a duel,
+so the man who cannot keep an appointment with himself is not sane
+enough even for suicide. It is not easy to mention anything on which the
+enormous apparatus of human life can be said to depend. But if it
+depends on anything it is on this frail cord, flung from the forgotten
+hills of yesterday to the invisible mountains of tomorrow. On that
+solitary string hangs everything from Armageddon to an almanac, from a
+successful revolution to a return ticket. On that solitary string the
+barbarian is hacking heavily with a sabre which is fortunately blunt.
+
+
+*Prussia's Great Discovery.*
+
+Any one can see this well enough merely by reading the last negotiations
+between London and Berlin. The Prussians had made a new discovery in
+international politics--that it may often be convenient to make a
+promise, and yet curiously inconvenient to keep it. They were charmed,
+in their simple way, with this scientific discovery and desired to
+communicate it to the world. They therefore promised England a promise
+on condition that she broke a promise, and on the implied condition that
+the new promise might be broken as easily as the old one. To the
+profound astonishment of Prussia, this reasonable offer was refused. I
+believe that the astonishment of Prussia was quite sincere. That is what
+I mean when I say that the barbarian is trying to cut away that cord of
+honesty and clear record on which hangs all that men have made.
+
+The friends of the German cause have complained that Asiatics and
+Africans upon the very verge of savagery have been brought against them
+from India and Algiers. And in ordinary circumstances I should
+sympathize with such a complaint made by a European people. But the
+circumstances are not ordinary. Here again the quite unique barbarism of
+Prussia goes deeper than what we call barbarities. About mere
+barbarities, it is true, the Turco and the Sikh would have very good
+reply to the superior Teuton. The general and just reason for not using
+non-European tribes against Europeans is that given by Chatham against
+the use of the red Indian--that such allies might do very diabolical
+things. But the poor Turco might not unreasonably ask, after a week-end
+in Belgium, what more diabolical things he could do than the highly
+cultured Germans were doing themselves.
+
+Nevertheless, as I say, the justification of any extra-European aid goes
+deeper than by any such details. It rests upon the fact that even other
+civilizations, even much lower civilizations, even remote and repulsive
+civilizations, depend as much as our own on this primary principle on
+which the supermorality of Potsdam declares open war. Even savages
+promise things, and respect those who keep their promises. Even
+Orientals write things down; and though they write them from right to
+left, they know the importance of a scrap of paper. Many merchants will
+tell you that the word of the sinister and almost unhuman Chinaman is
+often as good as his bond; and it was amid palm trees and Syrian
+pavilions that the great utterance opened the tabernacle to him that
+sweareth to his hurt and changeth not. There is doubtless a dense
+labyrinth of duplicity in the East; and perhaps more guile in the
+individual Asiatic than in the individual German. But we are not talking
+of the violations of human morality in various parts of the world.
+
+
+*A Fight Against Anarchy.*
+
+We are talking about a new inhuman morality which denies altogether the
+day of obligation. The Prussians have been told by their literary men
+that everything depends upon "mood," and by their politicians that all
+arrangements dissolve before "necessity." That is the importance of the
+German Chancellor's phrase. He did not allege some special excuse in the
+case of Belgium, which might make it seem an exception that proved the
+rule. He distinctly argued, as on a principle applicable to other cases,
+that victory was a necessity and honor was a scrap of paper. And it is
+evident that the half-educated Prussian imagination really cannot get
+any further than this. It cannot see that if everybody's action were
+entirely incalculable from hour to hour, it would not only be the end of
+all promises but the end of all projects.
+
+In not being able to see that, the Berlin philosopher is really on a
+lower mental level than the Arab who respects the salt, or the Brahmin
+who preserves the caste. And in this quarrel we have a right to come
+with scimitars as well as sabres, with bows as well as rifles, with
+assegai and tomahawk and boomerang, because there is in all these at
+least a seed of civilization that these intellectual anarchists would
+kill. And if they should find us in our last stand girt with such
+strange swords and following unfamiliar ensigns and ask us for what we
+fight in so singular a company, we shall know what to reply: "We fight
+for the trust and for the tryst; for fixed memories and the possible
+meeting of men; for all that makes life anything but an uncontrollable
+nightmare. We fight for the long arm of honor and remembrance; for all
+that can lift a man above the quicksands of his needs and give him the
+mastery of time."
+
+
+
+
+*III.*
+
+*Disposing of Germany's Civilizing Mission*
+
+
+In the last summary I suggested that barbarism, as we mean it, is not
+mere ignorance or even mere cruelty. It has a more precise sense, and
+means militant hostility to certain necessary human ideas. I took the
+case of the vow or the contract which Prussian intellectualism would
+destroy. I urged that the Prussian is a spiritual barbarian, because he
+is not bound by his own past, any more than a man in a dream. He avows
+that when he promised to respect a frontier on Monday he did not foresee
+what he calls "the necessity" of not respecting it on Tuesday. In short,
+he is like a child who at the end of all reasonable explanations and
+reminders of admitted arrangements has no answer except "But I want to."
+
+There is another idea in human arrangements so fundamental as to be
+forgotten, but now for the first time denied. It may be called the idea
+of reciprocity; or, in better English, of give and take. The Prussian
+appears to be quite intellectually incapable of this thought. He cannot,
+I think, conceive the idea that is the foundation of all comedy--that in
+the eyes of the other man he is only the other man. And if we carry this
+clue through the institutions of Prussianized Germany we shall find how
+curiously his mind has been limited in the matter. The German differs
+from other patriots in the inability to understand patriotism. Other
+European peoples pity the Poles or the Welsh for their violated borders,
+but Germans only pity themselves. They might take forcible possession of
+the Severn or the Danube, of the Thames or the Tiber, of the Garry or
+the Garonne--and they would still be singing sadly about how fast and
+true stands the watch on the Rhine and what a shame it would be if any
+one took their own little river away from them. That is what I mean by
+not being reciprocal; and you will find it in all that they do, as in
+all that is done by savages.
+
+
+*"Laughs When He Hurts You."*
+
+Here again it is very necessary to avoid confusing this soul of the
+savage with mere savagery in the sense of brutality or butchery, in
+which the Greeks, the French, and all the most civilized nations have
+indulged in hours of abnormal panic or revenge. Accusations of cruelty
+are generally mutual. But it is the point about the Prussian that with
+him nothing is mutual. The definition of the true savage does not
+concern itself even with how much more he hurts strangers or captives
+than do the other tribes of men. The definition of the true savage is
+that he laughs when he hurts you and howls when you hurt him. This
+extraordinary inequality in the mind is in every act and word that comes
+from Berlin.
+
+For instance, no man of the world believes all he sees in the
+newspapers, and no journalist believes a quarter of it. We should
+therefore be quite ready in the ordinary way to take a great deal off
+the tales of German atrocities; to doubt this story or deny that. But
+there is one thing that we cannot doubt or deny--the seal and authority
+of the Emperor. In the imperial proclamation the fact that certain
+"frightful" things have been done is admitted and justified on the
+ground of their frightfulness. It was a military necessity to terrify
+the peaceful populations with something that was not civilized,
+something that was hardly human.
+
+
+*"Howls When You Hurt Him."*
+
+Very well. That is an intelligible policy; and in that sense an
+intelligible argument. An army endangered by foreigners may do the most
+frightful things. But then we turn the next page of the Kaiser's public
+diary, and we find him writing to the President of the United States to
+complain that the English are using dumdum bullets and violating various
+regulations of The Hague Conference. I pass for the present the question
+of whether there is a word of truth in these charges. I am content to
+gaze rapturously at the blinking eyes of the true, or positive,
+barbarian. I suppose he would be quite puzzled if we said that violating
+The Hague Conference was "a military necessity" to us; or that the rules
+of the conference were only a scrap of paper. He would be quite pained
+if we said that dumdum bullets "by their very frightfulness" would be
+very useful to keep conquered Germans in order. Do what he will, he
+cannot get outside the idea that he, because he is he and not you, is
+free to break the law and also to appeal to the law. It is said that the
+Prussian officers play at a game called Kriegspiel, or the war game. But
+in truth they could not play at any game, for the essence of every game
+is that the rules are the same on both sides.
+
+But, taking every German institution in turn, the case is the same; and
+it is not a case of mere bloodshed or military bravado. The duel, for
+example, can legitimately be called a barbaric thing, but the word is
+here used in another sense. There are duels in Germany; but so there are
+in France, Italy, Belgium, Spain; indeed, there are duels wherever there
+are dentists, newspapers, Turkish baths, time tables, and all the curses
+of civilization--except in England and a corner of America. You may
+happen to regard the duel as a historic relic of the more barbaric
+States on which these modern States were built. It might equally well be
+maintained that the duel is everywhere the sign of high civilization,
+being the sign of its more delicate sense of honor, its more vulnerable
+vanity, or its greater dread of social disrepute. But whichever of the
+two views you take, you must concede that the essence of the duel is an
+armed equality. I should not, therefore, apply the word barbaric, as I
+am using it, to the duels of German officers, or even the broadsword
+combats that are conventional among the German students. I do not see
+why a young Prussian should not have scars all over his face if he likes
+them; nay, they are often the redeeming points of interest on an
+otherwise somewhat unenlightening countenance. The duel may be defended;
+the sham duel may be defended.
+
+
+*The One-Sided Prussian Duel.*
+
+What cannot be defended is something really peculiar to Prussia, of
+which we hear numberless stories, some of them certainly true. It might
+be called the one-sided duel. I mean the idea that there is some sort of
+dignity in drawing the sword upon a man who has not got a sword--a
+waiter, or a shop assistant, or even a schoolboy. One of the officers of
+the Kaiser in the affair at Zabern was found industriously hacking at a
+cripple. In all these matters I would avoid sentiment. We must not lose
+our tempers at the mere cruelty of the thing, but pursue the strict
+psychological distinction. Others besides German soldiers have slain the
+defenseless, for loot or lust or private malice, like any other
+murderer. The point is that nowhere else but in Prussian Germany is any
+theory of honor mixed up with such things, any more than with poisoning
+or picking pockets. No French, English, Italian, or American gentleman
+would think he had in some way cleared his own character by sticking his
+sabre through some ridiculous greengrocer who had nothing in his hand
+but a cucumber. It would seem as if the word which is translated from
+the German as "honor" must really mean something quite different in
+German. It seems to mean something more like what we should call
+"prestige."
+
+
+*Absence of the Reciprocal Idea.*
+
+The fundamental fact, however, is the absence of the reciprocal idea.
+The Prussian is not sufficiently civilized for the duel. Even when he
+crosses swords with us his thoughts are not as our thoughts; when we
+both glorify war we are glorifying different things. Our medals are
+wrought like his, but they do not mean the same thing; our regiments are
+cheered as his are, but the thought in the heart is not the same; the
+Iron Cross is on the bosom of his King, but it is not the sign of our
+God. For we, alas! follow our God with many relapses and
+self-contradictions, but he follows his very consistently. Through all
+the things that we have examined, the view of national boundaries, the
+view of military methods, the view of personal honor and self-defense,
+there runs in their case something of an atrocious simplicity; something
+too simple for us to understand; the idea that glory consists in holding
+the steel, and not in facing it.
+
+If further examples were necessary it would be easy to give hundreds of
+them. Let us leave, for the moment, the relations between man and man in
+the thing called the duel. Let us take the relation between man and
+woman, in that immortal duel which we call a marriage. Here again we
+shall find that other Christian civilizations aim at some kind of
+equality, even if the balance be irrational or dangerous. Thus, the two
+extremes of the treatment of women might be represented by what are
+called the respectable classes in America and in France. In America they
+choose the risk of comradeship, in France the compensation of courtesy.
+In America it is practically possible for any young gentleman to take
+any young lady for what he calls (I deeply regret to say) a joy ride;
+but at least the man goes with the woman as much as the woman with the
+man. In France the young woman is protected like a nun while she is
+unmarried; but when she is a mother she is really a holy woman; and when
+she is a grandmother she is a holy terror.
+
+By both extremes the woman gets something back out of life. There is
+only one place where she gets little or nothing back, and that is the
+north of Germany. France and America aim alike at equality; America by
+similarity, France by dissimilarity. But North Germany does definitely
+aim at inequality. The woman stands up with no more irritation than a
+butler; the man sits down with no more embarrassment than a guest. This
+is the cool affirmation of inferiority, as in the case of the sabre and
+the tradesmen. "Thou goest with women; forget not thy whip," said
+Nietzsche. It will be observed that he does not say "poker," which might
+come more naturally to the mind of a more common or Christian
+wife-beater. But, then, a poker is a part of domesticity, and might be
+used by the wife as well as the husband. In fact, it often is. The sword
+and the whip are the weapons of a privileged caste.
+
+Pass from the closest of all differences, that between husband and wife,
+to the most distant of all differences, that of the remote and unrelated
+races who have seldom seen each other's faces, and never been tinged
+with each other's blood. Here we still find the same unvarying Prussian
+principle. Any European might feel a genuine fear of the Yellow Peril,
+and many Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Russians have felt and expressed it.
+Many might say, and have said, that the heathen Chinee is very heathen
+indeed; that if he ever advances against us he will trample and torture
+and utterly destroy, in a way that Eastern people do, but Western people
+do not. Nor do I doubt the German Emperor's sincerity when he sought to
+point out to us how abnormal and abominable such a nightmare campaign
+would be, supposing that it could come.
+
+But now comes the comic irony, which never fails to follow on the
+attempt of the Prussian to be philosophic. For the Kaiser, after
+explaining to his troops how important it was to avoid Eastern
+barbarism, instantly commanded them to become Eastern barbarians. He
+told them, in so many words, to be Huns, and leave nothing living or
+standing behind them. In fact, he frankly offered a new army corps of
+aboriginal Tartars to the Far East, within such time as it may take a
+bewildered Hanoverian to turn into a Tartar. Any one who has the painful
+habit of personal thought will perceive here at once the non-reciprocal
+principle again. Boiled down to its bones of logic, it means simply
+this: "I am a German and you are a Chinaman. Therefore, I being a
+German, have a right to be a Chinaman. But you have no right to be a
+Chinaman, because you are only a Chinaman." This is probably the highest
+point to which the German culture has risen.
+
+
+*"The Principle of Being Unprincipled."*
+
+The principle here neglected, which may be called mutuality by those who
+misunderstand and dislike the word equality, does not offer so clear a
+distinction between the Prussian and the other peoples as did the first
+Prussian principle of an infinite and destructive opportunism; or, in
+other words, the principle of being unprincipled. Nor upon this second
+can one take up so obvious a position touching the other civilizations
+or semi-civilizations of the world. Some idea of oath and bond there is
+in the rudest tribes, in the darkest continents. But it might be
+maintained, of the more delicate and imaginative element of reciprocity,
+that a cannibal in Borneo understands it almost as little as a professor
+in Berlin. A narrow and one-sided seriousness is the fault of barbarians
+all over the world. This may have been the meaning, for aught I know, of
+the one eye of the Cyclops; that the barbarian cannot see around things
+or look at them from two points of view, and thus becomes a blind beast
+and an eater of men. Certainly there can be no better summary of the
+savage than this, which, as we have seen, unfits him for the duel. He is
+the man who cannot love--no, nor even hate--his neighbor as himself.
+
+But this quality in Prussia does have one effect which has reference to
+the same question of the lower civilizations. It disposes once and for
+all at least of the civilizing mission of Germany. Evidently the Germans
+are the last people in the world to be trusted with the task. They are
+as short-sighted morally as physically. What is their sophism of
+"necessity" but an inability to imagine tomorrow morning? What is their
+non-reciprocity but an inability to imagine, not a god or devil, but
+merely another man? Are these to judge mankind? Men of two tribes in
+Africa not only know that they are all men but can understand that they
+are all black men. In this they are quite seriously in advance of the
+intellectual Prussian, who cannot be got to see that we are all white
+men. The ordinary eye is unable to perceive in the Northeast Teuton
+anything that marks him out especially from the more colorless classes
+of the rest of Aryan mankind. He is simply a white man, with a tendency
+to the gray or the drab. Yet he will explain in serious official
+documents that the difference between him and us is a difference between
+"the master race and the inferior race."
+
+
+*How to Know "The Master Race."*
+
+The collapse of German philosophy always occurs at the beginning rather
+than the end of an argument, and the difficulty here is that there is no
+way of testing which is a master race except by asking which is your own
+race. If you cannot find out, (as is usually the case,) you fall back on
+the absurd occupation of writing history about prehistoric times. But I
+suggest quite seriously that if the Germans can give their philosophy to
+the Hottentots there is no reason why they should not give their sense
+of superiority to the Hottentots. If they can see such fine shades
+between the Goth and the Gaul, there is no reason why similar shades
+should not lift the savage above other savages; why any Ojibway should
+not discover that he is one tint redder than the Dakotas, or any nigger
+in the Kameruns say he is not so black as he is painted. For this
+principle of a quite unproved racial supremacy is the last and worst of
+the refusals of reciprocity. The Prussian calls all men to admire the
+beauty of his large blue eyes. If they do, it is because they have
+inferior eyes; if they don't, it is because they have no eyes.
+
+Wherever the most miserable remnant of our race, astray and dried up in
+deserts or buried forever under the fall of bad civilization, has some
+feeble memory that men are men, that bargains are bargains, that there
+are two sides to a question, or even that it takes two to make a
+quarrel--that remnant has the right to assist the New Culture, to the
+knife and club and the splintered stone. For the Prussian begins all his
+culture by that act which is the destruction of all creative thought and
+constructive action. He breaks that mirror in the mind in which a man
+can see the face of his friend or foe.
+
+
+
+
+*IV.*
+
+*Russia Less Despotic Than Prussia*
+
+
+The German Emperor has reproached this country (England) with allying
+itself with "barbaric and semi-Oriental power." We have already
+considered in what sense we use the word barbaric; it is in the sense of
+one who is hostile to civilization, not one who is insufficient in it.
+But when we pass from the idea of the barbaric to the idea of the
+Oriental, the case is even more curious. There is nothing particularly
+Tartar in Russian affairs, except the fact that Russia expelled the
+Tartars. The Eastern invader occupied and crushed the country for many
+years; but that is equally true of Greece, of Spain, and even of
+Austria. If Russia has suffered from the East, she has suffered in order
+to resist it; and it is rather hard that the very miracle of her escape
+should make a mystery about her origin. Jonah may or may not have been
+three days inside a fish; but that does not make him a merman. And in
+all the other cases of European nations who escaped the monstrous
+captivity, we do admit the purity and continuity of the European type.
+We consider the old Eastern rule as a wound, but not as a stain.
+Copper-colored men out of Africa overruled for centuries the religion
+and patriotism of Spaniards. Yet I have never heard that "Don Quixote"
+was an African fable on the lines of "Uncle Remus." I have never heard
+that the heavy black in the pictures of Velasquez was due to a negro
+ancestry. In the case of Spain, which is close to us, we can recognize
+the resurrection of a Christian and cultured nation after its age of
+bondage. But Russia is rather remote; and those to whom nations are but
+names in newspapers can really fancy, like Mr. Baring's friend, that all
+Russian churches are "mosques." Yet the land of Turgenev is not a
+wilderness of fakirs; and even the fanatical Russian is as proud of
+being different from the Mongol as the fanatical Spaniard was proud of
+being different from the Moor.
+
+
+*"Scratch a Russian."*
+
+The town of Reading, as it exists, offers few opportunities for piracy
+on the high seas; yet it was the camp of the pirates in Alfred's days. I
+should think it hard to call the people of Berkshire half Danish merely
+because they drove out the Danes. In short, some temporary submergence
+under the savage flood was the fate of many of the most civilized States
+of Christendom, and it is quite ridiculous to argue that Russia, which
+wrestled hardest, must have recovered least. Everywhere, doubtless, the
+East spread a sort of enamel over the conquered countries; but
+everywhere the enamel cracked. Actual history, in fact, is exactly
+opposite to the cheap proverb invented against the Muscovite. It is not
+true to say, "Scratch a Russian and you find a Tartar." In the darkest
+hour of the barbaric dominion it was truer to say, "Scratch a Tartar and
+you find a Russian." It was the civilization that survived under all the
+barbarism. This vital romance of Russia, this revolution against Asia,
+can be proved in pure fact; not only from the almost superhuman activity
+of Russia during the struggle, but also (which is much rarer as human
+history goes) by her quite consistent conduct since. She is the only
+great nation which has really expelled the Mongol from her country and
+continued to protest against presence of the Mongol in her continent.
+Knowing what he had been in Russia, she knew what he would be in Europe.
+In this she pursued a logical line of thought, which was, if anything,
+too unsympathetic with the energies and religions of the East. Every
+other country, one may say, has been an ally of the Turk--that is, of
+the Mongol and the Moslem. The French played them as pieces against
+Austria; the English warmly supported them under the Palmerston régime;
+even the young Italians sent troops to the Crimea; and of Russia and her
+Austrian vassal it is nowadays needless to speak. For good or evil, it
+is the fact of history that Russia is the only power in Europe that has
+never supported the Crescent against the Cross.
+
+That doubtless will appear an unimportant matter, but it may become
+important under certain peculiar conditions. Suppose, for the sake of
+argument, that there were a powerful Prince in Europe who had gone
+ostentatiously out of his way to pay reverence to the remains of the
+Tartar, Mongol, and Moslem left as an outpost in Europe. Suppose there
+were a Christian Emperor who could not even go to the tomb of the
+crucified without pausing to congratulate the last and living crucifier.
+If there were an Emperor who gave guns and guides and maps and drill
+instructors to defend the remains of the Mongol in Christendom, what
+would we say to him? I think at least we might ask him what he meant by
+his impudence when he talked about supporting a semi-Oriental power.
+That we support a semi-Oriental power we deny. That he has supported an
+entirely Oriental power cannot be denied, no, not even by the man who
+did it.
+
+
+_Whom Has Prussia Emancipated?_
+
+But here is to be noted the essential difference between Russia and
+Prussia; especially by those who use the ordinary liberal arguments
+against the latter Russia has a policy, which she pursues, if you will,
+through evil and good; but at least so as to produce good as well as
+evil. Let it be granted that the policy has made her oppressive to the
+Finns, the Poles--though the Russian Poles feel far less oppressed than
+do the Prussian Poles. But it is a mere historic fact, that if Russia
+has been a despot to some small nations, she has been a deliverer to
+others. She did, so far as in her lay, emancipate the Servians or the
+Montenegrins. But whom did Prussia ever emancipate--even by accident? It
+is, indeed, somewhat extraordinary that in the perpetual permutations of
+international politics the Hohenzollerns have never gone astray into the
+path of enlightenment. They have been in alliance with almost everybody
+off and on; with France, with England, with Austria, with Russia. Can
+any one candidly say that they have left on any one of these people the
+faintest impress of progress or liberation? Prussia was the enemy of the
+French monarchy, but a worse enemy of the French Revolution. Prussia had
+been an enemy of the Czar, but she was a worse enemy of the Duma.
+Prussia totally disregarded Austrian rights; but she is today quite
+ready to inflict Austrian wrongs. This is the strong particular
+difference between the one empire and the other. Russia is pursuing
+certain intelligible and sincere ends, which to her at least are ideals,
+and for which, therefore, she will make sacrifices and will protect the
+weak. But the North German soldier is a sort of abstract tyrant;
+everywhere and always on the side of materialistic tyranny. This Teuton
+in uniform has been found in strange places; shooting farmers before
+Saratoga and flogging soldiers in Surrey, hanging niggers in Africa and
+raping girls in Wicklow, but never, by some mysterious fatality, lending
+a hand to the freeing of a single city or the independence of one
+solitary flag. Wherever scorn and prosperous oppression are, there is
+the Prussian; unconsciously consistent, instinctively restrictive,
+innocently evil; "following darkness like a dream."
+
+
+*Disinterested Despotism.*
+
+Suppose we heard of a person (gifted with some longevity) who had helped
+Alva to persecute Dutch Protestants, then helped Cromwell to persecute
+Irish Catholics, and then helped Claverhouse to persecute Scotch
+Puritans--we should find it rather easier to call him a persecutor than
+to call him a Protestant or a Catholic. Curiously enough, this is
+actually the position in which the Prussian stands in Europe. No
+arguments can alter the fact that in three converging and conclusive
+cases he has been on the side of three distinct rulers of different
+religions, who had nothing whatever in common except that they were
+ruling oppressively. In these three Governments, taken separately, one
+can see something excusable, or at least human. When the Kaiser
+encouraged the Russian rulers to crush the revolution, the Russian
+rulers undoubtedly believed they were wrestling with an inferno of
+atheism and anarchy. A Socialist of the ordinary English kind cried out
+upon me when I spoke of Stolypin and said he was chiefly known by the
+halter called "Stolypin's Necktie." As a fact, there were many other
+things interesting about Stolypin besides his necktie--his policy of
+peasant proprietorship, his extraordinary personal courage, and
+certainly none more interesting than that movement in his death agony,
+when he made the sign of the cross toward the Czar, as the crown and
+captain of his Christianity. But the Kaiser does not regard the Czar as
+the captain of Christianity. Far from it. What he supported in Stolypin
+was the necktie, and nothing but the necktie; the gallows, and not the
+cross. The Russian ruler did believe that the Orthodox Church was
+orthodox. The Austrian Archduke did really desire to make the Catholic
+Church catholic. He did really believe that he was being pro-Catholic in
+being pro-Austrian. But the Kaiser cannot be pro-Catholic, and,
+therefore, cannot have been really pro-Austrian; he was simply and
+solely anti-Servian; nay, even in the cruel and sterile strength of
+Turkey, any one with imagination can see something of the tragedy, and,
+therefore, of the tenderness of true belief. The worst that can be said
+of the Moslems is, as the poet put it, they offered to man the choice of
+the Koran or the sword. The best that can be said for the German is that
+he does not care about the Koran, but is satisfied if he can have the
+sword. And for me, I confess, even the sins of these three other
+striving empires take on, in comparison, something that is sorrowful and
+dignified; and I feel they do not deserve that this little Lutheran
+lounger should patronize all that is evil in them, while ignoring all
+that is good. He is not Catholic; he is not Orthodox; he is not
+Mohammedan. He is merely an old gentleman who wishes to share the crime,
+though he cannot share the creed. He desires to be a persecutor by the
+pang without the palm. So strongly do all the instincts of the Prussian
+drive against liberty that he would rather oppress other peoples'
+subjects than think of anybody going without the benefits of oppression.
+He is a sort of disinterested despot. He is as disinterested as the
+devil, who is ready to do any one's dirty work.
+
+
+*The Paradox of Prussia.*
+
+This would seem obviously fantastic were it not supported by solid facts
+which cannot be explained otherwise. Indeed it would be inconceivable if
+we were thinking of a whole people, consisting of free and varied
+individuals. But in Prussia the governing class is really a governing
+class, and a very few people are needed to think along these lines to
+make all the other people act along them. And the paradox of Prussia is
+this: That while its princes and nobles have no other aim on this earth
+but to destroy democracy wherever it shows itself, they have contrived
+to get themselves trusted, not as wardens of the past, but as
+forerunners of the future. Even they cannot believe that their theory is
+popular, but they do believe that it is progressive. Here again we find
+the spiritual chasm between the two monarchies in question. The Russian
+institutions are, in many cases, really left in the rear of the Russian
+people, and many of the Russian people know it. But the Prussian
+institutions are supposed to be in advance of the Prussian people, and
+most of the Prussian people believe it. It is thus much easier for the
+war lords to go everywhere and impose a hopeless slavery upon every one,
+for they have already imposed a sort of hopeful slavery on their own
+simple race.
+
+
+*A Factory of Thumbscrews.*
+
+And when men shall speak to us of the hoary iniquities of Russia and of
+how antiquated is the Russian system we shall answer, "Yes; that is the
+superiority of Russia." Their institutions are part of their history,
+whether as relics or fossils. Their abuses have really been uses; that
+is to say, they have been used up. If they have old engines of terror or
+torment, they may fall to pieces from mere rust, like an old coat of
+armor. But in the case of the Prussian tyranny, if it be tyranny at all,
+it is the whole point of its claim that it is not antiquated, but just
+going to begin, like the showman. Prussia has a whole thriving factory
+of thumbscrews, a whole humming workshop of wheels and racks, of the
+newest and neatest pattern, with which to win Europe back to reaction
+* * * infandum renovare dolorem. And if we wish to test the truth of this,
+it can be done by the same method which showed us that Russia, if her
+race or religion could sometimes make her an invader and an oppressor,
+could also be made an emancipator and a knight errant. In the same way,
+if the Russian institutions are old-fashioned, they honestly exhibit the
+good as well as the bad that can be found in old-fashioned things. In
+their police system they have an inequality which is against our ideas
+of law. But in their commune system they have an equality that is older
+than law itself. Even when they flogged each other like barbarians, they
+called each other by their Christian names like children. At their
+worst, they retained all the best of a rude society. At their best, they
+are simply good, like good children or good nuns. But in Prussia, all
+that is best in the civilized machinery is put at the service of all
+that is worst in the barbaric mind. Here again the Prussian has no
+accidental merits, none of those lucky survivals, none of those late
+repentances, which make the patchwork glory of Russia. Here all is
+sharpened to a point and pointed to a purpose; and that purpose, if
+words and acts have any meaning at all, is the destruction of liberty
+throughout the world.
+
+
+
+
+*V.*
+
+*The "Bond of Teutonism"*
+
+
+In considering the Prussian point of view we have been considering what
+seems to be mainly a mental limitation--a kind of knot in the brain.
+Toward the problem of Slav population, of English colonization, of
+French armies, and of reinforcements it shows the same strange
+philosophic sulks. So far as I can follow it, it seems to amount to
+saying, "It is very wrong that you should be superior to me, because I
+am superior to you." The spokesman of this system seems to have a
+curious capacity for concentrating this entanglement or contradiction
+sometimes into a single paragraph, or even a single sentence. I have
+already referred to the German Emperor's celebrated suggestion that in
+order to avert the peril of Hunnishness we should all become Huns. A
+much stronger instance is his more recent order to his troops touching
+the war in Northern France. As most people know, his words ran: "It is
+my royal and imperial command that you concentrate your energies, for
+the immediate present, upon one single purpose, and that is that you
+address all your skill and all the valor of my soldiers to exterminate
+first the treacherous English and to walk over Gen. French's
+contemptible little army." The rudeness of the remark an Englishman can
+afford to pass over. What I am interested in is the mentality, the train
+of thought that can manage to entangle itself even in so brief a space.
+If French's little army is contemptible it would seem clear that all the
+skill and valor of the German Army had better not be concentrated on it,
+but on the larger and less contemptible allies. If all the skill and
+valor of the German Army are concentrated on it it is not being treated
+as contemptible. But the Prussian rhetorician had two incompatible
+sentiments in his mind, and he insisted on saying them both at once. He
+wanted to think of an English Army as a small thing; but he also wanted
+to think of an English defeat as a big thing. He wanted to exult, at the
+same moment, in the utter weakness of the British Nation in their attack
+and the supreme skill and valor of the Germans in repelling such an
+attack. Somehow it must be made a common and obvious collapse for
+England and yet a daring and unexpected triumph for Germany. In trying
+to express these contradictory conceptions simultaneously he got rather
+mixed. Therefore he bade Germania fill all her vales and mountains with
+the dying agonies of this almost invisible earwig, and let the impure
+blood of this cockroach redden the Rhine down to the sea.
+
+
+*Prof. Harnack's Reproach*.
+
+But it would be unfair to base the criticism on the utterance of any
+accidental and hereditary Prince; and it is quite equally clear in the
+case of the philosophers who have been held up to us, even in England,
+as the very prophets of progress. And in nothing is it shown more
+sharply than in the curious, confused talk about race, and especially
+about the Teutonic race. Prof. Harnack and similar people are
+reproaching us, I understand, for having broken "the bond of
+Teutonism"--a bond which the Prussians have strictly observed, both in
+breach and observance. We note it in the open annexation of lands wholly
+inhabited by negroes, such as Denmark. We note it equally in their
+instant and joyful recognition of the flaxen hair and light blue eyes of
+the Turks. But it is still the abstract principle of Prof. Harnack which
+interests me most, and in following it I have the same complexity of
+inquiry, but the same simplicity of result. Comparing the professor's
+concern about "Teutonism" with his unconcern about Belgium, I can only
+reach the following result: "A man need not keep a promise he has made.
+But a man must keep a promise he has not made." There certainly was a
+treaty binding Britain to Belgium, if it was only a scrap of paper. If
+there was any treaty binding Britain with Teutonism it is, to say the
+least of it, a lost scrap of paper--almost what one might call a scrap
+of waste paper. Here again the pedants under consideration exhibit the
+illogical perversity that makes the brain reel. There is obligation and
+there is no obligation; sometimes it appears that Germany and England
+must keep faith with each other; sometimes that Germany need not keep
+faith with anybody and anything; sometimes that we, alone among European
+peoples, are almost entitled to be Germans; sometimes that besides us
+Russians and Frenchmen almost rise to a Germanic loveliness of
+character. But through all there is, hazy but not hypocritical, this
+sense of some common Teutonism.
+
+Prof. Haeckel, another of the witnesses raised up against us, attained
+to some celebrity at one time through proving the remarkable resemblance
+between two different things by printing duplicate pictures of the same
+thing. Prof. Haeckel's contribution to biology, in this case, was
+exactly like Prof. Harnack's contribution to ethnology. Prof. Harnack
+knows what a German is like. When he wants to imagine what an Englishman
+is like he simply photographs the same German over again. In both cases
+there is probably sincerity, as well as simplicity. Haeckel was so
+certain that the species illustrated in embryo really are closely
+related and linked up that it seemed to him a small thing to simplify it
+by mere repetition. Harnack is so certain that the German and Englishman
+are almost alike that he really risks the generalization that they are
+exactly alike. He photographs, so to speak, the same fair and foolish
+face twice over, and calls it a remarkable resemblance between cousins.
+Thus he can prove the existence of Teutonism just about as conclusively
+as Haeckel has proved the more tenable proposition of the non-existence
+of God.
+
+
+*Germans and English.*
+
+Now, the German and the Englishman are not in the least alike--except in
+the sense that neither of them are negroes. They are, in everything good
+and evil, more unlike than any other two men we can take at random from
+the great European family. They are opposite from the roots of their
+history--nay, of their geography. It is an understatement to call
+Britain insular. Britain is not only an island, but an island slashed by
+the sea till it nearly splits into three islands, and even the midlands
+can almost smell the salt. Germany is a powerful, beautiful, and fertile
+inland country, which can only find the sea by one or two twisted and
+narrow paths, as people find a subterranean lake. Thus the British Navy
+is really national because it is natural. It has cohered out of hundreds
+of accidental adventures of ships and shipmen before Chaucer's time and
+after it. But the German Navy is an artificial thing, as artificial as a
+constructed Alp would be in England. William II. has simply copied the
+British Navy, as Frederick II. copied the French Army, and this Japanese
+or antlike assiduity in imitation is one of the hundred qualities which
+the Germans have and the English markedly have not. There are other
+German superiorities which are very much superior. The one or two really
+jolly things that the Germans have got are precisely the things which
+the English haven't got, notably a real habit of popular music and of
+the ancient songs of the people; not merely spreading from the towns or
+caught from the professionals. In this the Germans rather resemble the
+Welsh, though heaven knows what becomes of Teutonism if they do. But the
+difference between the Germans and the English goes deeper than all
+these signs of it. They differ more than any other two Europeans in the
+normal posture of the mind.
+
+Above all, they differ in what is the most English of all English
+traits--that shame which the French may be right in calling "the bad
+shame," for it is certainly mixed up with pride and suspicion, the
+upshot of which we call shyness. Even an Englishman's rudeness is often
+rooted in his being embarrassed. But a German's rudeness is rooted in
+his never being embarrassed. He eats and makes love noisily. He never
+feels a speech or a song or a sermon or a large meal to be what the
+English call "out of place" in particular circumstances. When Germans
+are patriotic and religious they have no reactions against patriotism
+and religion, as have the English and the French. Nay, the mistake of
+Germany in the modern disaster largely arose from the facts that she
+thought England was simple, when England is very subtle. She thought
+that because our politics have become largely financial they had become
+wholly financial; that because our aristocrats had become pretty cynical
+they had become entirely corrupt. They could not seize the subtlety by
+which a rather used-up English gentleman might sell a coronet when he
+could not sell a fortress; might lower the public standards and yet
+refuse to lower the flag. In short, the Germans are quite sure that they
+understand us entirely because they do not understand us at all.
+Possibly, if they began to understand us they might hate us even more,
+but I would rather be hated for some small but real reason than pursued
+with love on account of all kinds of qualities which I do not possess
+and which I do not desire. And when the Germans get their first genuine
+glimpses of what modern England is like they will discover that England
+has a very broken, belated, and inadequate sense of having an obligation
+to Europe; but no sort of sense whatever of having any obligation to
+Teutonism.
+
+
+*Slippery Strength of Stupidity.*
+
+This is the last and strongest of the Prussian qualities we have here
+considered. There is in stupidity of this sort a strange, slippery
+strength, because it can be not only outside rules, but outside reason.
+The man who really cannot see that he is contradicting himself has a
+great advantage in controversy, though the advantage breaks down when he
+tries to reduce it to simple addition, to chess--or to the game called
+war. It is the same about the stupidity of the one-sided kinship. The
+drunkard who is quite certain that a total stranger is his long-lost
+brother has a great advantage until it comes to matters of detail. "We
+must have chaos within," said Nietzsche, "that we may give birth to a
+dancing star."
+
+In these slight notes I have suggested the principal strong points of
+the Prussian character--a failure in honor which almost amounts to a
+failure in memory; an egomania that is honestly blind to the fact that
+the other party is an ego, and, above all, an actual itch for tyranny
+and interference, the devil which everywhere torments the idle and the
+proud. To these must be added a certain mental shapelessness, which can
+expand or contract without reference to reason or record--a potential
+infinity of excuses. If the English had been on the German side the
+German professors would have noted what irresistible energies had
+evolved the Teutons. As the English are on the other side, the German
+professors will say that these Teutons were not sufficiently evolved; or
+they will say they were just sufficiently evolved to show that they were
+not Teutons. Probably they will say both. But the truth is that all that
+they call evolution should rather be called evasion. They tell us they
+are opening windows of enlightenment and doors of progress. The truth is
+that they are breaking up the whole house of the human intellect that
+they may abscond in any direction. There is an ominous and almost
+monstrous parallel between the position of their overrated philosophers
+and of their comparatively underrated soldiers. For what their
+professors call roads of progress are really routes of escape.
+
+
+
+
+*South Africa's Boers and Britons*
+
+*By H. Rider Haggard.*
+
+
+The heart of South Africa, Boer and Briton, is with England in this war.
+Here and there you will find an individual who cherishes bitter and
+hostile memories, of which there has been an example in Mr. Beyers
+letter the other day, so effectually answered by Gen. Botha. But such
+instances, I believe, are so rare that really they are the exceptions
+which seem to prove the rule. Of course, it goes without saying that
+every person of English descent is heartily with the mother country, and
+I do not suppose it would be an overestimate to add that quite 80 per
+cent, of the Dutch are of the same way of thinking.
+
+Still, there is a party among the South African Dutch that sees no
+necessity for the invasion of German Southwest Africa. This party
+overlooks the fact that the Germans have for long been preparing to
+invade them; also that if by any chance Germany should conquer in this
+war South Africa would be one of the first countries that they would
+seize.
+
+In speaking of this I talk of what I understand, since for the last two
+and a half years it has been my duty to travel around the British Empire
+upon the service of his Majesty. In addition to South Africa, I have
+visited India, Australia, New Zealand, Newfoundland, and Canada. I have
+recently traveled throughout South Africa as a member of the Dominion's
+Royal Commission. It was my first visit there after the lapse of a whole
+generation, and I can only say that everywhere I have found the most
+intense loyalty and devotion to the old mother land. The empire is one
+and indivisible; together it will stand or together it will fall.
+
+South Africa is united; it has forgotten its recent labor troubles. I
+answer "absolutely" all such things are past history, blown away and
+destroyed by this great wind of war. South Africa, down to its lowest
+Hottentot, has, I believe, but one object, to help England to win in
+this vast battle of the nations. Why, even the natives, as you may have
+noticed, are sending subscriptions from their scanty hoards and praying
+to be allowed "to throw a few stones for the King." Did not Poutsma say
+as much the other day?
+
+In the old days, of course, there were very strained relations between
+the English and Boers, which had their roots in foolish and inconsistent
+acts carried out by the Home Government, generally to forward party
+ends. I need not go into them because they are too long.
+
+Then came the Boer war, which, as you know, proved a much bigger
+enterprise than the Home Government had anticipated. It cost Britain
+20,000 lives and £300,000,000 of English money before the Boers were
+finally subdued. Only about half a score of years have gone by since
+peace was declared. Within two or three years of that peace the British
+Government made up its mind to a very bold step and one which was viewed
+with grave doubts by many people--namely, to give full self-government
+to the Transvaal and the Orange River Colonies.
+
+
+*Astonished at Results.*
+
+When I traveled through South Africa the other day this new Constitution
+had been working for a few years, and I can only say that I was
+astonished at the results. Here and there in the remoter districts, it
+is true, some racial feeling still prevailed, but taken as a whole this
+seems absolutely to have died away. Briton and Boer have come together
+in a manner for which I believe I am right in saying there is no
+precedent in the history of the world, so shortly, at any rate, after a
+prolonged and bitter struggle to the death. I might give many instances,
+but I will only take one. At Pretoria I was asked to inspect a company
+of Boy Scouts, and there I found English and Dutch lads serving side by
+side with the utmost brotherhood. Again I met most of the men who had
+been leaders of the Boers in the war. One and all professed the greatest
+loyalty to England. Moreover, I am certain that this was not lip
+loyalty; it was from the heart. Especially was I impressed by that great
+man, Gen. Botha, with whom I had several conversations. I am convinced
+that at this moment the King has no truer or more faithful servant than
+Gen. Botha. Again and again did I hear from prominent South Africans of
+Dutch or Huguenot extraction that never more was there any chance of
+trouble between Boer and Briton.
+
+I know it is alleged by some that this is because the Dutch feel that
+they have on the whole made a good bargain, having won absolute
+constitutional liberty and the fullest powers of self-government, plus
+the protection of the British fleet. There may be something in this
+view, but I am sure that the feeling goes a great deal deeper than
+self-interest. Mutual respect has arisen between those who ten years ago
+were enemies fighting each other.
+
+
+*Appeal to People's Imagination.*
+
+Moreover, the Boer now knows a great deal more of the British Empire and
+what it means than he did then. Lastly, the supreme generosity evinced
+by Britain in giving their enemy of the day before every right and
+privilege that is owned by her other oversea dominions with whom she has
+never had a quarrel appeals deeply to the imagination of the Dutch
+people. Now, the world sees the results. Germany, which has
+miscalculated so much in connection with this war and the part that the
+British Empire would play in it, miscalculated nowhere more than it did
+in the case of South Africa. The German war lords hoped that India and
+Egypt would rise, they trusted that Canada and Australia would prove
+lukewarm, but they were certain that South Africa would seize the
+opportunity to rebel. How could it be otherwise, they thought, seeing
+that but yesterday she was at death grips with us. Then came the great
+surprise. Lo and behold! instead of rebelling, South Africa promptly
+cabled to England saying that every British soldier might be withdrawn
+from her shores, and, further, that the burghers of the land would
+themselves undertake the conquest of the German possessions of Southwest
+Africa for the Crown. They are doing so at this moment. I believe that
+today there is no British soldier left at the Cape, and I know that now
+a great force is moving on Southwest Africa furnished by Boer and Briton
+alike. Can the history of the world tell us of any parallel case to
+this--that a country conquered within a dozen years should not only need
+no garrison, but by its own free will undertake war against the enemies
+of its late victor? Surely this is something of which Britain may feel
+proud.
+
+
+*Deep Distrust of Germany.*
+
+Now, some of your readers may ask: "Why is it? How did this miracle, for
+it is little less, happen?" My answer is that it has been caused first
+by a supreme and glorious trust in the justice and generosity of
+England, which knows how to rule colonies as no other nation has done in
+the history of the earth, and secondly by a deep distrust of Germany. To
+my own knowledge, Germany has been intriguing in South Africa for the
+last quarter of a century. I remember, I suppose it must be almost
+twenty years ago, sending to the late Mr. Chamberlain, who was then
+Colonial Secretary, information to this effect which reached me from
+undoubted sources in South Africa. Again, not long ago, I was shown a
+document which was found among the papers of the Zulu Prince Dinizulu,
+son of King Cetewayo, who died the other day. It was concluded between
+himself and Germans, and under it the poor man had practically sold his
+country nominally to a German firm, but doubtless to more powerful
+persons behind. In short, there is no question that for many years
+Germany has had its eye upon South Africa as a desirable field of
+settlement for its subjects under the German and not the British flag.
+Now, the Boers are perfectly well acquainted with this fact and have no
+wish to exchange the beneficent rule of Britain for that of Potsdam, the
+King Log of George V. for the King Stork of Kaiser Wilhelm.
+
+You ask me if I think that the Boers are likely to succeed in their
+attack on Southwest Africa, where it must be remembered that the Germans
+have a very formidable force; indeed, I have been told, I do not know
+with what accuracy, that they have accumulated there the vast arsenal of
+war material that was obviously intended to be used on some future
+occasion in the invasion of the Cape. I answer: "Certainly, they will
+succeed, though not easily." Remember what stock these Boers come from.
+They are descendants of the men who withstood and beat Alva in the
+sixteenth century.
+
+
+*Botha of Huguenot Descent.*
+
+I happen to be well acquainted with that period of history. I wrote a
+story called "Lysbeth" concerning it, and to do this I found it
+necessary not only to visit Holland on several occasions, but to read
+all the contemporary records. In the light of the information which I
+thus obtained, I state positively that the world has no record of a more
+glorious and heroic struggle than that made by the Dutch against all the
+power of Spain. Well, the Boers are descended from these men and women
+(for both fought). Also, they include a very large dash of some of the
+best blood of Europe, namely, that of the Huguenots. For instance, Botha
+himself is of Huguenot descent. It is impossible for a person like
+myself, who have that same blood in me, to talk with him for five
+minutes without becoming aware of his origin. Long before he told me so
+I knew that he was in part a Frenchman. Men so great are not easily
+conquered, as we know to our cost. Why, it took quite 250,000 soldiers
+and three years of strenuous guerrilla warfare to enable Britain to
+defeat 40,000 or 50,000 Dutch farmers. Therefore I have personally not
+the least fear of the ultimate result of the campaign against Southwest
+Africa.
+
+I went as a lad as Secretary to the Governor of Natal. That was in 1875.
+Subsequently I accompanied Sir Theophilus Shepstone, one of the greatest
+men that ever lived in South Africa, on his famous mission to the
+Transvaal. I am now, I believe, the only survivor of that mission, and
+certainly the only man who knows all the inner political history of that
+event. Afterward I held office in the Transvaal, and was in the country
+during all the disastrous period of the first Boer war. For instance, I
+dined with Gen. Colley the night before he started on his ill-fated
+expedition. I think there were thirteen of us present at that historical
+dinner. Within a few weeks six or eight of these were dead, including
+Colley himself, killed in the fight of Majuba, of which I heard the
+guns. Of those present at that dinner party there now survive only Lady
+Colley, my wife, and myself.
+
+
+*Felt Like Rip Van Winkle.*
+
+After this I left Africa, and more than thirty years went by before I
+returned as a commissioner in the service of the Crown. It was a very
+extraordinary experience; indeed, I felt like a new Rip Van Winkle, for
+nearly all my old chiefs and colleagues were dead, and another
+generation had arisen. I can only say that I was deeply touched by the
+reception which I received throughout the country. It was with strange
+feelings that almost on the very spot where I helped to read the
+proclamation of annexation of the Transvaal, in 1877, and with my own
+hands hoisted the British flag over the land, I listened to my health
+being proposed by the Dutch Chief Justice of the Transvaal territory,
+once more a part of the British Empire. Such was my greeting everywhere.
+Three and thirty years before I had left the shores of Africa, believing
+that soon or late the British power was doomed to failure and probably
+to extinction there. When I left them again, six months ago, it was with
+the glad knowledge that, by the united wish of the inhabitants of South
+Africa, it was re-established, never again to pass away. It is a
+wonderful thing for a man in his own lifetime to see a country pass
+through so many vicissitudes, and in the end to appear in the face of
+the world no longer as England's enemy, but as a constituent part of the
+great British Empire, one of her best friends and supporters, glorying
+in her flag, which now floats from Cape Agalhas to the Zambesi, and soon
+will float over those contingent regions that have been seized by the
+mailed fist of Germany.
+
+
+
+
+*Capt. Mark Haggard's Death in Battle*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: In various papers throughout England has appeared a letter, or part
+of a letter, written by Private C. Derry of the Second Battalion, Welsh
+Regiment. It concerns the fall of my much-loved nephew, Capt. Mark
+Haggard, of the same regiment, on Sept. 13 in the battle of the Aisne.
+
+Since this letter has been published and, vivid, pathetic, and
+pride-inspiring as it is, does not tell all the tale, I have been
+requested, on behalf of Mark's mother, young widow, and other members of
+our family, to give the rest of it as it was collected by them from the
+lips of Lieut. Somerset, who lay wounded by him when he died. Therefore
+I send this supplementary account to you in the hope that the other
+journals which have printed the first part of the story will copy it
+from your columns.
+
+It seems that after he had given the order to fix bayonets, as told by
+Private Derry, my nephew charged the German Maxims at the head of his
+company, he and his soldier servant outrunning the other men. Arrived at
+the Maxim in front of him, with the rifle which he was using as Derry
+describes, he shot and killed
+
+[Illustration: GERHART HAUPTMANN
+
+_See Page_ 175]
+
+[Illustration: LUDWIG FULDA.
+
+_See Page 180_ ]
+
+the three soldiers who were serving it, and then was seen "fighting and
+laying out" the Germans with the butt end of his empty gun, "laughing"
+as he did so, until he fell mortally wounded in the body and was carried
+away by his servant.
+
+His patient and heroic end is told by Private Derry, and I imagine that
+the exhortation to "Stick it, Welsh!" which from time to time he uttered
+in his agony, will not soon be forgotten in his regiment. Of that end we
+who mourn him can only say in the simple words of Derry's letter, that
+he "died as he had lived--an officer and a gentleman."
+
+Perhaps it would not be inappropriate to add as a thought of consolation
+to those throughout the land who day by day see their loved ones thus
+devoured by the waste of war, that of a truth these do not vainly die.
+Not only are they crowned with fame, but by the noble manner of their
+end they give the lie to Bernhardi and his school, who tell us that we
+English are an effete and worn-out people, befogged with mean ideals;
+lost in selfishness and the lust of wealth and comfort. Moreover, the
+history of these deeds of theirs will surely be as a beacon to those
+destined to carry on the traditions of our race in that new England
+which shall arise when the cause of freedom for which we must fight and
+die has prevailed--to fall no more.
+
+I am, Sir, your obedient servant,
+
+H. RIDER HAGGARD.
+
+Ditchingham, Norfolk, Oct. 9.
+
+
+
+
+*An Anti-Christian War*
+
+*By Robert Bridges.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: Since the beginning of this war the meaning of it has in one
+respect considerably changed, and I hope that our people will see that
+it is primarily a holy war. It is manifestly a war declared between
+Christ and the devil.
+
+The conduct of the German conscripts has demonstrated that they have
+been instructed to adopt in full practice the theories of their
+political philosophers, and that they have heartily consented to do this
+and freely commit every cruelty that they think will terrorize the
+people whom they intend to crush. The details of their actions are too
+beastly to mention.
+
+Their philosophers, as I read them, teach openly that the law of love is
+silly and useless, but that brutal force and cruelty are the useful and
+proper means of attaining success in all things. Shortly, you are not to
+do to others as you wish they should do to you, but you should do
+exactly what you wish they should not do to you; that is, you should cut
+their throats and seize their property, and then you will get on.
+
+As for these enlightened philosophers, their doctrines are plainly an
+apostasy from the Gospel--and this they do not scruple to avow; and
+their tenets are only a recrudescence or reassertion of the barbarism
+which we hoped we had grown out of; it is all merely damnable. But it
+seems to me that, judged only as utilitarian policy, it is stupid; and
+that they blundered in neglecting the moral force (for that is also a
+force) of the antagonism that they were bound to arouse in all gentle
+minds, whether simple or cultured. It was stupid of them not to perceive
+that their hellish principles would shock everything that is most
+beloved and living in modern thought, both the "humanitarian" tendency
+of the time and the respect which has grown up for the rights of
+minorities and nationalities. Now, not to reckon with such things was
+stupid, unless they can win temporary justification by immediate
+success.
+
+What success is possible for those who thus openly outrage humanity
+remains to be seen; but they cannot be allowed the advantage of any
+doubt as to what they are about. Those who fight for them will fight for
+"the devil and all his works"; and those who fight against them will be
+fighting in the holy cause of humanity and the law of love. If the
+advocacy of their bad principles and their diabolical conduct do not set
+the whole world against them, then the world is worse than I think. My
+belief is that there are yet millions of their own countrymen who have
+not bowed the knee to Satan, and who will be as much shocked as we are;
+and that this internal moral disruption will much hamper them. This
+morning I have a legal notice sent me from a German resident in England
+announcing that he has changed his name, for shame (I suppose) of his
+Fatherland.
+
+All their apology throughout has been a clumsy tissue of
+self-contradictory lies, and their occasional hypocrisy has been hastily
+pretended and ill-conceived. The particular contention against us--that
+we were betraying the cause of civilization by supporting the barbarous
+Slav--does not come very convincingly from them if their apostle is
+Nietzsche, while the Russian prophet is Tolstoy.
+
+The infernal machine which has been scientifically preparing for the
+last twenty-five years is now on its wild career like one of Mr. Wells's
+inventions, and wherever it goes it will leave desolation behind it and
+put all material progress back for at least half a century. There was
+never anything in the world worthier of extermination, and it is the
+plain duty of all civilized nations to unite to drive it back into its
+home and exterminate it there. I am, &c.,
+
+ROBERT BRIDGES.
+
+Sept. 1.
+
+
+
+
+*English Artists' Protest*
+
+
+ _Art lovers in Great Britain have drawn up a protest against the
+ vandalism of German soldiers. Copies of this protest have been sent
+ to the Comte de Lalaing, Belgian Minister in London; the American
+ Ambassador, with a humble request that it may be forwarded to the
+ President of the United States; and Baron Kervyn de Lettenhove, Art
+ Adviser to the Belgian Government. Those who have signed include
+ well-known collectors, Trustees of the British Museum, the National
+ Gallery, the National Portrait Gallery, and the National Galleries
+ of Scotland; the Director and Principal Librarian of the British
+ Museum; the Directors of the National Gallery, the Victoria and
+ Albert Museum, and the National Galleries of Scotland and Ireland;
+ the Keepers of the Wallace Collection and the National Gallery of
+ British Art; Keepers in the British Museum; the Joint Honorary
+ Secretaries of the National Art Collections Fund, and many critics
+ and others prominent in the art world._
+
+The whole civilized world has witnessed with horror the terrible effects
+of modern warfare on helpless inhabitants of Belgium and France, and on
+ancient buildings and other works of art which are the abiding monuments
+of the piety and culture of their ancestors.
+
+Some of the acts of the invading German army against buildings may be
+defensible from the military standpoint; but it seems certain from
+present information that in some signal instances, notably at Louvain
+and Rheims, this defense cannot hold good against the mass of evidence
+to the contrary.
+
+The signatories of this protest claim that they are in no sense a
+partisan body. Their contention in this matter is that the splendid
+monuments of the arts of the Middle Ages which have been destroyed or
+damaged are the inheritance of the whole world, and that it is the duty
+of all civilized communities to endeavor to preserve them for the
+benefit and instruction of posterity. While France and Belgium are
+individually the poorer from such wanton destruction, the world at large
+is no less impoverished.
+
+On these grounds, therefore, we desire to express our strong indignation
+and abhorrence at the gratuitous destruction of ancient buildings that
+has marked the invasion of Belgium and France by the German Army, and we
+wish to enter a protest in the strongest terms against the continuance
+of so barbarous and reckless a policy. That it is the result of a
+policy, and not of an accident, is shown by the similarity of the fate
+of Louvain, Malines, Termonde, Senlis, and finally Rheims.
+
+Many of us have had the opportunity of showing that our love and respect
+for art are not bounded by our nationality, but we feel compelled to
+publish to the world our horror and detestation of the barbarous acts
+committed by the army that represents a country which has done so much
+to promote and advance the study of art and its history.
+
+The signatories are:
+
+ DEVONSHIRE.
+ CHOLMONDELEY.
+ LANSDOWNE.
+ FEVERSHAM.
+ MABEL FEVERSHAM.
+ LEICESTER.
+ LONSDALE.
+ NORMANTON.
+ NORTHBROOK.
+ PLYMOUTH.
+ DILLON.
+ ALINGTON.
+ D'ABERNON.
+ ISABEL SOMERSET.
+ FREDERICK L. COOK.
+ AUDLEY D. NEELD.
+ HERBERT RAPHAEL.
+ SIDNEY COLVIN.
+ MARTIN CONWAY.
+ CHARLES HOLROYD.
+ FREDERIC G. KENYON.
+ HUGH LANE.
+ FRANCIS BEAUFORT PALMER.
+ C. HERCULES READ.
+ CECIL HARCOURT SMITH.
+ ISIDORE SPIELMANN.
+ HERBERT B. TREE.
+ WHITWORTH WALLIS.
+ CHARLES AITKEN.
+ OTTO BEIT.
+ MAURICE W. BROCKWELL.
+ A.H. BUTTERY.
+ C.S. CARSTAIRS.
+ JAMES L. CAW.
+ HERBERT COOK.
+ D.H.S. CRANAGE.
+ LIONEL CUST.
+ CAMPBELL DODGSON.
+ CHARLES DOWDESWELL.
+ DAVID ERSKINE.
+ H.A.L. FISHER.
+ J.L. GARVIN.
+ PERCIVAL GASKELL.
+ ALGERNON GRAVES.
+ JAMES GREIG.
+ O. GUTEKUNST.
+ EDWARD HUTTON.
+ G.B. CROFT-LYONS.
+ D.S. MACCOLL.
+ ERIC MACLAGAN.
+ G. MAYER.
+ MORTIMER MENPES.
+ ALMERIC H. PAGET.
+ J.S.R. PHILLIPS.
+ G.N. COUNT PLUNKETT.
+ JANET ROSS.
+ ROBERT ROSS.
+ M.E. SADLER.
+ MARION SPIELMANN.
+ A.J. SULLEY.
+ D. CROAL THOMSON.
+ T. HUMPHRY WARD.
+ W.H. JAMES WEALE.
+ FREDERICK A. WHITE.
+ R.C. WITT.
+
+
+
+
+*To Arms!*
+
+*By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.*
+
+
+Is it possible that there are still some of our people who do not
+understand the causes of this war, and are ignorant of the great stakes
+at issue which will speedily have so important a bearing upon the lives
+of each and all of them? It is hard to believe it, and yet it is so
+stated by some who profess to know. Let me try, in the shortest space
+and in the clearest words that I can command, to lay before them both
+the causes and the possible effects, and to implore them now, now, at
+this very moment, before it is too late, to make those efforts and
+sacrifices which the occasion demands. In Germany, every man from the
+ages of sixteen to fifty-five is with the colors. The last man has been
+called up. And yet we hear--we could not bear to see--that young
+athletic men in this country are playing football or cricket, while our
+streets are full of those who should be in our camps. All our lives have
+been but a preparation for this supreme moment. All our future lives
+will be determined by how we bear ourselves in these few months to come.
+Shame, shame on the man who fails his country in this its hour of need!
+I would not force him to serve. I could not think that the service of
+such a man was of any avail. Let the country be served by free men, and
+let them deal with the coward or the sluggard who flinches.
+
+The causes of the war are only of moment to us, at this stage, in that
+we gain more strength in our arms and more iron in our souls by a
+knowledge that it is for all that is honorable and sacred for which we
+fight. What really concerns us is that we are in a fight for our
+national life, that we must fight through to the end, and that each and
+all of us must help, in his own fashion, to the last ounce of his
+strength, that this end may be victory. That is the essence of the
+situation. It is not words and phrases that we need, but men, men--and
+always more men. If words can bring the men then they are of avail. If
+not they may well wait for the times to mend. But if there is a doubt in
+the mind of any man as to the justice of his country's quarrel, then
+even a writer may find work ready to his hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let us cast our minds back upon the events which have led up to this
+conflict. They may be divided into two separate classes, those which
+prepared the general situation, and those which caused the special
+quarrel. Each of these I will treat in its turn.
+
+
+*Teuton Intoxication.*
+
+It is a matter of common knowledge, one which a man must be blind and
+deaf not to understand, that for many years Germany, intoxicated by her
+success in war and by her increase of wealth, has regarded the British
+Empire with eyes of jealousy and hatred. It has never been alleged by
+those who gave expression to this almost universal national passion that
+Great Britain had in any way, either historically or commercially, done
+Germany a mischief. Even our most bitter traducers, when asked to give
+any definite historical reasons for their dislike, were compelled to put
+forward such ludicrous excuses as that the British had abandoned the
+Prussian King in the year 1761, quite oblivious of the fact that the
+same Prussian King had abandoned his own allies in the same war under
+far more damaging circumstances, acting up to his own motto that no
+promises are binding where the vital interests of a State are in
+question. With all their malevolence they could give no examples of any
+ill turn done by us until their deliberate policy had forced us into
+antagonism. On the other hand, a long list of occasions could very
+easily be compiled on which we had helped them in some common cause,
+from the days of Marlborough to those of Blucher. Until the twentieth
+century had turned they had no possible cause for political hatred
+against us. In commerce our record was even more clear. Never in any way
+had we interfered with that great development of trade which has turned
+them from one of the poorest to one of the richest of European States.
+Our markets were open to them untaxed, while our own manufactures paid
+20 per cent. in Germany. The markets of India, of Egypt, and of every
+portion of the empire which had no self-appointed tariff, were as open
+to German goods as to British ones. Nothing could possibly have been
+more generous than our commercial treatment. No doubt there was some
+grumbling when cheap imitations of our own goods were occasionally found
+to oust the originals from their markets. Such a feeling was but natural
+and human. But in all matters of commerce, as in all matters political
+before the dawn of this century, they have no shadow of a grievance
+against us.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And yet they hated us with a most bitter hatred, a hatred which long
+antedates the days when we were compelled to take a definite stand
+against them. In all sorts of ways this hatred showed itself, in the
+diatribes of professors, in the pages of books, in the columns of the
+press. Usually it was a sullen, silent dislike. Sometimes it would flame
+up suddenly into bitter utterance, as at the time of the unseemly
+dispute around the deathbed of the Emperor's father, or on the occasion
+of the Jameson Raid. And yet this bitter antagonism was in no way
+reciprocated in this country. If a poll had been taken at any time up to
+the end of the century as to which European country was our natural
+ally, the vote would have gone overwhelmingly for Germany. "America
+first and then Germany" would have been the verdict of nine men out of
+ten. But then occurred two events which steadied the easy-going Briton,
+and made him look more intently and with a more questioning gaze at his
+distant cousin over the water. Those two events were the Boer war and
+the building of the German fleet. The first showed us, to our amazement,
+the bitter desire which Germany had to do us some mischief, the second
+made us realize that she was forging a weapon with which that desire
+might be fulfilled.
+
+
+_The Boer War and Germany._
+
+We are most of us old enough to remember the torrent of calumny and
+insult which was showered upon us in the day of our temporary distress
+by the nation to whom we had so often been a friend and an ally. It is
+true that other nations treated us little better, and yet their
+treatment hurt us less. The difference as it struck men at the time may
+be summarized in this passage from a British writer of the period.
+
+"But it was very different with Germany," he says. "Again and again in
+the world's history we have been the friends and the allies of these
+people. It was so in the days of Marlborough, in those of the Great
+Frederick, and in those of Napoleon. When we could not help them with
+men we helped them with money. Our fleet has crushed their enemies. And
+now, for the first time in history, we have had a chance of seeing who
+were our friends in Europe, and nowhere have we met more hatred and more
+slander than from the German press and the German people. Their most
+respectable journals have not hesitated to represent the British
+troops--troops every bit as humane and as highly disciplined as their
+own--not only as committing outrages on person and property, but even as
+murdering women and children.
+
+"At first this unexpected phenomenon merely surprised the British
+people, then it pained them, and finally, after two years of it, it has
+roused a deep, enduring anger in their minds."
+
+He goes on to say: "The continued attacks upon us have left an enduring
+feeling of resentment, which will not and should not die away in this
+generation. It is not too much to say that five years ago a complete
+defeat of Germany in a European war would have certainly caused British
+intervention. Public sentiment and racial affinity would never have
+allowed us to see her really go to the wall. And now it is certain that
+in our lifetime no British guinea and no soldier's life would under any
+circumstances be spent for such an end. That is one strange result of
+the Boer war, and in the long run it is possible that it may prove not
+the least important."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such was the prevailing mood of the nation when they perceived Germany,
+under the lead of her Emperor, following up her expressions of enmity by
+starting with restless energy to build up a formidable fleet, adding
+programme to programme, out of all possible proportion to the German
+commerce to be defended or to the German coastline exposed to attack.
+Already vainglorious boasts were made that Germany was the successor to
+Britain upon the seas. "The Admiral of the Atlantic greets the Admiral
+of the Pacific," said the Kaiser later in a message to the Czar. What
+was Britain to do under this growing menace? So long as she was isolated
+the diplomacy of Germany might form some naval coalition against her.
+She took the steps which were necessary for her own safety, and without
+forming an alliance she composed her differences with France and Russia
+and drew closer the friendship which united her with her old rival
+across the Channel. The first fruit of the new German fleet was the
+entente cordiale. We had found our enemy. It was necessary that we
+should find our friends. Thus we were driven into our present
+combination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And now we had to justify our friendship. For the first time we were
+compelled to openly oppose Germany in the deep and dangerous game of
+world politics. They wished to see if our understanding was a reality or
+a sham. Could they drive a wedge between us by showing that we were a
+fair-weather friend whom any stress would alienate? Twice they tried it,
+once in 1906 when they bullied France into a conference at Algeciras but
+found that Britain was firm at her side, and again in 1911 when in a
+time of profound peace they stirred up trouble by sending a gunboat to
+Agadir, and pushed matters to the very edge of war. But no threats
+induced Britain to be false to her mutual insurance with France. Now for
+the third and most fatal time they have demanded that we forswear
+ourselves and break our own bond lest a worse thing befall us. Blind and
+foolish, did they not know by past experience that we would keep our
+promise given? In their madness they have wrought an irremediable evil
+to themselves, to us, and to all Europe.
+
+I have shown that we have in very truth never injured nor desired to
+injure Germany in commerce nor have we opposed her politically until her
+own deliberate actions drove us into the camp of her opponents. But it
+may well be asked why then did they dislike us, and why did they weave
+hostile plots against us? It was that, as it seemed to them, and as
+indeed it actually may have been, we, independently of our own wills,
+stood between Germany and that world empire of which she dreamed. This
+was caused by circumstances over which we had no control and which we
+could not modify if we had wished to do so. Britain, through her
+maritime power and the energy of her merchants and people, had become a
+great world power when Germany was still unformed. Thus, when she had
+grown to her full stature, she found that the choice places of the world
+and those most fitted for the spread of a transplanted European race
+were already filled up. It was not a matter which we could help nor
+could we alter it, since Canada, Australia, and South Africa would not,
+even if we could be imagined to have wished it, be transferred to German
+rule. And yet the Germans chafed, and if we can put ourselves in their
+places we may admit that it was galling that the surplus of their
+manhood should go to build up the strength of an alien and possibly a
+rival State. So far we could see their grievance, or, rather their
+misfortune, since no one was in truth to blame in the matter. Had their
+needs been openly and reasonably expressed, and had the two States moved
+in concord in the matter, it is difficult to think that no helpful
+solution of any kind could have been found.
+
+
+*As Germans See England.*
+
+But the German method of approaching the problem has never been to ask
+sympathy and co-operation, but to picture us as a degenerate race from
+whom anything might be gained by playing upon our imagined weakness and
+cowardice. A nation which attends quietly to its own sober business
+must, according to their mediaeval notions, be a nation of decadent
+poltroons. If we fight our battles by means of free volunteers instead
+of enforced conscripts then the military spirit must be dead among us.
+Perhaps, even in this short campaign, they have added this delusion also
+to the dust-bin of their many errors. But such was their absurd
+self-deception about the most virile of European races. Did we propose
+disarmament, then it was not humanitarianism but cowardice that prompted
+us, and their answer was to enlarge their programme. Did we suggest a
+navy-building holiday, it was but a cloak for our weakness and an
+incitement that they should redouble their efforts. Our decay had become
+a part of their national faith. At first the wish may have been the
+father to the thought, but soon under the reiterated assertions of their
+crazy professors the proposition became indisputable. Bernhardi in his
+book upon the next war cannot conceal the contempt in which he has
+learned to hold us. Neibuhr long ago had prophesied the coming fall of
+Britain, and every year was believed to bring it nearer and to make it
+more certain. To these jaundiced eyes all seemed yellow, when the
+yellowness lay only in themselves. Our army, our navy, our colonies, all
+were equally rotten. "Old England, old, indeed, and corrupt, rotten
+through and through." One blow and the vast sham would fly to pieces,
+and from those pieces the victor could choose his reward. Listen to
+Prof. Treitschke, a man who, above all others, has been the evil genius
+of his country, and has done most to push it toward this abyss: "A thing
+that is wholly a sham," he cried, in allusion to our empire, "cannot, in
+this universe of ours, endure forever. It may endure for a day, but its
+doom is certain." Were ever words more true when applied to the narrow
+bureaucracy and swaggering Junkerdom of Prussia, the most artificial and
+ossified sham that ever our days have seen? See which will crack first,
+our democracy or this, now that both have been plunged into the furnace
+together. The day of God's testing has come, and we shall see which can
+best abide it.
+
+
+*The Blame Not England's.*
+
+I have tried to show that we are in no way to blame for the hostility
+which has grown up between us. So far as it had any solid cause at all
+it has arisen from fixed factors, which could no more be changed by us
+than the geographical position which has laid us right across their exit
+to the oceans of the world. That this deeply rooted national sentiment,
+which forever regarded us as the Carthage to which they were destined to
+play the part of Rome, would, sooner or later, have brought about war
+between us, is, in my opinion, beyond all doubt. But it was planned to
+come at the moment which was least favorable for Britain. "Even English
+attempts at a rapprochement must not blind us to the real situation,"
+says Bernhardi. "We may, at most, use them to delay the necessary and
+inevitable war until we may fairly imagine we have some prospect of
+success." A more shameless sentence was never penned, and one stands
+marveling which is the more grotesque--the cynicism of the sentiment or
+the folly which gave such a warning to the victim. For be it remembered
+that Bernhardi's words are to be taken very seriously, for they are not
+the ravings of some Pan-German monomaniac, but the considered views of
+the foremost military writer of Germany, one who is in touch with those
+inner circles whose opinions are the springs of national policy. "Our
+last and greatest reckoning is to be with Great Britain," said the
+bitter Treitschke. Sooner or later the shock was to come. Germany sat
+brooding over the chessboard of the world waiting for the opening which
+should assure a winning game.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was clear that she should take her enemies separately rather than
+together. If Britain were attacked it was almost certain that France and
+Russia would stand by her side. But if, on the contrary, the quarrel
+could be made with these two powers, and especially with Russia, in the
+first instance, then it was by no means so certain that Great Britain
+would be drawn into the struggle. Public opinion has to be strongly
+moved before our country can fight, and public opinion under a Liberal
+Government might well be divided upon the subject of Russia. Therefore,
+if the quarrel could be so arranged as to seem to be entirely one
+between Teuton and Slav there was a good chance that Britain would
+remain undecided until the swift German sword had done its work. Then,
+with the grim acquiescence of our deserted allies, the still bloody
+sword would be turned upon ourselves, and that great final reckoning
+would have come.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such was the plan, and fortune favored it. A brutal murder had, not for
+the first time, put Servia into a position where a State may be blamed
+for the sins of individuals. An ultimatum was launched so phrased that
+it was impossible for any State to accept it as it stood and yet remain
+an independent State. At the first sign of argument or remonstrance the
+Austrian Army marched upon Belgrade. Russia, which had been already
+humiliated in 1908 by the forcible annexation of Bosnia, could not
+possibly submit a second time to the Caudine Forks. She laid her hand
+upon her sword hilt. Germany sprang to the side of her ally. France
+ranged herself with Russia. Like a thunderclap the war of the nations
+had begun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So far all had worked well for German plans. Those of the British public
+who were familiar with the past and could look into the future might be
+well aware that our interests were firmly bound with those of France,
+and that if our faggots were not tied together they would assuredly be
+snapped each in its turn. But the unsavory assassination which had been
+so cleverly chosen as the starting point of the war bulked large in the
+eyes of our people, and, setting self-interest to one side, the greater
+part of the public might well have hesitated to enter into a quarrel
+where the cause seemed remote and the issues ill-defined. What was it to
+us if a Slav or a Teuton collected the harbor due of Saloniki! So the
+question might have presented itself to the average man who in the long
+run is the ruler of this country and the autocrat of its destinies. In
+spite of all the wisdom of our statesmen, it is doubtful if on such a
+quarrel we could have gained that national momentum which might carry us
+to victory. But at that very moment Germany took a step which removed
+the last doubt from the most cautious of us and left us in a position
+where we must either draw our sword or stand forever dishonored and
+humiliated before the world. The action demanded of us was such a
+compound of cowardice and treachery that we ask ourselves in dismay what
+can we ever have done that could make others for one instant imagine us
+to be capable of so dastardly a course. Yet that it was really supposed
+that we could do it, and that it was not merely put forward as an excuse
+for drawing us into war, is shown by the anger and consternation of the
+Kaiser and his Chancellor when we drew back from what the British Prime
+Minister had described as "an infamous proposal." One has only to read
+our Ambassador's description of his interview with the German Chancellor
+after our decision was announced, "so evidently overcome by the news of
+our action," to see that through some extraordinary mental aberration
+the German rulers did actually believe that a vital treaty with
+Britain's signature upon it could be regarded by this country as a mere
+"scrap of paper."
+
+
+*The Treaty of 1839.*
+
+What was this treaty which it was proposed so lightly to set aside? It
+was the guarantee of the neutrality of Belgium signed in 1839 (confirmed
+verbally and in writing by Bismarck in 1870) by Prussia, France, and
+Britain, each of whom pledged their word to observe and to enforce it.
+On the strength of it Belgium had relied for her security amid her
+formidable neighbors. On the strength of it also France had lavished all
+her defenses upon her eastern frontier, and left her northern exposed to
+attack. Britain had guaranteed the treaty, and Britain could be relied
+upon. Now, on the first occasion of testing the value of her word it was
+supposed that she would regard the treaty as a worthless scrap of paper,
+and stand by unmoved while the little State which had trusted her was
+flooded by the armies of the invader. It was unthinkable, and yet the
+wisest brains of Germany seem to have persuaded themselves that we had
+sunk to such depths of cowardly indolence that even this might go
+through. Surely they also have been hypnotized by those foolish dreams
+of Britain's degeneration, from which they will have so terrible an
+awakening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As a matter of fact the General Staff had got ahead of the diplomatists,
+and the German columns were already over the border while the point was
+being debated at Berlin. There was no retreat from the position which
+had been taken up. "It is to us a vital matter of strategy and is beyond
+argument," said the German soldier. "It is to us a vital matter of honor
+and, is beyond argument," answered the British statesman. The die was
+cast. No compromise was possible. Would Britain keep her word or would
+she not? That was the sole question at issue. And what answer save one
+could any Briton give to it? "I do not believe," said our Prime
+Minister, "that any nation ever entered into a great controversy with a
+clearer conscience and stronger conviction that it is fighting, not for
+aggression, not for the maintenance of its own selfish interest, but in
+defense of principles the maintenance of which is vital to the
+civilization of the world." So he spoke, and history will indorse his
+words, for we surely have our quarrel just.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So much for the events which have led us to war. Now for a moment let us
+glance at what we may have to hope for, what we may have to fear, and,
+above all, what we must each of us do that we win through to a lasting
+peace.
+
+What have we to gain if we win? That we have nothing material to gain,
+no colonies which we covet, no possessions of any sort that we desire,
+is the final proof that the war has not been provoked by us. No nation
+would deliberately go out of its way to wage so hazardous and costly a
+struggle when there is no prize for victory. But one enormous indirect
+benefit we will gain if we can make Germany a peaceful and harmless
+State. We will surely break her naval power and take such steps that it
+shall not be a menace to us any more. It was this naval power, with its
+rapid increase and the need that we should ever, as Mr. Churchill has so
+well expressed it, be ready at our average moment to meet an attack at
+their chosen moment--it was this which has piled up our war estimates
+during the last ten years until they have bowed us down. With such
+enormous sums spent upon ships and guns, great masses of capital were
+diverted from the ordinary channels of trade, while an even more serious
+result was that our programmes of social reform had to be curtailed from
+want of the money which could finance them. Let the menace of that
+lurking fleet be withdrawn--the nightmare of those thousand hammers
+working day and night in forging engines for our destruction--and our
+estimates will once again be those of a civilized Christian country,
+while our vast capital will be turned from measures of self-protection
+to those of self-improvement. Should our victory be complete, there is
+little which Germany can yield to us save the removal of that shadow
+which has darkened us so long. But our children and our children's
+children will never, if we do our work well now, look across the North
+Sea with the sombre thoughts which have so long been ours, while their
+lives will be brightened and elevated by money which we, in our darker
+days, have had to spend upon our ships and our guns.
+
+Consider, on the other hand, what we should suffer if we were to lose.
+All the troubles of the last ten years would be with us still, but in a
+greatly exaggerated form. A larger and stronger Germany would dominate
+Europe and would overshadow our lives. Her coast line would be
+increased, her ports would face our own, her coaling stations would be
+in every sea, and her great army, greater then than ever, would be
+within striking distance of our shores. To avoid sinking forever into
+the condition of a dependant, we should be compelled to have recourse to
+rigid compulsory service, and our diminished revenues would be all
+turned to the needs of self-defense. Such would be the miserable
+condition in which we should hand on to our children that free and
+glorious empire which we inherited in all the fullness of its richness
+and its splendor from those strong fathers who have built it up. What
+peace of mind, what self-respect could be left for us in the remainder
+of our lives! The weight of dishonor would lie always upon our hearts.
+And yet this will be surely our fate and our future if we do not nerve
+our souls and brace our arms for victory. No regrets will avail, no
+excuses will help, no after-thoughts can profit us. It is now--now--even
+in these weeks and months that are passing that the final reckoning is
+being taken, and when once the sum is made up no further effort can
+change it. What are our lives or our labors, our fortunes or even our
+families, when compared with the life or death of the great mother of us
+all? We are but the leaves of the tree. What matter if we flutter down
+today or tomorrow, so long as the great trunk stands and the burrowing
+roots are firm. Happy the man who can die with the thought that in this
+greatest crisis of all he has served his country to the uttermost, but
+who would bear the thoughts of him who lives on with the memory that he
+had shirked his duty and failed his country at the moment of her need?
+
+There is a settled and assured future if we win. There is darkness and
+trouble if we lose. But if we take a broader sweep and trace the
+meanings of this contest as they affect others than ourselves, then ever
+greater, more glorious are the issues for which we fight. For the whole
+world stands at a turning point of its history, and one or other of two
+opposite principles, the rule of the soldier or the rule of the citizen,
+must now prevail. In this sense we fight for the masses of the German
+people, as some day they will understand, to free them from that
+formidable military caste which has used and abused them, spending their
+bodies in an unjust war and poisoning their minds by every device which
+could inflame them against those who wish nothing save to live at peace
+with them. We fight for the strong, deep Germany of old, the Germany of
+music and of philosophy, against this monstrous modern aberration the
+Germany of blood and of iron, the Germany from which, instead of the old
+things of beauty, there come to us only the rant of scolding professors
+with their final reckonings, their Weltpolitik, and their Godless
+theories of the Superman who stands above morality and to whom all
+humanity shall be subservient. Instead of the world-inspiring phrases of
+a Goethe or a Schiller, what are the words in the last decade which have
+been quoted across the sea? Are they not always the ever-recurring words
+of wrath from one ill-balanced man? "Strike them with the mailed fist."
+"Leave such a name behind you as Attila and his Huns." "Turn your
+weapons even upon your own flesh and blood at my command." These are the
+messages which have come from this perversion of a nation's soul.
+
+
+*A Mighty Despotism.*
+
+But the matter lies deep. The Hohenzollerns and the Hapsburgs have used
+their peoples as a great landowner might use the serfs upon his estate.
+It was, and is, their openly expressed theory that they were in their
+position by the grace of God, that they owed no reckoning to any man,
+and that kingdom and folk were committed for better or worse to their
+charge. Round this theory of the Dark Ages there gathered all the forces
+of the many courts of the empire, all the nobility who make so huge a
+class in Germanic countries, all the vast army to whom strict discipline
+and obedience were the breath of life, all the office-holders of the
+State, all the purveyors of warlike stores. These and their like were
+the natural setting to such a central idea. Court influence largely
+controlled the teaching at school and universities, and so the growing
+twig could be bent. But all these forces together could not have upheld
+so dangerous and unnatural a theory had it not been for the influence of
+a servile press. How that press was managed, how the thoughts of the
+people could be turned to the right or the left with the same precision
+as a platoon of grenadiers, has been shown clearly enough in the memoirs
+of Bismarck. Public opinion was poisoned at its very roots. The average
+citizen lived in a false atmosphere where everything was distorted to
+his vision. He saw his Kaiser, not as an essentially weak and impetuous
+man with a dangerous entourage who were ever at his ear, but as Germany
+personified, an angel with a flaming sword, beating back envious
+assailants from the beloved Fatherland. He saw his neighbors not as
+peaceful nations who had no possible desire to attack him, but on the
+contrary lived in constant fear of him, but as a band, of envious and
+truculent conspirators who could only be kept in order by the sudden
+stamp of the jackboot and the menacing clatter of the sabre. He
+insensibly imbibed the Nietzsche doctrine that the immorality of the
+Superman may be as colossal as his strength and that the slave-evangel
+of Christianity was superseded by a sterner law. Thus, when he saw acts
+which his reason must have told him were indefensible he was still
+narcotized by this conception of some new standard of right. He saw his
+Kaiser at the time of a petty humiliation to Great Britain sending a
+telegram of congratulation to the man who had inflicted this rebuff.
+Could that be approved by reason? At a time when all Europe was
+shuddering over the Armenian massacres he saw this same Kaiser paying a
+complimentary visit to the Sultan whose hands were still wet with the
+blood of murdered Christians. Could that be reconciled with what is
+right? A little later he saw the Kaiser once again pushing himself into
+Mediterranean politics, where no direct German interest lay, and
+endeavoring to tangle up the French developments in Northern Africa by
+provocative personal appearances at Morocco, and, later, by sending a
+gunboat to intrude upon a scene of action which had already by the
+Treaty of Algeciras been allotted to France. How could an honest German
+whose mind was undebauched by a controlled press justify such an
+interference as that? He is or should be aware that, in annexing Bosnia,
+Austria was tearing up a treaty without the consent of the other
+signatories, and that his own country was supporting and probably
+inciting her ally to this public breach of faith. Could he honestly
+think that this was right? And, finally, he must know, for his own
+Chancellor has publicly proclaimed it, that the invasion of Belgium was
+a breach of international right, and that Germany, or, rather, Prussia,
+had perjured herself upon the day that the first of her soldiers passed
+over the frontier. How can he explain all this to himself save on a
+theory that might is right, that no moral law applies to the Superman,
+and that so long as one hews one's way through, the rest can matter
+little? To such a point of degradation have public morals been brought
+by the infernal teachings of Prussian military philosophy, dating back
+as far as Frederick II., but intensified by the exhortations of press
+and professors during our own times. The mind of the average kindly
+German citizen has been debauched and yet again debauched until it
+needed just such a world crisis as this to startle him at last from his
+obsession and to see his position and that of his country in its true
+relation with humanity and progress.
+
+
+*The Final Stakes.*
+
+Thus I say, that for the German who stands outside the ruling classes,
+our victory would bring a lasting relief, and some hope that in future
+his destiny should be controlled by his own judgment and not by the
+passions or interests of those against whom he has at present no appeal.
+A system which has brought disaster to Germany and chaos to all Europe
+can never, one would think, be resumed, and amid the debris of his
+empire the German may pick up that precious jewel of personal freedom
+which is above the splendor of foreign conquest. A Hapsburg or a
+Hohenzollern may find his true place as the servant rather than the
+master of a nation. But apart from Germany, look at the effects which
+our victory must have over the whole wide world. Everywhere it will mean
+the triumph of reasoned democracy, of public debate, of ordered freedom
+in which every man is an active unit in the system of his own
+Government, while our defeat would stand for a victory to a priviliged
+class, the thrusting down of the civilian by the arrogance and
+intolerance of militarism, and the subjection of all that is human and
+progressive to all that is cruel, narrow, and reactionary. This is the
+stake for which we play, and the world will lose or gain as well as we.
+You may well come, you democratic oversea men of our blood, to rally
+round us now, for all that you cherish, all that is bred in your very
+bones, is that for which we fight. And you, lovers of freedom in every
+land, we claim at least your prayers and your wishes, for if our sword
+be broken you will be the poorer. But fear not, for our sword will not
+be broken, nor shall it ever drop from our hands until this matter is
+forever set in order. If every ally we have upon earth were to go down
+in blood and ruin, still would we fight through to the appointed end.
+Defeat shall not daunt us. Inconclusive victory shall not turn us from
+our purpose. The grind of poverty and the weariness of hopes deferred
+shall not blunt the edge of our resolve. With God's help we shall go to
+the end, and when that goal is reached it is our prayer that a new era
+shall come as our reward, an era in which, by common action of State
+with State, mutual hatreds and strivings shall be appeased, land shall
+no longer be estranged from land, and huge armies and fleets will be
+nightmares of the past. Thus, as ever, the throes of evil may give birth
+to good. Till then our task stands clear before us--a task that will ask
+for all we have in strength and resolution. Have you who read this
+played your part to the highest? If not, do it now, or stand forever
+shamed.
+
+
+
+
+*Conan Doyle on British Militarism*
+
+
+Early last year, in the course of some comments which I made upon the
+slighting remarks about our army by Gen. von Bernhardi, I observed: "It
+may be noted that Gen. von Bernhardi has a poor opinion of our troops.
+This need not trouble us. We are what we are, and words will not alter
+it. From very early days our soldiers have left their mark upon
+Continental warfare, and we have no reason to think that we have
+declined from the manhood of our forefathers." Since then he has
+returned to the attack.
+
+With that curious power of coming after deep study to the absolutely
+diametrically wrong conclusion which the German expert, political or
+military, appears to possess, he says in his "War of Today": "The
+English Army, trained more for purposes of show than for modern war,"
+adding in the same sentence a sneer at our "inferior colonial levies."
+
+He will have an opportunity of reconsidering his views presently upon
+the fighting value of our oversea troops, and surely, so far as our own
+are concerned, he must already be making some interesting notes for his
+next edition, or, rather, for the learned volume upon "Germany and the
+Last War," which will, no doubt, come from his pen. He is a man to whom
+we might well raise a statue, for I am convinced that his frank
+confession of German policy has been worth at least an army corps to
+this country. We may address to him John Davidson's lines to his enemy:
+
+ Unwilling friend, let not your spite abate.
+ Spur us with scorn and strengthen us with hate.
+
+There is another German gentleman who must be thinking rather furiously.
+He is a certain Col. Gadke, who appeared officially at Aldershot some
+years ago, was hospitably entertained, being shown all that he desired
+to see, and on his return to Berlin published a most deprecatory
+description of our forces. He found no good thing in them. I have some
+recollection that Gen. French alluded in a public speech to this
+critic's remarks, and expressed a modest hope that he and his men would
+some day have the opportunity of showing how far they were deserved.
+Well, he has had his opportunity, and Col. Gadke, like so many other
+Germans, seems to have made a miscalculation.
+
+
+*Germans Untried in War.*
+
+An army which has preserved the absurd parade schritt, an exercise which
+is painful to the bystander, as he feels that it is making fools of
+brave men, must have a tendency to throw back to earlier types. These
+Germans have been trained in peace and upon the theory of books. In all
+that vast host there is hardly a man who has stood at the wrong end of a
+loaded gun. They live on traditions of close formations, vast cavalry
+charges, and other things which will not fit into modern warfare. Braver
+men do not exist, but it is the bravery of men who have been taught to
+lean upon each other, and not the cold, self-contained, resourceful
+bravery of the man who has learned to fight for his own hand. The
+British have had the teachings of two recent campaigns fought with
+modern weapons--that of the Tirah and of South Africa. Now that the
+reserves have joined the colors there are few regiments which have not a
+fair sprinkling of veterans from these wars in their ranks. The Pathan
+and the Boer have been their instructors in something more practical
+than those imperial grand manoeuvres where the all-highest played with
+his puppets in such a fashion that one of his Generals remarked that the
+chief practical difficulty of a campaign so conducted would be the
+disposal of the dead.
+
+Boers and Pathans have been hard masters and have given many a slap to
+their admiring pupils, but the lesson has been learned. It was not show
+troops, General, who, with two corps, held five of your best day after
+day from Mons to Compiègne. It is no reproach to your valor, but you
+were up against men who were equally brave and knew a great deal more of
+the game. This must begin to break upon you, and will surely grow
+clearer as the days go by. We shall often in the future take the knock
+as well as give it, but you will not say that we are a slow army if you
+live to chronicle this war, nor will your imperial master be proud of
+the adjective which he has demeaned himself in using before his troops
+had learned their lesson.
+
+
+*The South African Lesson.*
+
+The fact is that the German Army, with all its great traditions, has
+been petrifying for many years back. They never learned the lesson of
+South Africa. It was not for want of having it expounded to them, for
+their military attache--"'im with the spatchcock on 'is 'elmet,'" as I
+heard him described by a British orderly--missed nothing of what
+occurred, as is evident from their official history of the war. And yet
+they missed it, and with all those ideas of individual efficiency and
+elastic independent formation which are the essence of modern
+soldiering. Their own more liberal thinkers were aware of it. Here are
+the words which were put into the mouth of Güntz, the representative of
+the younger school, in Beverlein's famous novel:
+
+"The organization of the German Army rested upon foundations which had
+been laid a hundred years ago. Since the great war they had never
+seriously been put to the proof, and during the last three decades they
+had only been altered in the most trifling details. In three long
+decades! And in one of those decades the world at large had advanced as
+much as in the previous century.
+
+"Instead of turning this highly developed intelligence to good account,
+they bound it hand and foot on the rack of an everlasting drill which
+could not have been more soullessly mechanical in the days of Frederick.
+It held them together as an iron hoop holds together a cask, the dry
+staves of which would fall asunder at the first kick."
+
+Lord Roberts has said that if ten points represent the complete soldier,
+eight should stand for his efficiency as a shot. The German maxim has
+rather been that eight should stand for his efficiency as a drilled
+marionette. It has been reckoned that about two hundred books a year
+appear in Germany upon military affairs, against about twenty in
+Britain. And yet, after all this expert debate, the essential point of
+all seems to have been missed--that in the end everything depends upon
+the man behind the gun, upon his hitting his opponent and upon his
+taking cover so as to avoid being hit himself.
+
+After all the efforts of the General Staff, the result when shown upon
+the field of battle has filled our men with a mixture of admiration and
+contempt--contempt for the absurd tactics and admiration for the poor
+devils who struggle on in spite of them. Listen to the voices of the men
+who are the real experts. Says a Lincolnshire Sergeant: "They were in
+solid square blocks, and we couldn't help hitting them." Says Private
+Tait (Second Essex): "Their rifle shooting is rotten. I don't believe
+they could hit a haystack at 100 yards." "They are rotten shots with
+their rifles," says an Oldham private. "They advance in close column,
+and you simply can't help hitting them," writes a Gordon Highlander.
+"You would have thought it was a big crowd streaming out from a cup
+tie," says Private Whitaker of the Guards. "It was like a farmer's
+machine cutting grass," so it seemed to Private Hawkins of the
+Coldstreams. "No damned good as riflemen," says a Connemara boy. "You
+couldn't help hitting them. As to their rifle fire, it was useless."
+"They shoot from the hip, and don't seem to aim at anything in
+particular."
+
+
+*Not Books That Count.*
+
+These are the opinions of the practical men upon the field of battle.
+Surely a poor result from the 200 volumes a year and all the weighty
+labors of the General Staff! "Artillery nearly as good as our own, rifle
+fire beneath contempt." That is the verdict. How will the well-taught
+parade schritt avail them when it comes to a stricken field?
+
+But let it not seem as if this were meant for disparagement. We should
+be sinking to the Kaiser's level if we answer his "contemptible little
+army" by pretending that his own troops are anything but a very
+formidable and big army. They are formidable in numbers, formidable,
+too, in their patriotic devotion, in their native courage, and in the
+possession of such material, such great cannon, aircraft, machine guns,
+and armored cars as none of the Allies can match. They have every
+advantage which a nation would be expected to have when it has known
+that war was a certainty, while others have only treated it as a
+possibility. There is a minuteness and earnestness of preparation which
+are only possible for an assured event. But the fact remains, and it
+will only be brought out more clearly by the Emperor's unchivalrous
+phrase, that in every arm the British have already shown themselves to
+be the better troops. Had he the Froissart spirit within him he would
+rather have said: "You have today a task which is worthy of you. You are
+faced by an army which has a high repute and a great history. There is
+real glory to be won today." Had he said this then, win or lose, he
+would not have needed to be ashamed of his own words--the words of
+ungenerous spirit.
+
+It is a very strange thing how German critics have taken for granted
+that the British Army had deteriorated, while the opinion of all those
+who were in close touch with it was that it was never so good. Even some
+of the French experts made the same mistake, and Gen. Bonnat counseled
+his countrymen not to rely upon it, since "it would take refuge amid its
+islands at the first reverse." One would think that the cause which
+makes for its predominance were obvious. Apart from any question of
+national spirit there is the all-important fact that the men are there
+of their own free will, an advantage which I trust that we shall never
+be compelled to surrender. Again, the men are of longer service in every
+arm, and they have far more opportunities of actual fighting than come
+to any other force. Finally they are divided into regiments with
+centuries of military glories streaming from their banners, which carry
+on a mighty tradition. The very words the Guards, the Rifles, the
+Connaught Rangers, the Buffs, the Scots Greys, the Gordons, sound like
+bugle calls. How could an army be anything but dangerous which had such
+units in its line of battle?"
+
+
+*History Repeating Itself*.
+
+And yet there remains the fact that both enemies and friends are
+surprised at our efficiency. This is no new phenomenon. Again and again
+in the course of history the British armies have had to win once more
+the reputation which had been forgotten. Continentals have always begun
+by refusing to take them seriously. Napoleon, who had never met them in
+battle, imagined that their unbroken success was due to some weakness in
+his Marshals rather than in any excellence of the troops. "At last I
+have them, these English," he exclaimed as he gazed at the thin, red
+line at Waterloo. "At last they have me, these English," may have been
+his thought that evening as he spurred his horse out of the débacle. Foy
+warned him of the truth. "The British infantry is the devil," said he.
+"You think so because you were beaten by them," cried Napoleon. Like von
+Kluck or von Kluck's master, he had something to learn.
+
+Why this continual depreciation? It may be that the world pays so much
+attention to our excellent right arm that it cannot give us credit for
+having a very serviceable left as well. Or it may be that they take
+seriously those jeremiads over our decay which are characteristic of our
+people, and very especially of many of our military thinkers. I have
+never been able to understand why they should be of so pessimistic a
+turn of mind, unless it be a sort of exaltation of that grumbling which
+has always been the privilege of the old soldier. Croker narrates how he
+met Wellington in his later years, and how the Iron Duke told him that
+he was glad he was so old, as he would not live to see the dreadful
+military misfortunes which were about to come to his country. Looking
+back, we can see no reason for such pessimism as this. Above all, the
+old soldier can never make any allowance for the latent powers which lie
+in civilian patriotism and valor. Only a year ago I had a long
+conversation with a well-known British General, in which he asserted
+with great warmth that in case of an Anglo-German war with France
+involved the British public would never allow a trained soldier to leave
+these islands. He is at the front himself and doing such good work that
+he has little time for reminiscence, but when he has he must admit that
+he underrated the nerve of his countrymen.
+
+
+*Assurance Beneath Pessimism.*
+
+And yet under the pessimism of such men as he there is a curious
+contradictory assurance that there are no troops like our own. The late
+Lord Goschen used to tell a story of a letter that he had from a Captain
+in the navy at the time when he was First Lord. This Captain's ship was
+lying alongside a foreign cruiser in some port, and he compared in his
+report the powers of the two vessels. Lord Goschen said that his heart
+sank as he read the long catalogue of points in which the British ship
+was inferior--guns, armor, speed--until he came to the postscript, which
+was: "I think I could take her in twenty minutes."
+
+With all the grumbling of our old soldiers, there is always some
+reservation of the sort at the end of it. Of course, those who are
+familiar with our ways of getting things done would understand that a
+good deal of the croaking is a means of getting our little army
+increased, or at least preventing its being diminished. But whatever the
+cause, the result has been the impression abroad of a "contemptible
+little army." Whatever surprise in the shape of 17-inch howitzers or
+900-foot Zeppelins the Kaiser may have for us, it is a safe prophecy
+that it will be a small matter compared to that which Sir John French
+and his men will be to him.
+
+But above all I look forward to the development of our mounted riflemen.
+This I say in no disparagement of our cavalry, who have done so
+magnificently. But the mounted rifleman is a peculiarly British
+product--British and American--with a fresh edge upon it from South
+Africa. I am most curious to see what a division of these fellows will
+make of the Uhlans. It is good to see that already the old banners are
+in the wind, Lovat's Horse, Scottish Horse, King Edward's Horse, and the
+rest. All that cavalry can do will surely be done by our cavalry. But I
+have always held, and I still very strongly hold, that the mounted
+rifleman has it in him to alter our whole conception of warfare, as the
+mounted archer did in his day; and now in this very war will be his
+first great chance upon a large scale. Ten thousand well-mounted,
+well-trained riflemen, young officers to lead them, all broad Germany,
+with its towns, its railways and its magazines before them--there lies
+one more surprise for the doctrinaires of Berlin.
+
+
+
+
+*The Need of Being Merciless*
+
+*By Maurice Maeterlinck.*
+
+*From The London Daily Mail.*
+
+
+At these moments of tragedy none should be allowed to speak who cannot
+shoulder a rifle, for the written word seems so monstrously useless and
+so overwhelmingly trivial in face of this mighty drama that will for a
+long time and maybe forever free mankind from the scourge of war--the
+one scourge among all that cannot be excused and that cannot be
+explained, since alone among all scourges it issues entirely from the
+hands of man.
+
+But it is while this scourge is upon us--while we have our being in its
+very centre--that we shall do well to weigh the guilt of those who
+committed this inexpiable crime. It is now, when we are in the awful
+horror, undergoing and feeling it, that we have the energy and
+clearsightedness needed to judge it. From the depths of the most fearful
+injustice justice is best perceived. When the hour shall have come for
+settling accounts--it will not be long delayed--we shall have forgotten
+much of what we have suffered and a censurable pity will creep over us
+and cloud our eyes.
+
+
+*Will Seek Sympathy.*
+
+This is the moment, therefore, for us to frame our inexorable
+resolution. After the final victory, when the enemy is crushed--as
+crushed as he will be--efforts will be made to enlist our sympathy. We
+shall be told that the unfortunate German people are merely the victims
+of their monarch and their feudal caste; that no blame attaches to the
+Germany we know that is so sympathetic and cordial--the Germany of
+quaint old houses and open-hearted greetings; the Germany that sits
+under its lime trees beneath the clear light of the moon--but only to
+Prussia, hateful, arrogant Prussia; that homely, peace-loving Bavaria,
+the genial, hospitable dwellers on the banks of the Rhine, the Silesian
+and Saxon--I know not who besides--have merely obeyed and been compelled
+to obey orders they detested, but were unable to resist.
+
+We are in the face of reality now. Let us look at it well and pronounce
+our sentence, for this is the moment when we hold the proofs in our
+hands; when the elements of the crime are hot before us and should
+out--the truth that will soon fade from our memory. Let us tell
+ourselves now therefore that all we shall be told hereafter will be
+false. Let us unflinchingly adhere to what we decide at this moment when
+the glare of the horror is on us.
+
+
+*No Degrees of Guilt.*
+
+It is not true that in this gigantic crime there are innocent and guilty
+or degrees of guilt. They stand on one level, all who have taken part.
+The German from the north has no more especial craving for blood than
+the German from the south has especial tenderness and pity. It is very
+simple. It is the German from one end of the country to the other who
+stands revealed as a beast of prey that the firm will of our planet
+finally repudiates. We have here no wretched slaves dragged along by a
+tyrant King who alone is responsible. Nations have the Government they
+deserve, or rather the Government they have is truly no more than a
+magnified public projection of the private morality and mentality of the
+nation.
+
+If eighty million innocent people merely expose the inherent falseness
+and superficiality of their innocence--and it is a monster they maintain
+at their head who stands for all that is true in their nature, because
+it is he who represents the eternal aspirations of their race, which lie
+far deeper than their apparent transient virtues--let there be no
+suggestion of error, of intelligent people having been tricked and
+misled. No nation can be deceived that does not wish to be deceived. It
+is not intelligence that Germany lacks. In the sphere of intellect such
+things are not possible, nor in the region of the enlightened,
+reflecting will. No nation permits herself to be coerced into the one
+crime man cannot pardon. It is of her own accord she hastens toward it.
+Her chief has no need to persuade. It is she who urges him on.
+
+We have forces here quite different from those on the surface--forces
+that are secret, irresistible, profound. It is these we must judge, must
+crush under heel once for all, for they are the only ones that will not
+be improved, softened or brought into line by experience, progress, or
+even the bitterest lesson. They are unalterable, immovable. Their
+springs lie far beneath hope or influence. They must be destroyed as we
+destroy a nest of wasps, since we know these never can change into a
+nest of bees.
+
+Even though individually and singly Germans are all innocent and merely
+led astray, they are none the less guilty in mass. This is the guilt
+that counts--that alone is actual and real, because it lays bare
+underneath their superficial innocence, the subconscious criminality of
+all. No influence can prevail on the unconscious or subconscious. It
+never evolves. Let there come a thousand years of civilization, a
+thousand years of peace, with all possible refinements, art, and
+education, the German spirit which is its underlying element will remain
+absolutely the same as today and would declare itself when the
+opportunity came under the same aspect with the same infamy.
+
+Through the whole course of history two distinct will-powers have been
+noticed that would seem to be the opposing elemental manifestations of
+the spirit of our globe, one seeking only evil, injustice, tyranny,
+suffering, the other strives for liberty, right, radiance, joy. These
+two powers stand once again face to face. Our opportunity is to
+annihilate the one that comes from below. Let us know how to be pitiless
+that we have no more need for pity. It is the measures of organic
+defense--it is essential that the modern world should stamp out Prussian
+militarism as it would stamp out a poisonous fungus that for half a
+century had poisoned its days. The health of our planet is the question.
+Tomorrow the United States and Europe will have to take measures for the
+convalescence of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+*Letters to Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler*
+
+*By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant.*
+
+
+ _Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia University, has
+ permitted_ THE NEW YORK TIMES _to have the extracts printed
+ herewith from letters sent to him since the beginning of the war by
+ Baron d'Estournelles de Constant, Senator of France, and Member of
+ the International Court at The Hague._
+
+
+*First Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Aug. 15, 1914.--* * * Today I am full of grief to feel myself
+impotent before the murderous conflicts now going on in Belgium and at a
+number of points on our northern and eastern frontiers, while awaiting
+the great battles and hecatombs which will follow; my thought is full of
+these terrible calamities willfully brought about; so many precious
+lives already wiped out or soon to be; so much avoidable mourning which
+one neither can nor wishes now to avoid!
+
+In France there is not a single family which has not given without
+hesitation all its children of military age to fight for the repulse of
+the invader. All the men from Créans, of ages 20 to 48 years, have gone,
+with one exception, and he is now going; and meanwhile no work has
+ceased because of their absence. In all the communes, in all the hamlets
+of the whole of France, the women, the children, and the men over 48
+have assumed all duties, in particular the gathering of the harvests,
+which I see already finished as in normal times. * * *
+
+When one thinks that Servia alone, even though exhausted by two
+atrocious wars, is sufficient to hold in check imperial Austria; when
+one sees Italy remain neutral, and in reality hostile to Austria, and
+Russia open slowly, inexorably, her reservoir of men, resources, and
+infinite energy on the eastern frontier of Germany, one asks truly if
+the Pan-Germanists have not been the veritable plague of God for their
+country; the Fatherland, which men like Goethe, Kant, and Beethoven had
+made so cultured, so glorious, and which asked only to live and to
+prosper, the Pan-Germanists have isolated only to deliver it to the
+execration of the world. It was the same in France formerly, when she
+ceded to chauvinistic influences.
+
+
+*Second Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 3, 1914.
+
+* * * May you never witness such calamities as have fallen upon Europe.
+The visions of horror, which formerly we evoked in order to terrify the
+world and to try to conjure them away, are now surpassed; and we are
+only at the commencement of the war! The trains, thronged with youth and
+enthusiasm, which I saw leave are now returning crowded with the
+wounded. They have filled all the hospitals, the barracks which had been
+left empty, the lyceums, and the schools throughout France. In but a few
+days they have arrived everywhere in the south, the west and the centre
+of the country. At La Flèche alone we have five improvised hospitals
+with 1,200 beds. Créans is a hospital annex, and so it is in all the
+villages and in the dwellings which can provide one or more beds. The
+wounded who occupy these beds are happy, very happy. One of them, who
+has only a broken leg, but who thinks of the thousands of his comrades
+who remain wounded upon the fields of battle, said to me, "I am in
+heaven." * * *
+
+The worst of all, (I have always said it, but it is even worse than I
+had thought,) the worst is that each of the combatants, for the most
+part incapable of cruelty under ordinary conditions, is now devoted to
+the horrible work of hatred and of reprisal; and even more than the
+combatants, their children, their orphans, all those who are to remain
+in mourning. * * *
+
+As far as France is concerned, our first reverses have served to exalt
+the national spirit and to fortify the unanimous resolution to conquer
+or to die. It is important that this be well understood in the United
+States and that it be given due consideration if it is desired to
+intervene without irritating the most noble scruples. * * *
+
+It is the Prussian military system of domination with its contagion
+which has done the harm and which ought to disappear, and that system
+itself is the fruit of Napoleonic imperialism. The struggle is always,
+and more now than ever, between imperialism and liberty, between force
+and right. May you in the United States profit by this lesson, so that
+you may avoid falling into the European error. * * * It is barbarity
+triumphant. But that triumph will be only momentary, and all agree at
+the conclusion of this terrible drama on having a United States of
+Europe with disarmament, or at least with armaments limited to a
+collective police force.
+
+
+*Third Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 8, 1914.
+
+* * * You have comprehended that France is struggling for justice and
+peace. Be sure that she will resist even to the last man, with the
+certainty that she is defending not herself alone but also civilization.
+Never have I suspected to what degree of savagery man can be degraded by
+unrestrained violence. I had believed that the world could never again
+see the time of the Massacre of the Innocents; I deceived myself; we
+have returned to barbarity, and the Prussian Army leaves us no
+alternative between victory and extermination; should she become
+mistress of Paris, which I doubt, and of the half of France, she will
+find the other half which will bury her under its ruins. * * *
+
+The English troops march on our roads, stop at Clermont-Créans! Oh,
+miracle! I see among my compatriots the worst chauvinists, those who
+openly desire for me the fate of Jaurès, those who fought me in 1902
+with cries of "Fashoda" or "Chicago," hasten to meet the English
+soldiers in order to aid and acclaim them, in this country still full of
+the memories and the ruins of the hundred years' war! It is because the
+English troops are also defending the land of liberty, theirs as ours
+and as yours. Every one except the Prussians comprehend this, and this
+it is which exalts their souls! * * *
+
+The whole misfortune, I repeat, is the result of the crime committed
+forty-three years ago, the crime which we accepted to avoid recommencing
+the war. Our resignation has not sufficed; it has not caused the trouble
+to disappear; the German Government has none the less been obliged to
+confirm it each day. The misfortune has been the forcible annexation of
+Alsace-Lorraine. For that the Germans are paying today; for that they
+will pay until they have made atonement for their fault. In this regard
+France is irreproachable; she has resisted the chauvinists; our general
+elections, the conferences of Berne and of Basle, have proved that, far
+from seeking revenge, she wished by mutual concessions to arrive
+worthily at reconciliation in peace.
+
+The Germans are paying today for their fault of 1870-71, because that
+fault has corrupted and poisoned them. I have said it a thousand times.
+In order to keep those two unfortunate provinces under their domination
+it has been necessary for them to use force, to institute a régime of
+force. * * * It has been necessary to prevent revolts by repressive
+measures, as at Saverne, which have disgusted, and even disquieted, the
+whole world; that ignominious brutality become sovereign mistress, by
+the force of circumstances, even against the will of the Kaiser and
+against the protestation of all the élite of Germany, of such men as
+Zorn, Förster, Nippold, and Bebel, has ended by being a menace and a
+danger to Germany itself. All this is connected, and, whatever happens,
+Germany cannot emerge victorious from a war which is itself but the
+logical result of the abuse of her victories. She cannot conquer
+civilization; it is impossible. * * *
+
+Comprehend this well, repeat it, publish it if you wish; France,
+Belgium, and England may suffer check after check; they are prepared for
+this, they expect it, but they will not be discouraged. The German
+armies may exhaust themselves uselessly in killing, burning, and
+destroying. They will destroy themselves in the end. Our national policy
+is to take them in their own trap and to wear them out.
+
+The day of reckoning is coming, when the inexorable advance of the
+Slavic race, always increasing in numbers--it little matters whether it
+is well or badly organized--will come from the rear to attack the
+Germans at the time when they are confident of victory and to drown them
+in the floods of blood which they have caused to flow; terrible
+punishment for a war which we and our friends have done everything to
+prevent. The victims of this punishment will be at least a half million
+of French, Belgians, and Englishmen, together with a whole nation which
+desired peace as we did, but which has allowed herself to be misled by a
+Government mad enough to wish to reconcile the irreconcilable, namely,
+the maintenance of peace and the spirit of conquest. May this punishment
+at least begin an era of new peace! Alas! how may we hope for this when
+we see the human beast awakening in a delirium of fury and getting
+beyond our control to destroy the masterpieces of human genius.
+
+
+*Fourth Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 11, 1914.
+
+The Germans appear to have comprehended that the atrocities which have
+bitterly aggravated the remorseless violation of Belgian neutrality have
+only aroused general indignation, and have at the same time exasperated
+the opposing nations and armies. Contrary to the tales which appear in
+the sensational journals, which are naturally as eager today to embitter
+the war as they were formerly to bring it about, I am assured that the
+German armies in France are repudiating the unworthy excesses of the
+beginning of the campaign and are respecting life and private property.
+This will alleviate the horrors of the war, but France nevertheless will
+place no limit on the sacrifices which she will make. She will wear out
+the German Army and destroy it, day after day, in continuous battles.
+* * *
+
+The Belgians with us at Clermont-Créans, instead of being a burden, as I
+had feared, are making themselves useful. They are very welcome. They
+are gradually recognized and appreciated as estimable people, and are
+employed in the homes and farms and fields. We should like to have more
+of them. How we shall regret them when they leave! * * *
+
+The German Emperor must stand either as a pacifist or as a conqueror. He
+cannot pass as both. All the results which may follow this war could
+well have been obtained in peace by a general effort of good-will. On
+the other hand, the legacy of the war will be endless rancor, hatred,
+reprisal, and savagery. When it shall be understood that, in spite of
+Governments and Parliaments, the war has been, in large part, excited by
+the manoeuvres of an international band of the dealers in military
+supplies and by their all-powerful newspapers, when it shall be
+thoroughly comprehended that these dealers and these newspapers have
+played with rumors of war as with a scarecrow, for the purpose of
+keeping up a general condition of disquiet favorable to their sinister
+operations, then, too late, alas! there will be a revulsion of public
+opinion to sustain finally those men, like our friends, who have urged
+arbitration rather than war, and conciliation rather than arbitration.
+
+* * * More than ever our motto, "Pro patria per orbis concordiam," will
+be that of every good patriot who wishes to develop the internal
+prosperity of his country through friendly foreign relations. * * * More
+than a century ago you Americans condemned and executed British
+imperialism; subsequently Europe condemned and executed Napoleonic
+imperialism; Europe is now going to condemn and execute Germanic
+imperialism; profit by this threefold lesson to make an end of
+imperialism in your country, and by your good example to render to
+Europe an incalculable service.
+
+Such an example will be more efficacious than overhasty or superficial
+intervention, however well intentioned it might be. Above all, beware of
+offering aid to Europe in a spirit of opportunism rather than of high
+principle. Especially, do not try to take advantage of some
+circumstances in order to urge a lame and ephemeral peace. Public
+opinion will be bitterly divided if the war is brought to an end merely
+by lassitude and a desire for comfort. Public opinion will accept only a
+peace inspired with high ideals, without needless humiliation for the
+conquered, and equally without sacrifice of any principles which have
+brought together the anti-German coalition.
+
+The war itself, however atrocious it has been and still may be, will
+have been only a commencement, the beginning of continual wars into
+which the New World will be drawn, if we do not leave the desire of life
+and the means of living to Germany, conquered but still alive. It is
+possible to conquer and to exterminate armies, but it is not possible to
+exterminate a nation of 70,000,000 people. It will then be necessary to
+make a place for Germany which will permit the exercise of her fecund
+activity in the struggle of universal competition. If we yield to the
+temptation to make an end of German competition, we shall neither end
+the competition nor shall we end war.
+
+For years I have repeated this to our English friends who were
+intoxicated with the theories of Chamberlain. I see without surprise but
+with sorrow that serious journals of London and Paris spread before the
+eyes of their readers the absurd idea that this war will kill the German
+foreign commerce, while the English and French production will be
+enriched without a rival, and consequently without effort. Place should
+be made for Germany from Berlin to Vienna in the organization of a
+general European confederation which will give full satisfaction to
+Italy at Trieste, will install the Turkish Government in Asia, will
+bring about an agreement between the Christian Balkan States, and give
+the free disposal of their destinies to Poland, Denmark, Finland,
+Hungary, Rumania, and Alsace-Lorraine.
+
+In this manner the worst problems on which general peace depends would
+be solved, and with these problems that of armaments, which it would no
+longer be dangerous nor humiliating to reduce if the general reduction,
+extending even to Japan and seconded by all the republics of the New
+World, were agreed to by all. Certainly such an agreement would be
+difficult to develop; it would terrify the diplomats, but outside of
+such an agreement I see in perspective nothing but perpetual war,
+internal revolution, and general ruin.
+
+
+*Fifth Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 18, 1914.
+
+
+* * * The pride of an empire may not be crushed without a bitter
+struggle. The German Government has at its disposition the live force of
+a young and growing people. However, the day is coming when that people,
+aware that they have been deceived, will be able to repudiate their
+Government, just as the French people did after Sedan. Meanwhile the
+German armies have stopped their retreat in order to form a new line of
+resistance. But to what good? This line will be overthrown, and in the
+end the German Army will be obliged to retreat in disorder and again to
+cross the land which it has laid waste.
+
+The true difficulties, in my opinion, are going to commence when the
+conquered Germans must submit to the conditions made by the conquerors.
+The victors will be able to agree, I believe, to stop the war and to
+dictate conditions. But will they agree to make these conditions
+moderate? That is the question. At that moment even France will be far
+from unanimous, as she has been unanimous in defending herself. France
+is of one opinion on these principal points:
+
+1. Alsace-Lorraine ought to be liberated at last, free to return to
+France; her rights ought to be respected and recognized. Such liberation
+should extend as far as possible to every country in Europe whose right
+has been violated.
+
+2. We must make an end of ruinous armed peace, invented, so it was said,
+to prevent war, but which has made war inevitable. German militarism
+must be crushed unless it is again to become a menace and give the
+signal for another competition of armaments. This peace will be only a
+truce, a sinister comedy, unless it is crowned by a general convention
+of disarmament, to which Germany must subscribe with all the others and
+before all the others.
+
+3. Arbitration, conciliation, all the means already provided for
+amicable adjustment, and if possible for the prevention of international
+conflicts, should be organized on a more solid and more definite basis
+than in the past, with the sanction, or at least the maximum of
+necessary precautions, of a federated Europe. All which we have done at
+The Hague, far from being lost, will serve as a foundation for the
+building of a pacific federation.
+
+On these three points one may prophesy a unanimity almost complete; but
+the division will begin when it comes to distinguishing between Germany
+and the empire, between the German people who have a right to live and
+the German Empire which opposed the right to live; the division will
+begin when some demand the humiliation of Germany, others the ruin of
+her colonies, and of her very life. France, who has defended peace,
+will, I am sure, also defend justice; but justice will not triumph
+without difficulty. And it is here that the United States will render
+great service, if the United States has preserved, as one can see so
+clearly in the Mexican crisis, her moral authority and
+disinterestedness.
+
+In the cuttings from the American papers which you have sent me I have
+read with great disquietude an article which says that, after all, the
+United States "will be the beneficiary of the European war." This
+article claims that the United States may profit very easily by this war
+to take away from Germany her commerce in the three Americas, &c. It is
+a dangerous form of reasoning, which, however, is not new.
+
+If war has attracted ardent partisans it is because it appeals to the
+temperament of many people, it flatters their self-pride, but also it
+serves their interests. I have never understood it as I do at present. I
+see, for example, the town of Mons enriching itself through the war;
+cafés, restaurants, the hotels, are unable to accommodate all who come
+to them; the farmers are seen disputing about their products. There are
+also the military requisitions by which one can profit in getting rid of
+an old horse, of a wagon, an automobile, &c.; there are the butchers,
+the bakers, the dealers in cutlery, &c., who have never had so many
+purchasers; the furnishers of materials for the hospitals, pharmacists,
+orthopedists, &c.
+
+Add to these an immense number of furnishers of military supplies, not
+only those who sell cannon, arms, and ammunition, but the accessories,
+the uniforms, material for the transports, and for the administrative
+work, &c. They are legion. Add to these all the combatants who have been
+promised positions as officers, Colonels, Generals. * * * Napoleon I.
+gave titles and honors. * * * You will understand that after the war, if
+there is an infinite number of unfortunates who mourn and who are ruined
+by the war, there are others, on the contrary, who have profited very
+well, who have enriched themselves and been raised to a privileged,
+fortunate class, who will find it quite natural to demand war or whose
+children will demand it later; while the mass of unfortunates, without
+strength, without resources, without protection, will need years to
+reconquer in peace the rights which they legally enjoyed before the war,
+and which the war suddenly took from them.
+
+If to this class, more powerful than numerous, of natural partisans of
+the war in Europe you are going to add the American partisans of the
+European war, you will commit a grave fault, for the Americans have more
+than ever everything to gain by peace and all to lose in war, which they
+will not be able to limit if it breaks out again in the world.
+
+The truth is that the Americans evidently gain in the war, but they lose
+more. Europe is something else to them than a market over which to
+dispute, she is a reservoir of experiences, good and bad, but of
+experiences which you cannot do without. To wish for the continuation of
+the war in Europe or even to take sides with it as a sort of half evil
+is for the Americans a crime, a sort of suicide; that would be to
+applaud the destruction of models which civilization seems to have
+collected for your edification and for your development. Later, the
+United States can do without many of these lessons which she learns from
+Europe, but she will always have need of the inspiration of the
+masterpieces of our civilization. It is only a barbarous reasoning which
+allows one to see in the European war profit for the United States; it
+is a loss, a mourning, a shame for the whole world, and particularly for
+the free countries which are the guides of other peoples and which can
+only fulfill their mission in times of peace.
+
+I have often heard the profits of war discussed. The undertakers of
+impressive funeral services can also congratulate themselves over
+catastrophes. A railroad accident which puts an entire country in
+mourning can enrich them. The most murderous battles bring profit in the
+final reckoning to somebody, if it is only to the jackals and the crows;
+but it is the whole of a country, and for the United States it is the
+whole world, which must be considered, and the more the whole world
+prospers the more will the United States find friends, collaborators,
+and clients. The more the world is troubled, on the contrary, the more
+commerce and general activities will suffer from it, without mention of
+the development of instruction and of the progress of human thought,
+which will be paralyzed.
+
+I have been surprised to see a serious American paper bring up these old
+questions for discussion, and I conclude that we are going to feel in
+Europe the result of our errors. It is going to be necessary to find
+money to fill up the financial gulf which we dig each day under our feet
+without realizing it; a gulf twice made, by the billions which it has
+been necessary to spend for the war, by the billions of ordinary income
+which must now go by default. We cannot reasonably expect that Germany
+will be able to pay all the deficits in France, England, Russia,
+Belgium, and Japan; she will have no longer her foreign commerce; her
+misery is going to be frightful; it will be necessary then that each of
+the adversaries which she has so rashly provoked limit his demands; we
+must ourselves limit her ruin unless our own credit shall be ruined
+also.
+
+In a word, there are two victories equally difficult for the Allies to
+win: the first over Germany, the second over themselves. Let us prepare
+ourselves to the uttermost and with all the authority which we can
+husband to facilitate the first here, and from your side as well as from
+ours, the second. To make war there is the first difficulty; but to
+finish well, that is what makes me anxious for the future.
+
+
+*Sixth Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 24, 1914.
+
+In spite of all, unity of purpose is maintained among the Allies as well
+as among Frenchmen. I say in spite of all, because at Berlin this was
+hardly believed possible at the beginning of the war.
+
+* * * All the men have left Créans; my farm is empty, and as I told you,
+the work is accomplished just the same. Means are found to feed the
+wounded English, becoming more and more numerous, the wounded Belgians
+and the prisoners. At the mill the miller's wife has four sons and a
+son-in-law in the army. I went to see her; not a tear, she looked
+straight before her absorbed in her work and said only "It is
+necessary." She continues her work as yesterday, as always, only with
+more energy and seriousness than formerly, with the purpose to
+accomplish double.
+
+Meanwhile in spite of lack of news, we are beginning to learn that many
+sons, husbands, fathers, and brothers whom we saw go away will never
+return. Each day a few of the wounded are buried, and so it is in all
+the communities in the country which are not occupied by the Germans. In
+every town, village, home, and heart the national tribulations have
+their local echo.
+
+If all France were victim of a catastrophe of nature, an earthquake, a
+conflagration, or a flood, the country would be crushed; but, no, the
+contrary is now true, for the present catastrophe has been brought about
+by an evil will and each one comprehends that this will, if left free to
+act, will continue to do evil until it has been crushed. We have neither
+the time nor the wish to complain; we fight. * * *
+
+The people, all those who are now devoted to my policy, to our policy,
+remain more faithful than ever. They keep silent awaiting the end of the
+war and knowing well that in fact it is not so much a question of
+Germany as of German reaction, German imperialism, and German
+militarism. They know also that if the German reaction might have been
+crushed sooner, the war would not have broken out. Thus, far from being
+blind, public opinion is alive to the truth. The grandeur, and to speak
+the whole truth, alas, the beauty of the atrocious war is that it is a
+war of liberation. * * *
+
+It is impossible that the New World should remain a simple spectator
+before the gigantic struggle which is progressing in Europe. I do not
+ask that the New World intervene by armed force, but that it shall not
+conceal its opinion, its aversion for that horror which is called
+reaction and which truly is only death; that it shall not conceal its
+indignation for the abominable calculation of that reaction which is
+incapable of comprehending anything of the life, the work, the science
+and the art of human genius. I ask that the New World shall not remain
+skeptical before the senile attacks of those armies which respect
+nothing, neither women, children, old men, unfortified cities, museums,
+nor cathedrals. * * *
+
+It is impossible that the free United States, born out of the sacred
+struggle against European domination, enlarged, enriched, and ennobled
+by that struggle, and now in the front rank among nations as the fruit
+of that struggle, should hesitate between revolution and reaction,
+between right and conquest, between peace and war.
+
+Americans are too generous to hesitate, too wise, also, for Prussian
+reaction is cracking and is going to crumble; even Americans of German
+origin would be acting against their own fatherland if they, by their
+sympathies, should sustain the régime of caporalism which is now
+destroying it.
+
+
+
+
+*The Vital Energies of France*
+
+*By Henri Bergson.*
+
+*From The Bulletin des Armees, Nov. 5, 1914.*
+
+
+The issue of the war is not doubtful: Germany will succumb. Material
+force and moral force, all that sustains her will end by failing her
+because she lives on provisions garnered once for all, because she
+wastes them and will not know how to renew them.
+
+Everything has been said about her material resources. She has money,
+but her credit is sinking, and it is not apparent where she can borrow.
+She needs nitrates for her explosives, oil for her motors, bread for her
+sixty-five millions of inhabitants. For all this she has made provision,
+but the day will come when her granaries will be empty and her
+reservoirs dry. How will she fill them? War as she practices it consumes
+a frightful number of her men, and here, too, all revitalization is
+impossible; no aid will come from without, since an enterprise launched
+to impose German domination, German "culture," German products, does not
+and never will interest those who are not Germans. Such is the situation
+of Germany confronting a France who keeps her credit intact and her
+ports open, who procures provisions and ammunition according to her
+need, who reinforces her army with all that her Allies bring to her, and
+who can count--since her cause is that of humanity itself--upon the
+increasingly active sympathy of the civilized world.
+
+But it is not merely a question of material force, of visible force.
+What of the moral force that cannot be seen and that is more important
+than the other--which to a certain degree can be supplied--that is
+essential, since without it nothing avails?
+
+The moral energy of nations, like that of individuals, can only be
+sustained by some ideal superior to themselves, stronger than they are,
+to which they can cling with a strong grip when they feel their courage
+vacillate. Where lies the ideal of contemporary Germany? The time has
+past when her philosophers proclaimed the inviolability of justice, the
+eminent dignity of the person, (the individual?), the obligation laid
+upon nations to respect one another. Germany militarized by Prussia has
+thrust far from her those noble ideas which came to her formerly for the
+most part from the France of the eighteenth century and the Revolution.
+She has made for herself a new soul, or rather, she has docilely
+accepted that which Bismarck has given her. To that statesman has been
+attributed the famous phrase: "Might makes right." As a matter of fact
+Bismarck never said it, because he was unable to distinguish between
+might and right; in his eyes right was simply that which is desired by
+the strongest, that which is declared in the law imposed by the victor
+upon the vanquished. His whole moral philosophy is summed up in that.
+The Germany of the present knows no other. She also worships brute
+force. And as she believes herself strongest she is entirely absorbed in
+adoration of herself. Her energy has its origin in this pride. Her moral
+force is only the confidence by which her material force inspires her.
+That is to say, that here also she lives on her reserves, that she has
+no means of revitalization. Long before England was blockading her
+coasts she had blockaded herself, morally, by isolating herself from all
+ideals capable of revivifying her.
+
+Therefore she will see her strength and her courage worn out. But the
+energy of our soldiers is linked to something which cannot be worn out,
+to an ideal of justice and liberty. Time has no hold on us. To a force
+nourished only by its own brutality we oppose one that seeks outside of
+itself, above itself, a principle of life and of renewal. While the
+former is little by little exhausted, the latter is constantly revived.
+The former already is tottering, the latter remains unshaken. Be without
+fear: the one will be destroyed by the other.
+
+
+
+
+*France Through English Eyes*
+
+With Rene Bazin's Appreciation.
+
+
+ _Referring to the article printed below, which appeared in The
+ London Times Literary Supplement of Oct. 1, and which the French
+ Government ordered to be read in all Parisian schools, M. Rene
+ Bazin writes in l'Echo de Paris:_
+
+Is not this language admirable? What full and flowing phrases. They are
+like a ship filled with grain sailing into port with her sails full.
+Preserve them, these fugitive lines written by a neighbor, and read them
+to your children. They will teach them the greatness of France and the
+greatness of England.
+
+The whole world recognizes two qualities in the Englishman: his bravery
+and his common sense. We know that the Englishman is true to his given
+word, and that even in the antipodes he never changes his habits. As I
+write, the postman brings me a letter from the front, dated Oct. 17. The
+cavalryman who sends it tells of our Allies. "We are fighting the
+enemy's cavalry," he writes, "and for two days my brigade was in action
+with the British. They know how to fight and they astonish us by their
+marvelous powers of organization and their coolness."
+
+Yes, we know that of old. We also know that England never closes her
+doors to liberty. We have a confused memory of the hospitality given to
+our priests in the times of the Revolution. Now England provides us with
+fresh proof of her kindness of heart. You have heard the news--the
+professors and students of the Catholic University of Louvain invited to
+Cambridge. The destroyed Belgian university reconstituted in the home of
+the celebrated English university. What a magnificent idea!
+
+I do not know whether the author who has spoken so well of France in the
+great English newspaper has ever visited this country. But he has surely
+meditated on our history and has divined the reason of the very
+existence of France; why she merits love beyond her frontiers, and why
+she should be defended "like a treasure." England is not made up of
+traders, soldiers, sailors, politicians, but also--and that is what the
+French people will learn better every day--of poets, subtle
+philosophers, and of thoughtful and religious spirits.
+
+In truth, the day which Joan of Arc foresaw has arrived. She did not
+hate the English. It was only their intolerable rule of the kingdom
+which was hateful to her. The good maid of Lorraine said that after
+having driven the English out of France she would reconcile them with
+the French and lead them together in a crusade. This has become true.
+Her dream is accomplished. The crusade is not against the Saracens, but
+it is a crusade all the same.
+
+
+
+
+*France*
+
+*From The London Times Literary Supplement*
+
+
+Among all the sorrows of this war there is one joy for us in it: that it
+has made us brothers with the French as no other two nations have ever
+been brothers before. There has come to us, after ages of conflict, a
+kind of millennium of friendship; and in that we feel there is a hope
+for the world that outweighs all our fears, even at the height of the
+worldwide calamity. There were days and days, during the swift German
+advance, when we feared that the French armies were no match for the
+German, that Germany would be conquered on the seas and from her eastern
+frontier, that after the war France would remain a power only through
+the support of her Allies. For that fear we must now ask forgiveness;
+but at least we can plead in excuse that it was unselfish and free from
+all national vanity. If, in spite of ultimate victory, France had lost
+her high place among the nations, we should have felt that the victory
+itself was an irreparable loss for the world. And now we may speak
+frankly of that fear because, however unfounded it was, it reveals the
+nature of the friendship between France and England.
+
+That is also revealed in the praise which the French have given to our
+army. There is no people that can praise as they can: for they enjoy
+praising others as much as some nations enjoy praising themselves, and
+they lose all the reserve of egotism in the pleasure of praising well.
+But in this case they have praised so generously because there was a
+great kindliness behind their praise, because they, like us, feel that
+this war means a new brotherhood stronger than all the hatreds it may
+provoke, a brotherhood not only of war but of the peace that is to come
+after it. That welcome of English soldiers in the villages of France,
+with food and wine and flowers, is only a foretaste of what is to be in
+both countries in a happier time. It is what we have desired in the past
+of silly wrangles and misunderstandings, and now we know that our desire
+is fulfilled.
+
+
+*"That Sweet Enemy."*
+
+For behind all those misunderstandings, and in spite of the difference
+of character between us, there was always an understanding which showed
+itself in the courtesies of Fontenoy and a hundred other battles. When
+Sir Philip Sidney spoke of France as that sweet enemy, he made a phrase
+for the English feeling of centuries past and centuries to be. We
+quarrelled bitterly and long; but it was like a man and woman who know
+that some day their love will be confessed and are angry with each other
+for the quarrels that delay the confession. We called each other
+ridiculous, and knew that we were talking nonsense; indeed, as in all
+quarrels without real hatred, we made charges against each other that
+were the opposite of the truth. We said that the French were frivolous;
+and they said that we were gloomy. Now they see the gayety of our
+soldiers and we see the deep seriousness of all France at this crisis of
+her fate. She, of all the nations at war, is fighting with the least
+help from illusion, with the least sense of glory and romance. To her
+the German invasion is like a pestilence; to defeat it is merely a
+necessity of her existence; and in defeating it she is showing the
+courage of doctors and nurses, that courage which is furthest removed
+from animal instinct and most secure from panic reaction. There is no
+sign in France now of the passionate hopes of the revolutionary wars;
+1870 is between them and her; she has learned, like no other nation in
+Europe, the great lesson of defeat, which is not to mix material dreams
+with spiritual; she has passed beyond illusions, yet her spirit is as
+high as if it were drunk with all the illusions of Germany.
+
+And that is why we admire her as we have never admired a nation before.
+We ourselves are an old and experienced people, who have, we hope,
+outlived gaudy and dangerous dreams; but we have not been tested like
+the French, and we do not know whether we or any other nation could
+endure the test they have endured. It is not merely that they have
+survived and kept their strength. It is that they have a kind of
+strength new to nations, such as we see in beautiful women who have
+endured great sorrows and outlived all the triumphs and passions of
+their youth, who smile where once they laughed; and yet they are more
+beautiful than ever, and seem to live with a purpose that is not only
+their own, but belongs to the whole of life. So now we feel that France
+is fighting not merely for her own honor and her own beautiful country,
+still less for a triumph over an arrogant rival, but for what she means
+to all the world; and that now she means far more than ever in the past.
+
+
+*Furia Francese.*
+
+This quarrel, as even the Germans confess, was not made by her. She saw
+it gathering, and she was as quiet as if she hoped to escape war by
+submission. The chance of revenge was offered as it had never been
+offered in forty years; yet she did not stir to grasp it. Her enemy gave
+every provocation, yet she stayed as still as if she were spiritless;
+and all the while she was the proudest nation on the earth, so proud
+that she did not need to threaten or boast. Then came the first failure,
+and she took it as if she had expected nothing better. She had to make
+war in a manner wholly contrary to her nature and genius, and she made
+it as if patience, not fire, were the main strength of her soul. Yet
+behind the new patience the old fire persisted; and the _Furia Francese_
+is only waiting for its chance. The Germans believe they have determined
+all the conditions of modern war, and, indeed of all modern competition
+between the nations to suit their own national character. It is their
+age, they think, an age in which the qualities of the old peoples,
+England and France, are obsolete. They make war, after their own
+pattern, and we have only to suffer it as long as we can. But France has
+learned what she needs from Germany so that she may fight the German
+idea as well as the German armies; and when the German armies were
+checked before Paris there was an equal check to the German idea. Then
+the world, which was holding its breath, knew that the old nations, the
+old faith and mind and conscience of Europe, were still standing fast
+and that science had not utterly betrayed them all to the new barbarism.
+Twice before, at Tours and in the Catalaunian fields, there had been
+such a fight upon the soil of France, and now for the third time it is
+the heavy fate and the glory of France to be the guardian nation. That
+is not an accident, for France is still the chief treasury of all that
+these conscious barbarians would destroy. They knew that while she
+stands unbroken there is a spirit in her that will make their Kultur
+seem unlovely to all the world. They know that in her, as in Athens long
+ago, thought remains passionate and disinterested and free. Their
+thought is German and exercised for German ends, like their army; but
+hers can forget France in the universe, and for that reason her armies
+and ours will fight for it as if the universe were at stake. Many forms
+has that thought taken, passing through disguises and errors, mocking at
+itself, mocking at the holiest things; and yet there has always been the
+holiness of freedom in it. The French blasphemer has never blasphemed
+against the idea of truth even when he mistook falsehood for it. In the
+Terror he said there was no God, because he believed there was none, but
+he never said that France was God so that he might encourage her to
+conquer the world. Voltaire was an imp of destruction perhaps, but with
+what a divine lightning of laughter would he have struck the Teutonic
+Antichrist, and how the everlasting soul of France would have risen in
+him if he could have seen her most sacred church, the visible sign of
+her faith and her genius, ruined by the German guns. Was there ever a
+stupidity so worthy of his scorn as this attempt to bombard the spirit?
+For, though the temple is ruined, the faith remains; and whatever war
+the Germans may make upon the glory of the past, it is the glory of the
+future that France fights for. Whatever wounds she suffers now she is
+suffering for all mankind; and now, more than ever before in her
+history, are those words become true which one poet who loved her gave
+to her in the Litany of Nations crying to the earth:
+
+ I am she that was thy sign and standard bearer,
+ Thy voice and cry;
+ She that washed thee with her blood and left thee fairer,
+ The same am I.
+ Are not these the hands that raised thee fallen, and fed thee,
+ These hands defiled?
+ Am not I thy tongue that spake, thine eye that led thee,
+ Not I thy child?
+
+
+
+
+*The Soldier of 1914*
+
+*By Rene Doumic.*
+
+
+ _In spite of the great European war, which struck France with the
+ full force of its horrors, the Institute of France, which includes
+ the world-famous French Academy, held its regular session on Oct.
+ 26 last. The feature of this session, widely heralded beforehand,
+ was the address of the celebrated critic, M. Rene Doumic of the
+ Academy, on "The Soldier of 1914." "Every sentence, every word of
+ it, was punctuated with acclamations from the audience," says Le
+ Figaro in its report. Below is a translation of M. Doumic's
+ address:_
+
+The soldier of 1914. We think only of him. We live only for him, just as
+we live only through him. I have not chosen this subject; it has forced
+itself upon me. My only regret is that I come here in academician's
+costume, with its useless sword, to speak to you about those whose
+uniforms are torn by bullets, whose rifles are black with powder.
+
+And I am ashamed, above all, of placing so feeble a voice at the service
+of so great a cause. But what do words matter, when the most brilliant
+of them would pale before acts of which each day makes us the witnesses?
+For these acts we have only words, but let us hope that these, coming
+from the heart, may bring to those who are fighting for their country
+somewhere near the frontier the spirit of our gratitude and the fervor
+of our admiration.
+
+Our history is nothing but the history of French valor, so ingenious in
+adopting new forms and adapting itself each time to the changing
+conditions of warfare. Soldiers of the King or of the republic, old
+"grognards" of Napoleon, who always growled yet followed just the same,
+youngsters who bit their cartridges with childish lips, veterans of
+fights in Africa, cuirassieurs of Reichshofen, gardes-mobiles of the
+Loire, all, at the moment of duty and sacrifice, did everything that
+France expected of her sons.
+
+So, too, for this war, the soldier needed has arisen. After so many
+heroes he has invented a new form of heroism.
+
+I say the soldier, for the soldier is what one must say. Here begins
+what is clearly expressed in one phrase only--the French miracle. This
+national union in which all opinions have become fused is merely a
+reflection of the unity which has been suddenly created in our army.
+
+
+*When War Broke Out.*
+
+When war broke out it found military France ready and armed; mere
+troopers, officers none of whom ever thought that he would one day lead
+his men under fire, and that admirable General Staff which, never
+allowing itself to be deflected from its purpose, did its work silent
+and aloof.
+
+But there was beside this France another France, the France of
+civilians, accustomed by long years of peace to disbelieve in war;
+which, in conjuring up a picture of Europe delivered over to fire and
+blood, could not conceive that any human being in the world would assume
+the responsibility for such an act before history. War surprised the
+employe at his desk, the workman in his workshop, the peasant in his
+field. It snatched them from the intimacy of their hearths, from the
+amenities of family life which in France is sweeter than elsewhere.
+These men were obliged to leave behind beings whom they loved tenderly.
+For the last time they clasped in their arms the beloved partners of
+their lives, so deeply moved yet so proud, and their children, the
+eldest of whom have understood and will never forget. And all of them,
+artist and artisan, priest and teacher, those who dreamed of revenge and
+those who dreamed of the fraternity of nations, those of every mind,
+every profession, every age, as they stepped into their places, were
+endowed with the soul of the soldier of France, every one of them, and
+became thus the same soldier.
+
+The war which lay in wait for these men, many of whom did not seem made
+for war, was a war of which nobody had ever seen the like. We have heard
+tell of wars of giants, of battles of nations, but nobody had ever seen
+a war extending from the Marne to the Vistula, nor battles with a front
+of hundreds of kilometers, lasting weeks without respite day or night,
+fought by millions of men. Never in its worst nightmares had
+hallucinated imagination conjured up the progress made in the art of
+mowing down human lives. The German Army, to which the German Nation has
+never refused anything, either moral support or money, the nerve of war,
+has been able to profit by all this progress, to reduce to a formula the
+violence which drives forward the attack, to prepare the spy system
+which watches over the unarmed foe, to organize even incendiarism, and
+to become thus, forged by forty-four years of hatred, the most
+formidable tool of destruction that has ever sown ruin and death.
+
+
+*German Meets Belgian.*
+
+The Germans arrived, with the irresistible impetus of their masses, with
+the fury of a tempest, with the roar of thunder, enraged at having been
+confronted on their road by that little Belgian Nation which has just
+inscribed its name among the first on the roster of heroism. Already the
+German chiefs imagined themselves lords of Paris, which they threatened
+to reduce to ashes--and which did not tremble.
+
+It was to meet this colossus of war that our little soldier marched
+forth. And he made it fall back.
+
+To this new war he brings his old qualities, the qualities of all time.
+Courage--let us not speak of that. Can one speak of courage? Just read
+the short sentences in the army orders.
+
+Corporal Voituret of the Second Dragoons, mortally wounded on a
+reconnoissance, cries: "Vive la France! I die for her! I die happy!"
+Private Chabannes of the Eighteenth Chasseurs, unhorsed and wounded,
+replies to the Major who asks him why he had not surrendered: "We
+Frenchmen never surrender!" And remember those who, mortally wounded,
+stick to their posts so as to fight to the end with their men, and those
+wounded men who have but one desire--every one of us can vouch for
+this--to return to the firing line! And that one who, hopelessly
+mutilated, said to me: "It is not being crippled that hurts me; it is
+that I shall not be able to see the best part of the thing!" These, and
+the others, the thousands of others, shall we speak of their courage?
+--what would it mean to speak of their courage?
+
+And the dash of them!--the only criticism to which they lay themselves
+open is that they are too fiery, that they do not wait the right moment
+for the charge, in order to drive back the enemy at the point of the
+bayonet. What spirit! What gayety! All the letters from our soldiers are
+overflowing with cheerfulness. Where, for instance, does that nickname
+come from applied by them to the enemy--the "Boches"? It comes from
+where so many more have come; its author is nobody and everybody; it is
+the spontaneous product of that Gallic humor which jokes at danger,
+takes liberities with it.
+
+What pride! What sense of honor! Whereas the German officer, posted
+behind his men, drives them forward like a flock of sheep, revolver in
+his hand and insults on his lips, we, on our side, hear nothing but
+those beautiful, those radiant words: "Forward! For your country!"--the
+call of the French officer to his children, whom he impels forward by
+giving them the example, by plunging under fire first, before all of
+them, at their head.
+
+
+*The Password: "Smile!"*
+
+And--supreme adornment of all--with what grace they deck their
+gallantry! A few seconds before being killed by an exploding shell, Col.
+Doury, ordered to resist to the last gasp, replies: "All right! We will
+resist. And now, boys, here is the password: Smile!" It is like a flower
+thrown on the scientific brutality of modern war, that memory of the
+days when men went to war with lace on their sleeves. There we recognize
+the French soldier such as we have always known him through fifteen
+centuries of the history of France.
+
+But now we look upon him in a form of which we did not suspect the
+existence, the form in which he has just revealed himself to us.
+
+To go forward is all very well; but to fall back in good order, to
+understand that a retreat may be a masterpiece of strategy, to find in
+himself that other kind of courage which consists in not getting
+discouraged, to be able to wait without getting demoralized, to preserve
+unshaken the certainty of the final outcome--in these things lies a
+virtue which we did not know we possessed: the virtue of patience. It
+won us our victory of the Marne. One man is its personification today,
+that great chief, wise and prudent, who spares his men, who makes up his
+mind not to give battle except in his own time on his own ground, that
+chief toward whom at this moment the calm and confident eyes of the
+entire country are turned.
+
+To carry a position by assault is one thing. But to stand impassive in a
+rain of shot, amid exploding shells, amid infernal din and blinding
+smoke; to fire at an invisible enemy, to dispute foot by foot ground
+covered with traps, to retake the same village ten times, to burrow into
+the soil and crouch there, to watch day after day for the moment when
+the beast at bay ventures from his lair--where have we acquired the
+phlegmatic coolness for such things? Has it come from the proximity of
+our English allies? It is in the English reports that we read the
+eulogies of our army for its endurance and tenacity.
+
+We have always known how to pluck the laurels of the brave on fields of
+battle and to water them with our blood. We Frenchmen, all of us, are
+lovers of glory. The stories of war which we read in our childhood
+days--captures of redoubts, fiery charges, furious fights around the
+flag--made us thrill. And, like the Athenians who left the performance
+of a tragedy by Aeschylus thirsting to close their books and march on
+the enemy, we dreamed of combats in which we were to win fame.
+
+But since those days military literature has undergone somewhat of a
+change, and the communiqués which we devour twice a day, hungry for
+news, give us no such tales of prowess.
+
+"On the left wing we have progressed. On the right wing we have repulsed
+violent counter-attacks. On the front the situation remains without
+change." Where are our men? What troops are meant? What Generals?
+Nothing is told of such things. The veil of anonymity shrouds great
+actions, a barrier of impenetrable mystery protects the secret of the
+operations.
+
+
+*Great Things Done Simply.*
+
+Our soldiers have endured every hardship, braved every danger, never
+knowing whether each dawning day was their last, yet the cleverest
+manoeuvring, the most gallant feats, are obliterated, effaced, lost, in
+the calculated colorlessness of an enigmatic report. But that sacrifice
+also have they made. To be at the post assigned to them, to play a great
+or infinitesimal role in the common work, is the only reward they
+desire. Can it be that the disease of individualism is a thing of
+yesterday? The soldier of 1914 has cured us of it. Never have
+disinterestedness and modesty been pushed so far.
+
+Let us say it in a word: Never have great things been done so simply.
+
+But he knows why he is fighting. It is not for the ambition of a
+sovereign or the impatience of his heir, for the arrogance of a caste of
+country squires or the profit of a firm of merchants. No; he fights for
+the land where he was born and where his dead sleep; he fights to free
+his invaded country and give her back her lost provinces, for her past,
+struck to the heart by the shells that bombarded the Cathedral of
+Rheims; he fights so that his children may have the right to think,
+speak, and feel in French, so that there may still be in the world a
+French race, which the world needs. For this war of destruction is aimed
+at the destruction of our race, and our race has been moved to its
+depths. It has risen as one man and assembled together; it has called up
+from its remotest history all its energy, in order to reincarnate them
+in the person of him whose duty is to defend the race today; it has
+inspired in him the valor of the knights of old, the endurance of the
+laborer bending over his furrow, the modesty of the old masters who made
+of our cathedrals masterpieces of anonymity, the honesty of the
+bourgeois, the patience of humble folk, the consciousness of duty which
+mothers teach to their children, all those virtues which, developed from
+one generation to another, become a tradition, the tradition of an
+industrious people, made strong by a long past and made to endure. It is
+these qualities, all of them together, which we admire in the soldier of
+1914, the complete and superb type of the entire race.
+
+
+*A Holy Intoxication.*
+
+When it has such an aim, the noblest of all, war is sublime; all who go
+into it are as if transfigured. It exalts, expands, and purifies souls.
+On approaching the battlefield a holy intoxication, a holy happiness,
+takes possession of those for whom has been reserved the supreme joy of
+braving death for their country. Death is everywhere, but they do not
+believe in it any more. And when, on certain mornings, to the sound of
+cannon that mix their rumblings with mystic voices of bells, in the
+devastated church which cries to the heavens through every breach opened
+in its walls, the Chaplain blesses the regiment that he will accompany
+the next minute to the firing line, every head will be bent at the same
+time and all will feel on their brows the breath of God.
+
+Alas! the beauty of the struggle does not hide from me its sadness. How
+many went away, full of youth and hope, to return no more. How many have
+fallen already without seeing realized what they so ardently desired;
+sowers they, who to make the land fertile have watered it with their
+blood, yet will not see the harvest.
+
+But at least their sacrifice will not have been in vain. They have
+brought reconciliation to their divided country, they have made her
+become conscious of herself again, they have made her learn enthusiasm
+once again. They have not seen victory, but they have merited it. Honor
+to them, struck down first, and glory to those who will avenge them! We
+enfold them both in our devotion to the same sacred cause.
+
+Would that a new era might dawn, thanks to them, that a new world might
+be born in which we might breathe more freely, where injustices
+centuries old might be made good, where France, arising from long
+humiliation, might resume her rank and destiny. Then, in that cured,
+vivified France, what an awakening, what a renewal, what a sap, what a
+magnificent flowering there would be! This will be thy work, soldier of
+1914! To you we shall owe this resurrection of our beloved country. And
+later on, and always, in everything beautiful and good that may be done
+among us, in the creations of our poets and the discoveries of our
+savants, in the thousand forms of national activity, in the strength of
+our young men and the grace of our young women, in all that will be the
+France of tomorrow, there will be, soldier so brave and so simple in
+your greatness, a little of your heroic soul!
+
+
+
+
+*Germany's Civilized Barbarism*
+
+*By Emile Boutroux.*
+
+*From the Revue des Deux Mondes.*
+
+
+I sincerely thank M. Emile Boutroux for the letter he has been good
+enough to write to me; and the readers of the Revue will join me, for it
+is addressed to them also. No one could speak of Germany more
+authoritatively than M. Boutroux; no one, indeed, is better acquainted
+with the Germany of yesterday and that of today, or better equipped to
+draw a comparison between them, which for the Prussianized Germany of
+the present is a verdict and a condemnation. The violence, brutality,
+barbarism which she displays--a frightful spectacle--doubtless spring
+from the deepest instincts of race; but man always feels the need of
+justifying his conduct, and the Germans are too much philosophers not to
+seek justification for theirs in a scientific system in which these
+doctrinaires of a new sort are encouraged to persevere without the least
+scruple or pity. M. Boutroux explains to us the detestable sophism which
+has perverted the entire German soul and made of a nation which our
+grandfathers loved and admired, a monster whose implacable egotism
+weighs heavily on the world. But let M. Boutroux speak.
+
+FRANCIS CHARMES.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PARIS, 28 September, 1914.
+
+To the Director of the Revue des Deux Mondes:
+
+Mr. Director and Dear Colleague: You have done me the honor to ask me,
+as I have lived in Germany and studied in part German philosophy and
+literature, whether I was not prepared to submit some observations
+touching the present war. I confess that at this moment words, and even
+thoughts, seem to me to amount to little. Like every Frenchman,
+
+[Illustration: FREDERIC HARRISON. _See Page_ 192]
+
+[Illustration: YVES GUYOT. _See Page_ 194]
+
+I am given up wholly to the task of the hour; all my interest is in
+our generous and admirable army, and my sole concern is to take part,
+however modestly, in the work of the nation. True, a thousand memories
+and reflections crowd my mind; the notion of pausing to express them in
+writing had not occurred to me, but it would be ungracious in me to
+decline your kind invitation. Please omit from the ideas I throw on
+paper whatever seems to you to be lacking in interest.
+
+
+*Mephistopheles Appears.*
+
+In the presence of such events as are passing before our eyes, how can
+we keep our minds free? We have to say to ourselves: "See what has come
+of that philosophic, artistic, scientific development whose grandeur and
+idealistic character all the world has proclaimed!" "That is what the
+infernal cur had in his belly," said Faust as he saw the dog which was
+playing at his side change into Mephistopheles. What! Having declared
+the morality of Plato and Aristotle inadequate and mediocre, having
+preached duty for duty's sake, having established the unconditioned
+supremacy of moral worth, the royalty of the intellect, to end by
+officially declaring that a signed engagement is but a scrap of paper,
+and that juridic or moral laws do not count if they incommode us and if
+we are the strongest! Having given to the world marvelous music, in
+which the purest and deepest aspirations seem to be heard; having raised
+art and poetry to a sort of religion, in which man communes with the
+Eternal by the worship of the ideal; having exalted the universities as
+the most sublime of human creations, temples of science and of
+intellectual freedom, to come to bombarding Louvain, Malines, and the
+Cathedral of Rheims! Having assumed the role of representative par
+excellence of culture, of civilization in its loftiest form, at the end
+to aim at the subjugation of the world and to strive toward that aim by
+the methodical letting loose of brute force, wickedness, and barbarism!
+To boast of having attained the highest plane of human nature, and to
+reveal themselves as survivors of the Huns and Vandals!
+
+Only yesterday Germany was feared throughout the world because of her
+power, but esteemed for her science and her heritage of idealism. Today,
+on the contrary, there is a common cry of reprobation and horror raised
+against her from one end of the earth to the other. Fear is overcome by
+indignation. On every side it is asserted that the victory of German
+imperialism and militarism would be the triumph of despotism, brutality,
+and barbarism. These ideas are expressed to us by Americans of the North
+and South, by Spaniards, Italians, Greeks, Swiss, and Rumanians. The
+nation which burned the University of Louvain and the Cathedral of
+Rheims has brought dishonor upon itself.
+
+What shall we think of the prodigious contrast which manifests itself
+between the high culture of Germany and the end at which she aims, the
+means which she employs in the present war? Is it enough to explain this
+contrast, to allege that in spite of all their science the Germans are
+but slightly civilized, that in the sixteenth century they were still
+boorish and uncultivated and that their science, an affair of
+specialists and pundits, has never penetrated their soul or influenced
+their character?
+
+This explanation is justified. Consider the German professor in the beer
+garden, in the relations of everyday life, in his amusements. With
+certain notable exceptions he excels only in discovering and collecting
+materials for study and in drawing from them, by mechanical operations,
+solutions that rest wholly upon text and argument and make no appeal
+whatever to ordinary judgment and good sense. What a disproportion often
+between his science and his real education. What vulgarity of tastes and
+sentiments and language. What brutality of methods on the part of this
+man whose authority is indisputable in his specialty. Take this learned
+man from his university chair, place him on that scene of war where
+force can alone reign and where the gross appetites are unchained, it is
+not surprising that his conduct approaches that of savages.
+
+
+*A Culture of Violence.*
+
+That is the current judgment and not without reason. The savant and the
+man, among the Germans, are only too often strangers to each other. The
+German in war is inhuman not merely because of an explosion of his true
+nature, gross and violent, but by order. His brutality is calculated and
+systematized. It justifies the words of La Harpe, "There is such a thing
+as a scientific barbarity." In 1900 the German Emperor haranguing his
+soldiers about to set sail for China, exhorted them to leave nothing
+living in their path and to bear themselves like Huns.
+
+If, then, in this war, in the manner in which they have prepared and
+provoked it and now conduct it, they violate without scruple the laws of
+the civilized world, it is not despite their superior culture, it is in
+consequence of that very culture. They are barbarous because they are
+more civilized. How can such a combination of contradictory elements,
+such a synthesis, be possible?
+
+Fichte in the famous discourses to the German Nation which he delivered
+at the University of Berlin during the Winter of 1807 and 1808, had one
+object: to arouse the German Nation by kindling its self-consciousness,
+that is to say, its pure Germanic essence, _Deutschheit_, in order to
+realize that essence when possible beyond its borders and to make it
+dominate the world. The general idea which must guide Germany in the
+accomplishment of this double task is: Germany is to all the rest of the
+world as good is to evil.
+
+The appeal of Fichte was heard. During the century which followed,
+Germany in the most precise and practical manner, on the one hand built
+up the theory of Germanism or _Deutschtum_, on the other hand prepared
+the domination of Germanism in the world. This notion of Germanism
+furnishes, if I am not mistaken, the principle of the inference which I
+wish to indicate, the explanation of the surprising solidarity which
+Germans have created between culture and barbarism.
+
+It would be interesting to probe this notion and follow its development.
+
+In the first place how can a people come to claim for its ideas, its
+virtue, its achievements, not only the right to exist and to be
+respected by other people, but the privilege of being the sole
+expression of the true and the good while everything which emanates from
+other peoples represents nothing but error and evil?
+
+The philosopher Fichte after having built up his system under the
+influence of Kant and of French ideas, notably under the influence of
+Rousseau--of whom he said "peace to his ashes, for he has done
+things"--could think of nothing better to reinforce the German soul
+after Jena than to persuade it that in itself and itself alone there was
+to be found the sense of the ideal combined with power to realize that
+ideal in the world.
+
+
+*The Power to Realize.*
+
+Starting from a certain notion of the absolute he found after Jena that
+this very notion constituted the foundation of the German genius. Soon
+this mystic method was merged in a more concrete method better adapted
+to the positive spirit of modern generations. The one science where all
+knowledge and ideas which concern human life are concentrated is
+history. To this science our epoch has devoted a veritable worship. Now
+the Germans have drawn from history two lessons of the highest
+importance. One is that history is not only the succession of events,
+which mark the life of humanity, it is the judgment of God upon the
+rivalries of peoples. Everything which is wishes to be, and to endure,
+struggle, and impose itself. History tells us which are the men and the
+things Providence has elected. The sign of that election is success. To
+subsist, grow, conquer, dominate is to prove that one is the confidant
+of the thought of Providence, the dispenser of the power of Providence.
+If one people appears designated by history to dominate the others then
+that people is the vicegerent of God upon earth, is God Himself, visible
+and tangible for His creatures.
+
+The second lesson which German erudition has drawn from the study of
+history is that the actual existence of a people charged with
+representing God is not a myth, that such a people exists and that the
+German people is that people. From the victory of Hermann (Arminius)
+over Varus in the forest of Teutoburg in the year 9 A.D., the will of
+God is evident. The Middle Ages show it, and if in modern times Germany
+has appeared to efface herself it is because she was reposing to collect
+her force and strike more heavily. When she was not obviously the first,
+she was so virtually. It was in 1844 that Hoffmann von Fallersleben
+composed the national song, _Deutschland über alles, über alles in der
+Welt_. Germany over all, Germany over all the world, Germany extending
+from the Meuse to the Niemen, from the Adige to the Belt.
+
+Not only is Germany the elect of Providence but the sole elect, and
+other nations are rejected. The sign of her election is the annihilation
+of the three legions of Quinctilius Varus, and her eternal task is to
+revenge herself for the insolence of the Roman General. "We shall give
+battle to Hermann and we shall avenge ourselves, "_und wollen Rache
+haben_." Thus ran the celebrated national song. _Der Gott, der Eisen
+wachsen liess_.
+
+
+*Germanism and God.*
+
+German civilization has developed in antagonism with the Greco-Roman
+civilization. To adopt the former was on the part of God to reject the
+latter. Therefore German consciousness, realized without hindrance in
+all its force, is but the Divine consciousness. _Deutschtum_ = God and
+God = _Deutschtum_. In practice it is enough that an idea is
+authentically German in order that we may and must conclude that it is
+true, that it is just, and that it ought to prevail.
+
+What are the essential dogmas of this truth, which is German because it
+is true and which is true because it is German? German metaphysicians
+explain that to us more clearly than is usual by thought. The first
+quality of this truth is that it is in opposition to what classic or
+Greco-Latin thought would recognize as true. The latter has sought to
+discover what in man is essentially human, to render man superior to
+other beings, and to substitute more and more the superior elements for
+the inferior elements in human life--reason for blind impulse, justice
+for force, good for wickedness. It has undertaken to create in the world
+a moral force capable of controlling and humanizing material forces. To
+this doctrine, which rests upon man as its centre and which was
+essentially human, German thought opposes itself as the infinite opposes
+the finite, the absolute the relative, the whole the part. The disciples
+of the Greeks had at their disposition no light except that of human
+reason; the German genius possesses a transcendent reason which pierces
+the mysteries of the absolute, of the Divine. What would light be
+without the shadow from which it is detached? How could the ego exist if
+there was not somewhere a non ego to which it is opposed? Evil is not
+less indispensable than good in the transcendent symphony of the whole.
+
+There is something more. It may be a satisfaction for a Greco-Latin,
+impelled by his mediocre logic to say that good is good, evil is evil,
+but these simple formulas are contrary to the truth per se. Good by
+itself is absolutely impotent to realize itself. It is only an idea, an
+abstraction. The power and faculty of creation belong to evil alone. So
+that if good is to be realized it can only be by means of evil, and by
+means of evil left entirely to itself. God could not exist if He were
+not created by the devil, and thus, in a sense, evil is good and good is
+bad. Evil is good because it creates. Good is bad because it is
+impotent. The supreme and true divine law is just this: That evil left
+to itself, evil as evil, gives birth to good, which, by itself, would
+never be able to advance from the ideal to the real. "I am," said
+Mephistopheles, "part of that force which always wishes evil and always
+creates the good." Such is the divine order. He who undertakes to do
+good by good will only do evil. It is only in unchaining the power of
+evil that one has a chance to realize any good.
+
+From these metaphysical principles questions raised by the idea of
+civilization receive most remarkable solutions.
+
+
+*The Essence of Civilization.*
+
+What is civilization in the German and true sense of the word?
+
+Nations in general, especially the Latin nations, put the essence of
+civilization in the moral element of human life, in the softening of
+human manners. To those who understand human culture in this way the
+Germans will apply the words of Ibsen's Brand, "You wish to do great
+things but you lack energy. You expect success from mildness and
+goodness." According to the German thought, mildness and goodness are
+only weakness and impotence. Force alone is strong and force _par
+excellence_ is science, which puts at our disposal the powers of nature
+and indefinitely multiplies our strength. Science, then, should be the
+principal object of our efforts. From science and from the culture of
+scientific intelligence there will necessarily result, by the effect of
+Divine grace, the progress of the will and of the conscience which is
+called moral progress. It is in this sense that Bismarck said,
+"Imagination and sentiment are to science and intelligence what the
+tares are to the wheat. The tares threaten to stifle the wheat; that is
+why they are cut down and burned." True civilization is a virile
+education, aiming at force and implying force. A civilization which
+under pretext of humanity and of courtesy enervates and softens man is
+fit only for women and for slaves.
+
+Is that to say that the notion of right which men invoke against force
+has in reality no meaning, and that a highly civilized people would
+disregard it? We must clearly understand the relation which exists
+between the notion of right and the notion of force. Force is not the
+right. All existing forces do not have an equal right to exist; mediocre
+forces in reality have but a feeble share in the Divine force; but in
+proportion as a force becomes greater it is more noble. A universally
+victorious and all-powerful force would be identical with Divine force
+and should, therefore, be obeyed and honored in the same degree. Justice
+and force, moreover, belong to two different worlds--the natural and the
+spiritual. The former is the phenomenon and symbol of the latter. We
+live in a world of symbols; and so preponderant force is for us the
+visible and practical equivalent of right.
+
+It is, then, puerile to admit the existence of a natural right inherent
+in individuals or in nations, and manifested in their aspirations, their
+powers, their sympathies, their wills. The right of peoples should be
+determined by a purely objective method.
+
+Now in this sense people should be divided into _Naturvölker_,
+_Halbkulturvölker_, and _Kulturvölker_--people in the state of nature,
+half-cultivated people, and cultivated people. This is not all. There
+are people who are simply cultivated--_Naturvölker_--and people who are
+wholly cultivated--_Vollkulturvölker_. Now the degree of right depends
+on the degree of culture. As compared with the _Kulturvölker_ the
+_Naturvölker_ have no rights. They have only duties--submission,
+docility, obedience. And if there exists a people which deserves more
+than all others the title of _Vollkulturvölker_--completely cultured
+people--to this people the earth belongs and the supremacy thereof. Its
+mission is to bend all other peoples beneath the yoke of its omnipotence
+co-ordinated with its supreme culture.
+
+
+*The Master Nation.*
+
+Such is the idea of the master nation. This nation must not be simply an
+abstract type, it must necessarily be able to realize itself in our
+world. In effect the spirit is the supreme form of being; it necessarily
+wishes to be; and as it is infinite, it can be realized only by means of
+an infinite force. A nation capable of imposing its will upon everybody
+is the necessary instrument of the Divine will which can grant the
+prayer: "Our Father, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it
+is done in heaven."
+
+As a master nation is necessary in the world there must be subordinate
+nations. There can be no efficient "yes" without a decided "no." The
+ego, says Fichte, is effort. Therefore it presupposes something that
+resists it, namely, that which we call matter. The master nation
+commands. Therefore nations must exist who are made to obey it. It is
+needful even that these nations, which are to the master nation what the
+non ego is to the ego, should resist the action of this superior nation.
+For this resistance is necessary to enable the latter to develop and
+employ its force and to become fully itself; that is, to become the
+whole, enriching itself by the spoils of its enemies.
+
+The ideal nation is thus defined by a transcendental deduction, and this
+same deduction leads us to affirm that the master nation must be not
+merely an idea but a reality. Now, it is plain that this realization of
+the ideal nation is going on under our eyes in the German Nation, which
+represents the highest created race and which surpasses all other
+nations in science and in power. It is to her, and to her alone, that
+the task of accomplishing the will of God upon earth is consigned.
+
+
+*Means of Success.*
+
+To succeed in it, what means must she employ?
+
+In the first place she must acquire complete consciousness of her
+superiority and of her own genius. Nothing German is found in the same
+degree of excellence in other nations. German women, German fidelity,
+German wine, the German song, hold the first rank in the world. To
+combat Satan, that is to say, enemies of Germany, the Germans have at
+their service the ancient god, the German god, _der alte, der deutsche
+Gott_, who identifies His cause with theirs. And as everything which is
+German is by that very fact unique and inimitable, so it is
+correspondingly true that everything which the world has of excellence
+belongs to Germany in fact and in right. Rembrandt, Shakespeare, Ibsen,
+are Germans. A German brain alone could understand them and has a right
+to admire them. It is doubtful if even Joan of Arc, that sublime
+heroine, is French. German savants have maintained her German
+nationality. If the people of Alsace and Lorraine are faithful to France
+that only proves that they ought to be German subjects, because fidelity
+is a German virtue.
+
+As Germany possesses, in principle, all the virtues, all the
+perfections, she suffices to herself and can learn nothing from other
+people. By still stronger reason she owes them no duty of respect or
+good-will. What is called humanity has no meaning for the German. The
+_mot_ of William II., "Humanity for me stops at the Vosges," is not
+merely an instance of national egoism. The German Emperor feels that
+what is for the present beyond his empire can only acquire value when it
+shall be annexed to it.
+
+How, then, ought Germany to behave to other nations?
+
+There are people who wish to be loved, who believe that among nations as
+between individuals, courtesy may have a place and that it would be an
+advance for humanity to admit that justice and equity may rule
+international relations. But Germany, as regards other nations, makes no
+account of justice. She has nothing but scorn for that feminine
+sentiment which particularly characterizes the Latin races. The
+sentiment of justice and humanity is weakness and Germany is and ought
+to be force. _Wo Preussens Macht in Frage kommt, kenne ich kein Gesetz,_
+said Bismarck--"When the power of Prussia is in question I know no law."
+
+
+*Enemies Most Welcome.*
+
+The German does not ask to be loved. He prefers to be hated provided he
+is feared. _Oderint, dum metuant_. He does not mind being surrounded by
+enemies. He knows with satisfaction that in the very heart of the empire
+certain annexed provinces constantly protest against the violence which
+has been done to them. The ego cannot work without opposition. The
+German needs enemies to keep himself in that state of tension and of
+struggle which is the condition of vigor. He willingly applies to
+himself what the Lord God said of man in general in the prologue of
+Goethe's "Faust":
+
+ Man's activity has only too great a propensity to relax. Left by
+ himself man seeks repose. That is why I give him a devil for a
+ companion. He will excite him and keep him from getting sleepy.
+
+Germany has a certain satisfaction in recognizing in the neighbors whom
+she menaces, in the subjects whom she oppresses, these providential
+devils whose mischief will stimulate her activity and her virtue.
+
+Not that Germany rejects, as regards other nations, every régime except
+that of hostility. Her aim is domination, the only rôle which suits the
+people of God. Now, to attain that, two means are offered to her. The
+first plainly is intimidation which must never flag. The feeble quickly
+become insolent if their feebleness is not recalled to them. Other
+nations must feel themselves constantly threatened with the worst
+catastrophes if they resist Germany. But it being well understood that
+Germany is the strongest, that she will never give up what she
+possesses, however unjustly, then bargains advantageous not only for
+herself but occasionally for the other party, may be the more direct and
+less onerous means than violence to attain her end. So Germany will be,
+by turns, or both at once, threatening and amiable. Amiability itself
+can be effective when it rests on hatred, contempt, and omnipotence.
+
+Now power counts before all. Germany must possess armaments superior to
+those of all other nations. The reason is plain. The German Empire is a
+rock of peace, _der Hort des Friedens_. The force which it accumulates
+is directed toward imposing upon mankind the German peace, the divine
+peace. Since Germany represents peace, whoever opposes Germany intends
+war. Now it is legitimate that Germany should arm to the teeth because
+she is the incarnation of peace, but the adversaries of Germany, who, in
+opposing Germany oppose peace, cannot have the same right. It is the
+duty of Germany to carry her armaments to the maximum; other peoples
+have the right to arm only as Germany may permit.
+
+Germany does not seek war. On the contrary, she tries by inspiring
+terror to render it impossible. But if some nation should profit or be
+capable of profiting by her love of peace to pretend to rights which
+offend her she will consent to punish that nation. She will be pained by
+the violence she has to do to that nation and the severity which she has
+to use toward the guilty. But soldier of God as she is, she cannot fail
+to her mission. Any nation which refuses to do the will of Germany
+proves by that very fact its cultural inferiority and becomes guilty. It
+must be chastised.
+
+The method according to which Germany will make war is determined by
+these premises. War is a return to the state of nature. Germany yields
+to this temporary retrogression because she has to do with people of an
+inferior culture who must be taught a lesson, and must be spoken to in a
+language which they understand. Now a characteristic of a state of
+nature is that force reigns undisputed. In this very trait resides the
+sublime beauty of that state, its grandeur and its fecundity. Don't talk
+of that romantic chivalry which pretends in time of war to temper the
+violence of savage instincts by the intervention of feminine
+sensibility. War is war. _Krieg ist Krieg_. It isn't child's play, it
+isn't sport where it is necessary to blend barbarity and humanity so as
+to conciliate and humanize them. It is barbarity itself let loose as
+widely and fully as possible. This is not perversity. Man as man suffers
+in becoming barbarous, but the man who replaces God suppresses the
+feebleness of the creature. He submits himself to the mysterious and
+sublime law in virtue of which evil is by so much more beneficent as it
+is achieved with resolution and completeness. _Pecca fortiter._
+
+
+*The Nature of War.*
+
+The first article of the code of war is then the suppression of all
+sensibility, pity, humanity. The nature of war is to kill and destroy.
+The more it destroys and kills the sooner it comes to its ideal form.
+Moreover, it is at bottom more humane the more inhuman it is, because
+the very terrors which its excesses inspire shorten it and make it less
+murderous.
+
+In the second place, war necessarily ignores moral laws. Respect for
+laws, treaties, conventions, loyalty, good faith, sentiment and honor,
+scruples, nobility of soul generosity--these are mere fetters. The
+God-people do not recognize them. It will then, without hesitation,
+violate the rights of neutrals if it is to its interest. It will use
+falsehood, perfidy, treachery. It will justify itself by futile pretexts
+in committing the most atrocious acts--bombardment of undefended cities,
+massacre of old men, women and children; barbarous torture, pillage and
+assassination; bestiality to women; organized incendiarism; methodical
+destruction of monuments which, by their history and their antiquity and
+by the admiration of the world, would seem to be inviolable. "I am told:
+I must avenge myself." This reason suffices. We are told that some
+inhabitant of one city or another has been wanting in respect toward one
+of our men. Therefore we must burn the city and show the inhabitants
+what we have. Definitively, our duty is to let loose the elementary
+energies of nature as far as possible to attain the maximum force and
+the maximum of result.
+
+The effect should, moreover, be psychological as well as material.
+Actions which seem horrible to man and which spread terror are
+commendable means, because they break the spirit even if they have no
+value from a military point of view. Moreover, what offends common
+morality is conformed to transcendent morality. The mission of the
+Germans at war is to punish. They work Divine vengeance. They compel
+their enemies to expiate the crime of resisting them. After they have
+taken a city, if the enemy has the insolence to take it back, it is just
+that they shall sack that city if possible, killing its inhabitants and
+burning its finest monuments.
+
+*Barbarity Multiplied by Science.*
+
+Given this problem, how to let loose most widely the powers of evil, it
+is clear that a people of superior culture is better equipped than any
+other to resolve that problem. In fact, science, where it excels, can
+work destruction and evil with the very forces which nature employs only
+to create light, heat, life, and beauty. The God-people therefore unites
+the maximum of science to the maximum of barbarity. The formula of its
+action may be thus written: "Barbarity multiplied by science."
+
+This is the last word of the famous doctrine of Germanism. Now the
+identity of the ultimate consequences of the doctrine and the features
+which the present war presents is evident. The problem which we
+undertook is, therefore, solved. If, contrary to all likelihood,
+barbarity co-exists with culture in the Germans; if in the present war
+it appears to be absolutely bound up in that culture, the reason is that
+German culture differs profoundly from what humanity understands by
+culture and civilization. Human civilization tries to humanize war.
+German culture tends indefinitely to increase its primitive brutality by
+science.
+
+In everything the Germans must be unique--in their women, their God,
+their wine, their loyalty. The war which the Germans wage against us
+strikes the world with horror and terror, because it is in the full
+force of the term "the German way, _die deutsche Art_, the German war."
+
+As the world recognizes this astonishing proposition it asks with
+anxiety, what may be its future relations to Germany? Knowingly and
+systematically, Germany opposes to all Hellenic, Christian, humane
+civilizations the devastating theory of the Huns. True, after the war
+she will claim that she has done nothing but conform, often with pain,
+to the conditions of ideal and divine war, and she will appear willing
+to pardon to her enemies the cruelties she has had to inflict upon them.
+Decidedly, the world will refuse to admire this horrible magnanimity
+which on the first impulse of resistance becomes savagery. Today the
+veil is torn away. German culture is shown to be a scientific barbarity.
+The world, which means in the future to rid itself of all despotism,
+will not compromise with the despotism of barbarity.
+
+But what a disappointment and what a grief! Formerly, Germany was held
+to be a great nation. Its praises were sounded in many a land of solid
+and high culture. The German tradition once held other doctrines than
+those we have now seen devolop under the hands of Prussia. Germanism, as
+the Prussians formulate it, consists essentially in contempt for all
+other nations and in the pretension of domination. But Leibnitz--as
+highly esteemed in the Latin world as in the German--professed a
+philosophy which valued unity only under the form of harmony between
+free and autonomous forces. Leibnitz exalted the multiple, the diverse,
+the spontaneous. Between rival powers he sought to establish relations
+which would reconcile them without changing or diminishing the value or
+independence of any of them. Witness his effort at the reunion of the
+Catholic and Protestant Churches. After Leibnitz came Kant. He certainly
+was very much of a German. He owned, nevertheless, that he had learned
+from Rousseau to honor the common man who, not being a savant, possesses
+moral value far above the savant, who has no merit but science. And,
+starting from the principle that every person, so far as he is capable
+of moral value, is entitled to respect, he urged men to create not a
+universal and despotic monarchy but a republic of nations in which each
+should possess a free and independent personality.
+
+This willingness to put liberty before unity, and respect and honor the
+dignity of other nations while at the same time serving its own, was not
+extinguished in Germany with Leibnitz and Kant. Permit me, my dear
+Director, on this subject to indulge in some personal reminiscences.
+
+
+*Treitschke Versus Bluntschli.*
+
+In January, 1869, I was sent to Heidelberg by the Minister of Public
+Instruction, Victor Duruy, to study the organization of German
+universities. Germany was for me the land of metaphysics, music, and
+poetry. I was greatly astonished to find that outside of the lecture
+courses the only thing discussed was the war which Prussia was about to
+make on France. Invited to a soirée, I heard it whispered behind me,
+_Vielleicht ist er ein französischer Spion_--"Perhaps he is a French
+spy." Such were the words as I caught them. At the beer garden a student
+seated himself near me. He said to me, "We are going to war with you. We
+shall take Alsace and Lorraine." That night I could see from my window,
+looking out on the Neckar, the students clad in their club costumes
+floating down the river on an illuminated raft singing the famous song
+in honor of Blücher, who "taught the Welches the way of the Germans."
+And at the university itself the lectures of Treitschke, attended by
+excited crowds, were heated harangues against the French, inciting to
+hatred and to war. Seeing that nothing was thought of but the
+preparation for war, I came back at the Easter vacation of 1869
+convinced that hostilities would ensue. I returned to Heidelberg some
+time later and became acquainted with other persons, other centres of
+ideas. I understood then that opinion in Germany was divided between two
+opposite doctrines. The general aspiration was for the unity of Germany,
+but there was no agreement as to the way of conceiving and realizing
+this unity. The thesis of Treitschke was, _Freiheit durch Einheit_,
+"liberty through unity," that is to say, unity first, unity before all;
+liberty later, when circumstances should permit. And to realize at once
+this unity, which really was the only thing that mattered, the
+enrollment of all Germany under the command of Prussia for a war against
+France.
+
+Now the formula of Treitschke was opposed by that of Bluntschli,
+_Einheit durch Freiheit_--"Unity through liberty." This doctrine, which
+counted at that time some eminent advocates, aimed first to safeguard
+the independence and unity of the German States and then to establish
+between them on that basis a federated union. And as it contemplated in
+the heart of Germany a union without hegemony, so it conceived of German
+unity as something to be realized without harm to other nations, and
+especially without harm to France. It was to be a free Germany in a free
+world.
+
+Germany at that epoch was at the parting of the ways. Should she follow
+a tendency still living in many and noble minds or should she abandon it
+entirely, to march head down in the ways in which Prussia had entangled
+her? That was the question. The party of war, the party of unity as a
+means of attacking and despoiling France, the Prussian party, gained the
+day. And its success rendered its preponderance definitive. Since then
+those who have undertaken to remain faithful to an ideal of liberty and
+humanity have been annihilated.
+
+Is it still possible that Germany may some day regain the parting of the
+ways where she was before 1870 and this time take the other road, the
+road of the Leibnitzes, the Kants, the Bluntschlis, which leads first to
+the liberty of individuals and of peoples and afterward--- and only
+afterward--a form of harmony where the rights of all are equally
+respected? A word of the Scotch professor, William Knight, comes back to
+my memory at this moment: "The best things have to die and be reborn."
+The Germany which the world respected and admired, the Germany of
+Leibnitz, appears indeed dead. Can it be reborn?
+
+Accept, I beg, my dear Director, the assurance of my cordial devotion.
+
+EMILE BOUTROUX.
+
+
+
+
+*The German Religion of Duty*
+
+*By Gabriele Reuter.*[B]
+
+
+On various occasions in the past I have been reproached by my friends
+for not showing the proper spirit of patriotism.
+
+I have merely smiled at their criticism, for it was my opinion that true
+patriotism does not consist of flowery speeches and assertions, but in
+the effort dutifully to accomplish that for which one is best qualified.
+
+It seemed to me that I was truly showing my love for the Fatherland by
+writing my books to the best of my ability.
+
+But the source of this reproach was very evident to me. The cause could
+be traced to a quality which I share with many of my compatriots. It
+must, in truth, be called a particularly characteristic trait. This is a
+very earnest desire for and love of justice, which is not satisfied
+simply to "recognize," but endeavors thoroughly to understand the
+material and spiritual points of view of the other nations in order to
+show them the proper appreciation.
+
+It is natural to develop affection for that which one earnestly desires
+to understand.
+
+Many Germans have had the experience that they have rather overzealously
+commenced by weighing the good of a foreign people in the balance with
+the good of their own, and with well-nigh fanatic honesty they have
+ended by acknowledging their own shortcomings compared to the merits and
+advantages of the foreign nation. There have been instances when some
+foreigner has drawn our attention to this or that particular weakness
+and immediately innumerable of my countrymen assented, saying,
+"Certainly it is true, the criticism is just, matters are probably even
+worse than they have been represented."
+
+Many of us, and I acknowledge I am one of the many, have developed a
+form of ascetic mania for self-abasement, a desire for truth which knows
+no limits in the dissection of its own condition and the disclosure of
+social and personal shortcomings and disadvantages. This tendency may be
+easily discerned in much of the German literature of the past twenty
+years; also, in my books.
+
+The individual is really always the symbol of the whole, and the
+thoughts and feelings of one person are but the expression of strong
+forces in national life and culture. It was not want of patriotism, but
+an unbounded love for the universality of European culture which drove
+us, drove many thousand people with German souls, to reach out over the
+boundaries of our own Fatherland for intellectual conquests, for
+permeation and coalescence with all the world's riches, goodness, and
+beauty.
+
+We loved the others; and believing ourselves among friends we were
+candid and disclosed our weaknesses.
+
+
+*Germans Trusted Too Well.*
+
+We permitted criticism and criticised ourselves, because we were
+convinced that those others had our welfare at heart, and also because
+we were convinced that only by unsparing self-knowledge can the heights
+be scaled which lead to superior and more refined development. It is
+therefore probable that we ourselves have delivered the weapons into our
+enemies' hands.
+
+Confiding and harmless as children, we were blind to the enigmatical
+hatred which has to an appalling extent developed all around us. This
+hate which has been nourished systematically and with satanic cleverness
+probably originated in a slight feeling of jealousy, and the tendency of
+my countrymen to criticise each other led our enemies to believe that
+they might look for internal discord in the Fatherland and that our
+humiliation could therefore be more easily accomplished.
+
+If we had recognized the danger in time, we might have prevented this
+hatred, to which they at the beginning were hardly prone, from taking
+root in the souls of nations. But only very few among us were aware of
+it and they received little credence from the others. There were times
+when each one of us sensed the antipathy which we encountered beyond the
+boundary lines of our own country. But we never realized how deeply it
+had taken root and how widely it had spread. We loved our enemies! We
+loved this French nation for its high development of etiquette,
+language, and taste; a culture which seemed well adapted to serve as a
+complement to our own. How much misery France might have been spared had
+she but understood this unfortunate love of the German people for the
+"Hereditary Enemy!"
+
+We loved the deep, mystically religious soul of the Russians in their
+anguished struggles for freedom! How many Germans have looked upon
+Tolstoy as a new savior!
+
+Above all, though, the German admired the Englishman, in the rôle of the
+"royal merchant," the far-seeing colonizer, the master of the seas.
+Without envy Germany gave England credit for all these qualities. And
+when during the Boer war voices were raised to warn against the English
+character, even then to most of us our Anglo-Saxon cousin remained the
+"Gentleman beyond reproach."
+
+Then there is the great German love for Holland, Switzerland, and the
+Scandinavian countries; here we may find the Germanic race less
+adulterated than in our own country. Scandinavian poets have become our
+poets and we are as proud of the works of the Swedish artist as we are
+of those of our people.
+
+We gaze with delight upon the proud, blonde grace of the Norse maid; the
+more gentle and pliant manners of the Swedes and Danes arouse our
+admiration; and we dearly love their beautiful fjords and forests of
+beech and birch.
+
+
+*Love Changed to Suspicion.*
+
+Many of us wonder today how much of all this love we, in the days to
+come, will be able to rescue from the debris. "Has the world gone mad
+that it has ceased to believe in our sincerity?" This at present is the
+cry of many, many thousand German men and women. Do we deserve to have
+our love requited with hate? And to find in the countries which declare
+themselves neutral, distrust, reserve, and, in fact, doubt of our honest
+intentions? Sad, dull despair has taken possession of the hearts of our
+best men and women. It is not because they tremble for the fate of the
+loved ones who have been compelled to go to the front and not because
+there is any fear as to the outcome of this war. Not one among us doubts
+the ultimate triumph of Germany. We also know that we must pay a
+terrible toll for this victory with the blood of our sons, fathers and
+husbands.
+
+Equally as much as they mourn the loss of our young manhood many of our
+best citizens deplore the hatred which has spread over the face of the
+globe, hate which has torn asunder what was believed to have been a
+firmly woven net of a common European culture. That which we with ardent
+souls have labored to create is being devastated by ruthless force.
+
+The following story of the non-commissioned German officer is typical or
+symbolical of many. He, while the bullets of the inhabitants of Louvain
+fell around him, rescued the priceless old paintings from the burning
+Church of St. Peter, simply because he was an art-historian and knew and
+loved each of the masterpieces. And well we all understand the feelings
+which mastered him during those moments of horror.
+
+He would probably think and say, "I have but done my duty."
+
+And now we have arrived at the point which gives rise to the greatest
+amount of antipathy. Our opponents declare we are endowed with great
+ability--they say they must acknowledge that. But how can a race of
+stiff, dry, duty-performing beings awaken love? The German must lose all
+claim to individual freedom and independence of thought in consequence
+of the training which he receives. When he is a child he commences it in
+a military subordination in the school, he continues it in the barracks,
+and later, when he enters a vocational life, under the stern leadership
+of his superiors. He becomes, our critics continue, simply a
+disagreeable pedantic tool of the all-powerful "drill." This atmosphere
+of "drill," or in other words this stern hard military spirit, envelops
+him, accompanies him as guardian from the cradle to the grave, and makes
+of him an unbearable companion for all the more refined, gentle, and
+amiable nations. Yes, our opponents often declare that they are waging
+war not only against Germany, but against this pedantic, military,
+tyrannical sense of duty, which they call the "Prussian spirit." It
+shall once and for all, they assert, be eradicated from the world.
+
+
+*A Religious Feeling of Duty.*
+
+Far be it from me to deny that my country people, male and female, do
+indeed possess an unusually strong sense of duty. This is combined with
+a desire for justice which is so often looked upon by outsiders as a
+lack of patriotic pride, and with an honesty which easily makes the
+German appear so clumsy and awkward. These three characteristics belong
+indissolubly together and one is not to be thought of without the other.
+The spirit from which the German sense of duty arises is what the
+foreigner so often misunderstands in us. He generally confuses sense of
+duty with blind obedience. But this sense of duty does not originate
+from a need for submission or from a mental dependence. No, it rests on
+a deep philosophical reason and arises from the mental recognition of
+ethical and national necessity. That is why it can exist side by side
+with the most extreme individualism, which also belongs to the
+peculiarities of the character of our people. The Germans have always
+been a nation of thinkers. Not only the scholar, also the simple worker,
+the laborer, the modest mother take a deep pleasure in forming their
+philosophy of life and the world. Side by side with the loud triumph of
+our industry goes this quieter existence, which has been rather pushed
+into the background in the last decades, but has not, therefore, ceased
+to exist. And the further the belief in miracles stepped into the
+background, the more the belief in duty acquired a warm religious tinge.
+The loud complaints about the vanishing of the sense of duty among the
+young, which has so often been voiced by public opinion, only prove how
+strongly this ethical force was governing people's minds. Every seeming
+diminution of it was felt to be a disastrous endangerment of the
+knowledge of the people. We have perhaps acted childishly and foolishly
+toward other nations by too great confidence. But in the consciousness
+of the entire German Nation the ominous feeling was living and working
+with mighty power, that only if every one of us devotes his entire
+strength to the post assigned to him, and works until the exhaustion of
+his last mental and physical power, only then can we as a national whole
+retain our high level and, surrounded by dangers on all sides, create
+sufficient room for ourselves to breathe and live.
+
+
+*The Military and the Socialists.*
+
+Two mighty organizations exist among us which were opposed to each other
+until recently--the military and the Social Democratic. The world sees
+with amazement the perfection which has been reached by the military
+organization of our army. Its achievements have only become possible
+through the above-mentioned philosophical conception of the sense of
+duty which raises it far above any systematic obedience and lets it
+appear in the light of religious ideal. Duty becomes in these serious
+and energetic minds a voluntary adaptation to a carefully organized
+whole with the knowledge that to serve this whole at the same time
+produces the highest achievement of the individual personality. The
+Social Democratic organization, opposed though it is to the military
+organization, is also composed of Germans and is, therefore, directed by
+the same basic principles as the military organization, although for
+entirely different purposes. For this one reason it was almost a matter
+of course that the Social Democrats offered their services for the war
+at the moment when they recognized that it had become of imperious
+necessity to set aside personal wishes and ideals and to put in the
+foreground only the duty of the defense of their country. The idea of
+our opponents, that they would find a support in the Socialists of our
+country, rested on a complete misunderstanding of the German character.
+
+A foreign woman wrote to me in the days of the mobilization: "I do not
+understand the German enthusiasm for war--how it is possible that one
+can become enthusiastic about murder!" The woman only saw the exterior
+and superficial phase of things.
+
+In its endeavor to unite itself with the world the German soul had
+suddenly come upon the wildest hatred * * * numerous high ideals of
+culture fell to ruin within a few hours. Deeply wounded, it was hurled
+back into its most personal possessions. Here it found itself face to
+face with tasks which far surpassed anything demanded heretofore of it
+as fulfillment of duty. And now there came to pass a wonder which will
+be unforgettable for every one who lived through this period. Everything
+dry, petty, pedantic, connected with German ways, which had often made
+many of us impatient with ourselves, was suddenly swept away by the
+storm of these days.
+
+A gigantic wave of fiery hot feeling passed through our country flaming
+up like a beautiful sacrificial pyre. It was no longer a duty to offer
+one's self and one's life--it was supreme bliss. That might easily sound
+like a hollow phrase. But there is a proof, which is more genuine than
+words, than songs, and cheers. That is the expression in the faces of
+the people, their uncontrolled spontaneous movements. I saw the eyes
+light up of an old woman who had sent four sons into battle and
+exclaimed: "It is glorious to be allowed to give the Fatherland so
+much!" I saw the controlled calm in the features of sorrowing mothers
+who knew that their only sons had fallen. But the expression in the
+faces of many wounded who were already returning home gripped me the
+most. They had lived through the horror of the battle, their feet had
+waded through blood, their young bodies were horribly maimed. I saw this
+strangely serene, quietly friendly expression in the young faces. They
+were men who had sacrificed their ego. They were great patient
+conquerors of selfishness. And with what tenderness, what goodness are
+they surrounded, to lighten their lot, to give them joy. How the general
+sentiment is often expressed in the gesture of a single person--you did
+that for us--how can we sufficiently requite you?
+
+A stream of love is flowing through our Fatherland and is uniting all
+hearts. The unobtrusive mother "duty" gave birth to the genial child
+"feeling." She bestowed on it her strong vitality so that it can defy a
+world of hatred--and conquer it.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[B] Gabriele Reuter is one of the foremost German woman authors.
+
+
+
+
+*A Letter to Gerhart Hauptmann*
+
+*By Romain Rolland.*
+
+
+I am not, Gerhart Hauptmann, of those Frenchmen who call Germany
+barbarian. I recognize the intellectual and moral grandeur of your
+mighty race. I realize all that I owe to the thinkers of old Germany;
+and even at this extreme hour I recall to mind the example and the words
+of our Goethe--for he belongs to all humanity--repudiating national
+hatred and preserving his soul serene in those heights "where one feels
+the joys and sorrows of all peoples as one's own." It has been the labor
+of my life to bring together the minds of our two nations; and the
+atrocities of impious war shall never lead me to soil my heart with
+hatred.
+
+Whatever reason I may have, therefore, to suffer through the deeds of
+your Germany and to judge as criminal the German policy and the German
+methods, I do not hold responsible the people who submit thereto and are
+reduced to mere blind instruments. This does not mean that I regard war
+as a fatality. A Frenchman knows no such word as fatality. Fatality is
+the excuse of souls that lack a will.
+
+No. This war is the fruit of the feebleness of peoples and of their
+stupidity. One can only pity them; one cannot blame them. I do not
+reproach you for our sorrows. Your mourning will not be less than ours.
+If France is ruined, so also will be Germany. I did not even raise my
+voice when I saw your armies violate the neutrality of noble Belgium.
+This forfeit of honor, which compels the contempt of every
+right-thinking mind, is too well within the political tradition of
+Prussian Kings to have surprised me.
+
+But the fury with which you treated that generous land whose one crime
+was to defend, unto despair, its independence and the idea of
+justice--that was too much! The world revolts in wrath at this. Reserve
+for us your violence--for us French, who are your enemies. But to
+trample upon your victims, upon the little Belgian people, unfortunate
+and innocent--that is ignominy!
+
+And not content with assaulting the Belgium that lives, you wage war on
+the dead, on the glory of past centuries. You bombard Malines, you put
+Rubens to flame, Louvain comes from your hands a heap of ashes--Louvain
+with its treasures of art and knowledge, the holy city! Who indeed are
+you and what name do you conjure us to call you, Hauptmann, you who
+reject the title of barbarian?
+
+Are you the children of Goethe or of Attila? Do you wage war against
+armies or against the human spirit? Kill men if you must, but respect
+man's work. For this is the heritage of the human race. And you, like
+us, are its trustees. In making pillage of it as you have done you prove
+yourselves unworthy of this great inheritance, unworthy of holding rank
+in the small European army which is the garde d'honneur of civilization.
+
+It is not to the sense of the rest of the world that I appeal against
+you. It is to yourself, Hauptmann. In the name of our Europe, of which
+up to the present you have been one of the noblest champions--in the
+name of that civilization for which the greatest of men have
+struggled--in the name of the honor even of your German race, Gerhart
+Hauptmann, I adjure you, I command you, you and the intellectual élite
+of Germany, where I have so many friends, to protest with utmost
+vehemence against this crime which leaps back upon yourselves.
+
+If you fail in this, one of two things will be proved--that you
+acquiesce, (and then the opinion of the world will crush you,) or that
+you are powerless to raise your voice against the Huns that now command
+you. And in that case, with what right will you still pretend, as you
+have written, that your cause is that of liberty and human progress?
+
+You will be giving to the world a proof that, incapable of defending the
+liberty of the world, you are helpless even to uphold your own; that the
+élite of Germany lies subservient to the blackest despotism--to a
+tyranny which mutilates masterpieces and assassinates the human spirit.
+
+I await your response, Hauptmann--a response which shall be an act. The
+opinion of Europe awaits it, as do I. Bear this in mind; in a moment
+like this, even silence is an act.
+
+
+
+
+*A Reply to Rolland*
+
+*By Gerhart Hauptmann.*
+
+
+You address me, Herr Rolland, in public words which breathe the pain
+over this war, (forced by England, Russia and France,) pain over the
+endangering of European culture and the destruction of hallowed
+memorials of ancient art. I share in this general sorrow, but that to
+which I cannot consent is to give an answer whose spirit you have
+already prescribed and concerning which you wrongly assert that it is
+awaited by all Europe. I know that you are of German blood. Your
+beautiful novel, "Jean-Christophe," will remain immortal among us
+Germans together with "Wilhelm Meister," and "der grüne Heinrich."
+
+But France became your adopted fatherland; therefore your heart must now
+be torn and your judgment confused. You have labored zealously for the
+reconciliation of both peoples. In spite of all this when the present
+bloody conflict destroys your fair concept of peace, as it has done for
+so many others, you see our nation and our people through French eyes,
+and every attempt to make you see clearly and as a German is absolutely
+sure to be in vain.
+
+Naturally everything which you say of our Government, of our army and
+our people, is distorted, everything is false, so false that in this
+respect your open letter to me appears as an empty black surface.
+
+War is war. You may lament war, but you should not wonder at the things
+that are inseparable from the elementary fact itself. Assuredly it is
+deplorable that in the conflict an irreplaceable Rubens is destroyed,
+but--with all honor to Rubens!--I am among those in whom the shattered
+breast of his fellow-man compels far deeper pain.
+
+And, Herr Rolland, it is not exactly fitting that you should adopt a
+tone implying that the people of your land, the French, are coming out
+to meet us with palm branches, when in reality they are plentifully
+equipped with cannon, with cartridges, yes, even with dumdum bullets. It
+is apparent that you have grown pretty fearful of our brave troops! That
+is to the glory of a power which is invincible through the justice of
+its cause. The German soldier has nothing whatsoever in common with the
+loathsome and puerile were-wolf tales which your lying French press so
+zealously publishes abroad, that press which the French and the Belgian
+people have to thank for their misfortune.
+
+Let the idle Englishmen call us Huns; you may, for all I care,
+characterize the warriors of our splendid Landwehr as sons of Attila; it
+is enough for us if this Landwehr can shatter into a thousand pieces the
+ring of our merciless enemies. Far better that you should call us sons
+of Attila, cross yourselves in fear and remain outside our borders, than
+that you should indict tender inscriptions upon the tomb of our German
+name, calling us the beloved descendants of Goethe. The epithet Huns is
+coined by people who, themselves Huns, are experiencing disappointment
+in their criminal attacks on the life of a sound and valorous race,
+because it knows the trick of parrying a fearful blow with still more
+fearful force. In their impotence, they take refuge in curses.
+
+I say nothing against the Belgian people. The peaceful passage of German
+troops, a question of life for Germany, was refused by Belgium because
+the Government had made itself a tool of England and France. This same
+Government then organized an unparalleled guerrilla warfare in order to
+support a lost cause, and by that act--Herr Rolland, you are a
+musician!--struck the horrible keynote of conflict. If you are at all in
+a position to break your way through the giant's wall of anti-German
+lies, read the message to America, by our Imperial Chancellor, of Sept.
+7; read further the telegram which on Sept. 8 the Kaiser himself
+addressed to President Wilson. You will then discover things which it is
+necessary to know in order to understand the calamity of Louvain.
+
+
+
+
+*Another Reply to Rolland*
+
+*By Karl Wolfskehl.*
+
+
+To you, Rolland, belonging as a chosen one to the more important
+Frenchmen who can rise above their race, the German nature has often
+been revealed. To you, now, we shall make answer, offer frank testimony
+concerning the spirit of the time, concerning that fate, that very fate
+in which you, the Frenchman, do not believe. You do not believe in it;
+what to us is fate, mysterious necessity, to you is fatalité, an
+unavoidable Alp which threatens the individual in his individual
+freedom. This fatalité, we, too, do not believe in it, but we do believe
+in the forces which bring forth the eternal in human will, that these
+both are one, will and forces, one with necessity, with actuality, with
+creative, moral power, of which all great ideas are the children, the
+idea of freedom, the idea of the beautiful, the idea of tragic fidelity,
+and that these, reaching far above being and passing away, are
+nevertheless real, life entire, fact entire. All that which is as dear
+to you as to us, great works and great feelings, resignation and
+self-restraint, all that is necessity, is fate, that became will--all
+that a unity out of choice and compulsion. All that is for us eternal,
+not according to the measure of time, but according to the beginning and
+the power of its working forces, in so far as it is necessary.
+
+Thus has it become fate, destiny, not fatalité, rather like that fate
+which in Beethoven's own words in the first movement of his "Eroica" "is
+the knocking at the gate."
+
+Such a fate is this war. No one wanted it in our Germany, for it was
+forced upon us with terrible arbitrariness, contrary to all right. Do
+you not know of the net that has been spun around us and drawn tight for
+the last half of a generation, to choke us? Do you not know how often
+this most peaceful of peoples has drawn back, how often the strange
+powers in the East and in the West have with contemptuous snarls said,
+"Wilhelm will not make war"? That you ought to know, Rolland, for it is
+known to the whole world.
+
+
+*The War "Came from God."*
+
+But I will betray something to you that you cannot know, because you are
+a stranger; and this will probably show you where we see fate. I will
+betray to you the fact that there is still another Germany behind the
+exterior in which great politics and great finance meet with the
+literary champions of Europe. That Germany tells you in this heavy hour
+of Europe:
+
+This undesired war that has been forced upon us is nevertheless a
+necessity; it had to come to pass for the sake of Germany and the world
+of European humanity, for the sake of the world. We did not want it, but
+it came from God. Our poet knew of it. He saw this war and its necessity
+and its virtues, and heralded it, long before an ugly suspicion of it
+flew through the year--before the leaves began to turn. The "Stern des
+Bundes" ["Star of the Federation"] is this book of prophecy, this book
+of necessity and of triumph.
+
+The present need and the present triumph are quite human and quite
+inexorable. They have a part in all that has taken place, and they are
+unprecedented and new. None of us--do you hear, Rolland?--none of us
+Germans today would hesitate to help destroy every monument of our holy
+German past, if necessity made it a matter of the last ditch, for that
+from which alone all monuments of all times draw their right of
+existence and their worth unless they are empty husks, skeletons, and
+framework; even so, we alone may ask what shall come to pass, not what
+shall cease. Which ruins are ravings, and which are the pains of
+childbirth, we do not presume to decide; but you, too, who are so pained
+by ruins, even as we are pained by them, you, too, do not know it.
+
+Today it is a question of the life or death of the European soul. Do you
+not believe that this soul is more endangered at the hands of the hordes
+of stub-nosed Slavs than of the phalanx of those whom you, Rolland, call
+Huns? Your sense must give you the right to answer. Recall the terrible
+story of Russian incendiarism for the last hundred years, which has torn
+to pieces in ever-increasing lust for murder bodies and souls; recall
+the eternally perjured and law-defying regiment of grave diggers; and
+then blush that you have characterized as a heavy crime a manfully
+confessed act of self-defense on the part of the Germans, the temporary
+occupation of Belgium! Blush that you have forgotten the Russian Moloch
+now loosed upon us, drunk with the blood and tears of alien peoples as
+well as of its own children! That you have forgotten all that, in order
+to lament over buildings which we have been forced in
+self-defense--again in self-defense--to sacrifice! And blush for those
+of your people who have become accomplices of that Moloch! Those who are
+sinning against the Holy Ghost of Europe, in order to attempt belated
+vengeance against Germany! Do you know what the ancients, the very
+Greeks and Romans from whom you have drawn your blood and temperament,
+called that sin? Blood-guiltiness is the name of that horror. And do you
+know how it is atoned for? I shrink to ask further, yea, even to think
+further; for horror falls upon me, and I see the unspeakable.
+
+Today, battling against you allies of the swarms of Muscovites, we
+Europeans are battling also for that France which you are
+threatening--you, not we!
+
+
+*German Intellectuals "All Afire."*
+
+Yes, Romain Rolland, try, Frenchman that you are, to look into the
+mysteries of the time. Ask yourself, marvel, how it comes to pass that
+we, the intellectuals among the Germans, take part without exception in
+this dreadful war; take part with body and soul. None of us ambitious,
+none of us a politician, not one of us who, till this war, busied
+himself about anything except his idea, the Palladium of his life! And
+now we are all afire, with all our hearts, with our whole people, all
+full of determination and prepared for the last. All our youth in the
+field, every man among us thrilled with faith in our God and this battle
+of our God, every man among us conscious of the sacred necessity that
+has driven us, every man among us consecrated for timely death! Are
+these incendiaries? Are these slaves, whom a despot points the way to
+the rolling dead? Every one knows it is our all that is at stake; it is
+a matter of the divine in humanity, a matter of our preservation and
+that of Europe.
+
+And so we stand amid death and ruins under the star--one federation, one
+single union. This I have had to tell you, whether you will listen to
+it, whether Europe has ears to hear it, or not. From now on, may our
+deeds be our words!
+
+
+
+
+*Are We Barbarians?*
+
+*By Gerhart Hauptmann.*
+
+
+The idea of cosmopolitanism has never taken deeper root anywhere than in
+Germany. Let any person reflect about our literary translations and then
+name a nation that has tried so honestly as we to do justice to the
+spirit and the feelings of other races, to understand their inmost soul
+in all good-will.
+
+I must out with it: We had and have no hatred against France: we have
+idolized the fine arts, the sculpture and painting and the literature of
+that country. The worldwide appreciation of Rodin had its origin in
+Germany--we esteem Anatole France, Maupassant, Flaubert, Balzac, as if
+they were German authors. We have a deep affection for the people of
+South France. We find passionate admirers of Mistral in small German
+towns, in alleys, in attics. It was deeply to be regretted that Germany
+and France could not be friends politically. They ought to have been,
+because they were joint trustees of the intellectual treasures of the
+Continent, because they are two of the great cultivated nations of
+Europe. But fate has willed it otherwise.
+
+In the year 1870 the German races fought for the union of the Germans
+and the German Empire. Owing to the success of this struggle Germany has
+enjoyed an era of peace for more than forty years. A time of budding,
+growing, becoming strong, flowering, and bearing fruit, without parallel
+in history. Out of a population, growing more and more numerous, an
+ever-increasing number of individuals have been formed. Individual
+energy and a general tendency to expand led to the great achievements of
+our industry, our commerce, and our trade. I do not think that any
+American, Englishman, Frenchman, or Italian when in a German family, in
+German towns, in German hotels, on German ships, in German concerts, in
+German theatres, at Baireuth, in German libraries, or in German museums,
+ever felt as if he were among "barbarians." We visited other countries
+and kept an open door for every stranger.
+
+
+*English Relations.*
+
+It is with pain and with bitterness that I speak the word England. I am
+one of those barbarians on whom the English University of Oxford
+conferred the degree of Doctor Honoris Causa. I have friends in England
+who stand with one foot on the intellectual soil of Germany. Haldane,
+formerly English Minister of War, and with him countless other
+Englishmen, made regular pilgrimages to the little barbarous town of
+Weimar, where the barbarians Goethe, Schiller, Herder, Wieland, and
+others, have created another world for humanity. We have a poet, whose
+plays, more than those of any other German poet, have become national
+property; his name is Shakespeare. This Shakespeare is, at the same
+time, the prince of English poets. The mother of our Emperor is an
+English woman, the wife of the King of England a German, and yet this
+nation, so closely related by blood and choice, has declared war against
+us. Why? Heaven only knows. This much, however, is certain, that the now
+beginning European concert, saturated with blood, as it is, has an
+English statesman for its impresario and its conductor. It is doubtful,
+however, whether the finale of this terrible music will find the same
+conductor at the stand. "My cousin, you did not mean well either with
+yourselves or with us when your tools threw the fire-brand into our
+dwellings!"
+
+If heaven wills that we should issue regenerated from this terrible
+trial, we shall have the sacred duty of showing ourselves worthy of our
+regeneration. By the complete victory of German arms the independence of
+Europe would be secured. It would be necessary to make it clear to the
+different nations of Europe that this war must be the last between
+themselves. They must see at last that their sanguinary duels only bring
+a shameful advantage to the one who, without taking part in them, is
+their originator. Then they must devote themselves mutually to the work
+of civilization and peace, which will then make misunderstandings
+impossible.
+
+In this direction much had already been done before the war began. The
+dfferent nations had already met in peaceful emulation and were to meet
+again at Berlin for the Olympian games. It is only necessary to recall
+the aeronautic races, the boat races, the horse races, and the
+beneficial international influence of the arts and sciences, and the
+great super-national Nobel Prizes. The barbarian Germany has, as is well
+known, led the way among the other nations with her great institutions
+for social reform. A victory would oblige us to go forward on this path
+and to make the blessings of such institutions general. Our victory
+would, furthermore, secure the future existence of the Teutonic race for
+the welfare of the world. During the last decade, for example, how
+fruitful has the Scandinavian literature been for the German, and vice
+versa, the German for the Scandinavian. How many Swedes, Norwegians, and
+Danes have lately, without feeling conscious of a drop of foreign blood,
+shaken hands with German brothers in Stockholm, Christiania, Copenhagen,
+Munich, Vienna, and Berlin. How much homely good-fellowship has grown up
+around the noble names of Ibsen, Björnsen, and Strindberg.
+
+
+*Faust and Rifles.*
+
+I hear that abroad an enormous number of lying tales are being
+fabricated to the detriment of our honor, our culture, and our strength.
+Well, those who create these idle tales should reflect that the
+momentous hour is not favorable for fiction. On three frontiers our own
+blood bears witness. I myself have sent out two of my sons. All our
+intrepid German soldiers know why they are going to war. There are no
+analphabets to be found among them; all the more, however, of those who,
+besides their rifle, have their Goethe's "Faust," their "Zarathustra," a
+work of Schopenhauer's, the Bible, or their Homer in their knapsacks.
+And even those who have no book in the knapsack know that they are
+fighting for a hearth at which every guest is welcome.
+
+On the frontier stands our blood testimony; the Socialist side by side
+with the bourgeois, the peasant beside the man of learning, the Prince
+beside the workman; and they all fight for German freedom, for German
+domestic life, for German art, German science, German progress; they
+fight with the full, clear consciousness of a noble and rich national
+possession, for internal and external goods, all of which serve for the
+general progress and development of mankind.
+
+
+
+
+*To Americans From a German Friend*
+
+*By Ludwig Fulda.*
+
+ _Like most of the champions of Germany in the literary field,
+ Ludwig Fulda is a Doctor of Philosophy. He is also author of many
+ famous poetical and prose works of fiction._
+
+
+Many things have been revealed to us by this war that even the
+keenest-minded among us would have declared immediately before its
+outbreak to be impossibilities. Nothing, however, has been a greater and
+more painful surprise to Germans than the position taken by a great part
+of the American press. There is nothing that we would have suspected
+less than that within the one neutral nation with which we felt
+ourselves most closely connected, both by common interests and by common
+ideals, voices would be raised that in the hour of our greatest danger
+would deny us their sympathy, yes, even their comprehension of our
+course.
+
+To me, personally--I cannot avoid saying it--this was a very bitter
+disappointment. A year has hardly passed since I was over there the
+second time as a guest and returned strengthened in my admiration for
+that great, upward striving community. In my book, "Amerikanische
+Eindrucke," ("American Impressions,") a new edition of which has just
+appeared in a considerably supplemented form, comprising the fruits of
+that trip, I have made every effort to place before my countrymen in the
+brightest light the advantages and superiorities of Americans, and
+especially to convince them that the so-called land of the dollar was
+not only economically but also mentally and spiritually striding upward
+irresistibly; that also in the longing and effort to obtain education
+and knowledge and in the valuation of all the higher things in life, it
+was not surpassed by any other country in the world. In the entire book
+there is not a page that is not filled with the confidence that for
+these very reasons America and Germany were called upon to march hand in
+hand at the head of cultured humanity. Is this belief now to be
+contradicted? Shall I as a German no longer be permitted to call myself
+a friend of America because over there they think the worst of us for
+the reason that we, attacked in dastardly wise by a world of foes, are
+struggling with unanimous determination for our existence?
+
+
+*Guillotining German Honor.*
+
+Of course I know very well that public opinion over there has largely
+been misled by our opponents and is continuously being misled. Did not
+the English at the very beginning of the war cut our cable, in order to
+be able to guillotine our honor without the least interference? For this
+reason I cannot blame the masses if they took for truth the absurd
+fables dished out to them, when no contradicting voice could reach them.
+Less than that, however, can I understand how educated beings, even men
+who, thanks to their gifts and their standing, play the part of
+responsible leaders, not only accepted believingly these prevarications
+and distortions, but, with them as a basis, immediately rendered a
+verdict against us. For he who publicly judges must be expected to have
+heard first both parties; and whoever is not in a position to do this
+must in decency be expected to postpone his verdict. Yes, even more than
+that, one should think that the sense of justice of every non-partisan
+must be violated if the one party is absolutely muzzled by the other,
+and even for this one reason the cause of the latter must be considered
+as not being free from reason for doubt. Furthermore, one should assume
+that he who once has been unmasked as a liar therewith should have lost
+the blind confidence of the impartial in his future assertions. In spite
+of this, although the first ridiculous news of German defeats and
+internal dissent could not withstand the far-sounding echo of facts,
+there still seems to be no twisting of the truth, no defamation, which
+over there is considered as too thin and too ridiculous by the press and
+as too shameless by the public.
+
+Should the Germans, who, since the time when they fought for and
+attained their national unity, have exclusively devoted themselves to
+works of peace and culture, suddenly have been transformed into an
+adventurous, booty-hungry horde which from mere lust challenged a
+tremendously superior force to do battle? Should they suddenly have
+sacrificed to their so-called militarism all their other efforts in
+commerce, industry, art, and science, in order to risk their very
+existence for the love of this Moloch? Do you believe that, Americans?
+
+
+*Question of Militarism.*
+
+Our militarism! What does this expression, quoted until it is sickening,
+mean in the mouth of enemies who in respect of the energy and extent of
+their armaments were not behind us? Is there no such thing as militarism
+in France and in Russia? Is the English giant fleet an instrument of
+peace? Was the Triple Entente founded in order to bring about the
+millennium on earth? Would the Entente, if we had been foolish enough to
+disarm, have guaranteed our possessions as a reward for being good? Do
+you believe that, Americans?
+
+It certainly may be difficult for the citizens of the Union--happy
+beings they are for it--to put themselves in the place of a nation that
+knows it is surrounded on its open borders by jealous, hateful, and
+greedy neighbors; of a country that for centuries has been the
+battlefield of all European wars, the place of strife of all the
+European peoples. They, the members of a nation which for itself
+occupies a space nearly as large as Europe, almost half of a continent,
+protected on both sides by the ocean and on the other borders not
+seriously threatened for as long a time to come as may be anticipated,
+have no people's army because they do not need any; and yet they
+would--their history proves it--give their blood and that of their sons
+for the cause of their nation just as gladly as we, if the necessity for
+doing so came to them. Will they, therefore, reproach us for loving our
+country not less than they do theirs, only for the reason that we have a
+thousand times more difficulty in protecting it?
+
+Our general military service, which today is being defamed by the word
+"militarism," is born of the iron commandment of self-preservation.
+Without it the German Empire and the German Nation long ago would have
+been struck out of the list of the living. Only lack of knowledge or
+intentional misconception of our character could accuse us of having an
+aggressive motive back of it. On earth there is no more peaceful nation
+than Germany, providing she be left in peace and her room to breathe be
+not lessened. Germany never has had the least thought of assuming for
+herself the European hegemony, much less the rulership of the world. She
+has never greedily eyed colonial possessions of other great powers. On
+the contrary, in the acquisition of her colonies she was satisfied with
+whatever the others had left for her. And least of all did she carry up
+her sleeve a desire of extending the frontiers of the empire. The famous
+word of Bismarck, that Germany was "saturated" with acquired territory,
+is still accepted as fully in force to such an extent that even in case
+of her victory the question as to which parts of the enemies' territory
+we should claim for our own would cause us a great deal of perplexity.
+The German Empire could only lose as the national State she is in
+strength and unity by acquiring new and strange elements.
+
+Otherwise would the empire, from the day of its founding until now, for
+nearly half a century, actually have avoided every war, often enough
+under the most difficult circumstances? Would it have quietly suffered
+the open or hidden challenges, the machinations of its enemies
+constantly appearing more plainly? Yes, would it have tried again and
+again to improve its relations with these very same enemies by the
+greatest advances? As opposed to the ill-concealed hostility of the
+French, would it not have been shaken in its steadfast policy of
+conciliation by the fact that this policy with them only made the
+impression of weakness and fear? Would it have permitted France to
+reconstruct her power which was destroyed in 1870 to a greater extent
+than before, and, in addition, allowed her to conquer a new and gigantic
+colonial empire? Would it have permitted prostrate Russia to recuperate
+undisturbed from the almost annihilating blows of the revolution and the
+Japanese war? Would it, in the countless threatening conflicts of the
+last decades, have on every occasion thrown the entire weight of its
+sword into the scales for the preservation of peace?
+
+
+*The Kaiser's Responsibility.*
+
+Then, too, many Americans emphasize the fact that they are making not
+the German people but the Emperor alone responsible for this war. It is
+hardly conceivable how serious-minded people can lend themselves to the
+spreading of a fable so childish. When William II., 29 years old,
+mounted the throne, the entire world said of him that his aim was the
+acquirement of the laurels of war. In spite of this for twenty-six years
+he has shown that this accusation was absurd and has proved himself to
+be the most honest and most dependable protector of European peace. In
+fact, the very circle of enemies which now dares to call him a military
+despot thirsting for glory, has year in and year out ridiculed him as a
+ruler, whose provocation to the very limit was an amusement absolutely
+fraught with no danger. He who has never been misled by the fiery
+enthusiasm of youth nor by the full strength of ripe manhood to adorn
+his brow with the bloody halo of glory, should he suddenly, when his
+hair is turned gray, have turned into a Caesar, an Attila? Do you
+believe that, Americans?
+
+It is a fact in times of peace there have been certain differences of
+opinion between the Emperor and his people. Although at all times the
+honesty of his intentions was elevated above every doubt, the one or
+other impulsive moves he took to obtain their realization exposed him to
+criticism at home. Today one may safely admit that--today, when of these
+trifling disputes not even a breath, not even a shadow, remains. Never
+before has his whole people, his whole nation, in every grade of
+education, in all classes, in all parties, stood behind him so
+absolutely without reserve as now, when in the last, the very last hour,
+and driven by direst need, he finally drew the sword to ward off an
+attack from three sides, long ago prepared.
+
+Our nation and our Emperor have not wanted this war and are not to be
+blamed for it. Even the "White Book" of the German Government, by the
+very uncontrovertible language of its documents, must convince every
+impartial being of this fact. And day by day the overwhelming evidence
+of the plot systematically hatched and systematically carried out under
+the guidance of England, which put before us the alternative of cutting
+our way through or being annihilated, is increasing.
+
+
+*No Treason to Austria Considered.*
+
+It may be that the catastrophe, so far as we are concerned, might have
+been staved off once more if we would have disregarded the obligation of
+our alliance and would have left Austria in the lurch--the Austria which
+did not want anything else than to put a stop to the nasty work of a
+band of assassins organized by a neighboring State. But it requires an
+extreme degree of political blindness for the assumption that by such
+cowardly treason we should have been able to purchase a change of mind
+or a lasting peace from our enemies. On the contrary, they would soon
+enough have used a suitable opportunity to fall upon Germany, which then
+would have been completely isolated, and the struggle for our national
+existence would have had to be fought under conditions very much more
+favorable to our enemies.
+
+According to a newspaper report, the esteemed President Eliot of Harvard
+has written that the fear of the Muscovites could not explain our
+action, and that an alliance with the Western powers would have offered
+better protection against a Russian attack. Yes; if such a thing had
+been possible! As a matter of fact, however, the Western powers did not
+ally themselves with us against Russia, but with Russia against us; and
+not the fear of the Muscovites, but their mobilization, encouraged and
+aided by the very same Western powers, drove us to war. I wonder what
+President Eliot himself would have done under these circumstances had he
+been the guardian responsible for Germany's fate?
+
+*Belgium's Alleged Neutrality.*
+
+But then the violation of Belgian neutrality! How with the aid of this
+bugaboo the entire neutral world has been stirred up against us, after
+England made it the hypocritical excuse for her declaration of war! We
+knew very well that England and France were determined to violate this
+neutrality; but, then, we ought to have been very good; we ought to have
+waited until they did so. Waited until their armies would break into our
+country across our unprotected Belgian frontier! In other words, we
+ought to have committed national suicide. Whoever, even up until now,
+has doubted the German assertion that Belgium was under one roof with
+England and France, and had herself thrown away her neutrality, must
+have his eyes opened by the latest official developments. The documents
+of the Belgian General Staff which have fallen into our hands contain an
+agreement according to which the march through Belgium of British troops
+in the case of a Franco-German war was provided for in every detail.
+Whosoever in the face of these documents repeats the assertion that we
+have committed a violation of innocent Belgium gives aid to a historical
+forgery.
+
+We have violated the alleged neutrality of Belgium in self-defense. On
+the other hand, the Japanese, egged on and supported by England, have
+violated the real neutrality of China from pure lust for robbery. For
+the three great powers allied against Germany and Austria have not been
+satisfied with their own nominal superiority of 220 millions against 110
+millions! In addition to this they have urged on into war against us a
+Mongolian people, the most dangerous enemy of the white race and its
+culture. They have supplemented their armies by a motley collection of
+all the African negro tribes. They lead into battle against us Indian
+troops, and the Christian Germanic King of England prays to God for the
+victory of the heathen Hindus over his coreligionists and blood
+relatives. Americans, does your racial feeling, at other times so
+sensitive, remain silent in view of this unexampled shame? Do you accord
+to the English and the French, who are attacking us in co-operation with
+the Russians, the Servians, and the Montenegrins, who are dirtying
+themselves with a brotherhood in arms with the yellow skins, the brown
+skins, and the blacks, the right to declare themselves the
+representatives of civilization and us to be barbarians?
+
+In order to drive home such evident absurdities, they were, of course,
+obliged to carry on the poisoning of the spring of information to the
+utmost, they had to suppress the news of the vile deeds of guerrillas
+and "snipers" in Belgium and of the Russian ghouls in East Prussia, that
+were crying to heaven, and to send out into the world instead fables of
+German brutality. Our national army, permeated with ethical seriousness
+and iron discipline, the scientist standing beside the farmer, the
+workman beside the artist, should be guilty of unnecessary severity,
+uncontrollable brutality, brutality against people unable to defend
+themselves? Do you believe that, Americans?
+
+
+*The Charge of Vandalism.*
+
+The climax of absurdity, however, is reached when the Germans, who in
+their love and appreciation of art are not surpassed by any people in
+the world, are accused of having raged as vandals against works of art.
+Even now these accusations, which the French Government itself had the
+pitiful courage to support, have proved totally groundless. The City
+Hall at Louvain stands uninjured; while the populace fired at them, our
+soldiers had, risking their own lives, saved it from the flames. An
+imperial art commission followed at the heels of our victorious troops
+in Belgium, in order to take charge of the guarding and administration
+of the treasures of art. The cathedral at Rheims has received but slight
+damage, and would not have been damaged at all had its tower not been
+misused by the French as an observation station. I should like to see
+the commander of an army who, for the sake of the safety of a historical
+monument, would forget the safety of the troops intrusted into his care!
+
+Enough of it! What I have stated is sufficient to show what low weapons
+our enemies are using behind the battlefield to sully Germany's shield
+of honor. It is enough for those who care to listen at all. But, also,
+wherever the weak voice of one rebounds from ears stubbornly closed, the
+more powerful voice of truth eventually will force a more just verdict.
+
+Justice--that is all that we expect from America. We respect its
+neutrality; we do not ask from it an ideal partisanship for our benefit.
+If it does not have for us the sympathy which we have already extended
+to it and, after a century and a half of unclouded intercourse between
+the two nations, have anticipated there, then we cannot imbue it with
+that spirit by reasoning. Furthermore, in the existence of nations
+sympathy is not the deciding factor, and every nation should be rebuked
+which out of regard for sympathy would in decisive matters act against
+its own interests. But just for that very reason one more question must
+be raised. In the present conflict, which momentarily almost splits the
+entire world into two camps, where do the interests of America lie?
+
+That they are not lying on the side of Russia probably is self-evident.
+No free American can find desirable a further extension of the Russian
+world empire and of Russian despotism at the expense of Germany. But how
+about a country from which once America had to wrest its own liberty in
+bloody battle? How about England? Where, if England should succeed in
+downing Germany, would her eyes next be pointed? Has she not herself
+admitted that she is making war on us principally because she sees in us
+an uncomfortable competitor in trade? And which competitor would be the
+next one after us that would become awkward to the trust on the Thames?
+Yes, have they not already hauled off for the smash against America,
+when Japan is given opportunity to increase her power--the same Japan
+with whom America sooner or later will be bound to have an accounting
+and whose victory over us would make that accounting a great deal more
+difficult for the United States?
+
+Germany's fate certainly does not depend upon the friendly or unfriendly
+feeling of America. It will be decided solely upon the European
+battlefields. But because we are looking out from the night to a future
+dawn, because in the midst of our national need the cause of humanity is
+close to our heart, for these reasons it is not immaterial to us how the
+greatest neutral nation of culture thinks of us. Americans, the cable
+between us has been cut. It is our wish and our hope that the stronger
+band that unites American ideals with German ideals shall not also be
+cut.
+
+
+
+
+*To the Civilized World*
+
+*By Professors of Germany.*
+
+
+As representatives of German science and art, we hereby protest to the
+civilized world against the lies and calumnies with which our enemies
+are endeavoring to stain the honor of Germany in her hard struggle for
+existence--in a struggle which has been forced upon her.
+
+The iron mouth of events has proved the untruth of the fictitious German
+defeats, consequently misrepresentation and calumny are all the more
+eagerly at work. As heralds of truth we raise our voices against these.
+
+_It is not true_ that Germany is guilty of having caused this war.
+Neither the people, the Government, nor the Kaiser wanted war. Germany
+did her utmost to prevent it; for this assertion the world has
+documental proof. Often enough during the twenty-six years of his reign
+has Wilhelm II. shown himself to be the upholder of peace, and often
+enough has this fact been acknowledged by our opponents. Nay, even the
+Kaiser they now dare to call an Attila has been ridiculed by them for
+years, because of his steadfast endeavors to maintain universal peace.
+Not till a numerical superiority which had been lying in wait on the
+frontiers assailed us did the whole nation rise to a man.
+
+_It is not true_ that we trespassed in neutral Belgium. It has been
+proved that France and England had resolved on such a trespass, and it
+has likewise been proved that Belgium had agreed to their doing so. It
+would have been suicide on our part not to have been beforehand.
+
+_It is not true_ that the life and property of a single Belgian citizen
+was injured by our soldiers without the bitterest self-defense having
+made it necessary; for again and again, notwithstanding repeated
+threats, the citizens lay in ambush, shooting at the troops out of the
+houses, mutilating the wounded, and murdering in cold blood the medical
+men while they were doing their Samaritan work. There can be no baser
+abuse than the suppression of these crimes with the view of letting the
+Germans appear to be criminals, only for having justly punished these
+assassins for their wicked deeds.
+
+_It is not true_ that our troops treated Louvain brutally. Furious
+inhabitants having treacherously fallen upon them in their quarters, our
+troops with aching hearts were obliged to fire a part of the town as a
+punishment. The greatest part of Louvain has been preserved. The famous
+Town Hall stands quite intact; for at great self-sacrifice our soldiers
+saved it from destruction by the flames. Every German would of course
+greatly regret if in the course of this terrible war any works of art
+should already have been destroyed or be destroyed at some future time,
+but inasmuch as in our great love for art we cannot be surpassed by any
+other nation, in the same degree we must decidedly refuse to buy a
+German defeat at the cost of saving a work of art.
+
+_It is not true_ that our warfare pays no respect to international laws.
+It knows no indisciplined cruelty. But in the east the earth is
+saturated with the blood of women and children unmercifully butchered by
+the wild Russian troops, and in the west dumdum bullets mutilate the
+breasts of our soldiers. Those who have allied themselves with Russians
+and Servians, and present such a shameful scene to the world as that of
+inciting Mongolians and negroes against the white race, have no right
+whatever to call themselves upholders of civilization.
+
+_It is not true_ that the combat against our so-called militarism is not
+a combat against our civilization, as our enemies hypocritically pretend
+it is. Were it not for German militarism German civilization would long
+since have been extirpated. For its protection it arose in a land which
+for centuries had been plagued by bands of robbers as no other land had
+been. The German Army and the German people are one and today this
+consciousness fraternizes 70,000,000 of Germans, all ranks, positions,
+and parties being one.
+
+We cannot wrest the poisonous weapon--the lie--out of the hands of our
+enemies. All we can do is to proclaim to all the world that our enemies
+are giving false witness against us. You, who know us, who with us have
+protected the most holy possessions of man, we call to you:
+
+Have faith in us! Believe that we shall carry on this war to the end as
+a civilized nation, to whom the legacy of a Goethe, a Beethoven, and a
+Kant is just as sacred as its own hearths and homes.
+
+For this we pledge you our names and our honor:
+
+ADOLF VON BAEYER, Professor of Chemistry, Munich.
+
+Prof. PETER BEHRENS, Berlin.
+
+EMIL VON BEHRING, Professor of Medicine, Marburg.
+
+WILHELM VON BODE, General Director of the Royal Museums, Berlin.
+
+ALOIS BRANDL, Professor, President of the Shakespeare Society, Berlin.
+
+LUJU BRENTANO, Professor of National Economy, Munich.
+
+Prof. JUSTUS BRINKMANN, Museum Director, Hamburg.
+
+JOHANNES CONRAD, Professor of National Economy, Halle.
+
+FRANZ VON DEFREGGER, Munich.
+
+RICHARD DEHMEL, Hamburg.
+
+ADOLF DEITZMANN, Professor of Theology, Berlin.
+
+Prof. WILHELM DOERPFELD, Berlin.
+
+FRIEDRICH VON DUHN, Professor of Archaeology, Heidelberg.
+
+Prof. PAUL EHRLICH, Frankfort on the Main.
+
+ALBERT EHRHARD, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Strassburg.
+
+KARL ENGLER, Professor of Chemistry, Karlsruhe.
+
+GERHARD ESSER, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Bonn.
+
+RUDOLF EUCKEN, Professor of Philosophy, Jena.
+
+HERBERT EULENBERG, Kaiserswerth.
+
+HEINRICH FINKE, Professor of History, Freiburg.
+
+EMIL FISCHER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM FOERSTER, Professor of Astronomy, Berlin.
+
+LUDWIG FULDA, Berlin.
+
+EDUARD VON GEBHARDT, Dusseldorf.
+
+J.J. DE GROOT, Professor of Ethnography, Berlin.
+
+FRITZ HABER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.
+
+ERNST HAECKEL, Professor of Zoology, Jena.
+
+MAX HALBE, Munich.
+
+Prof. ADOLF VON HARNACK, General Director of the Royal Library, Berlin.
+
+GERHART HAUPTMANN, Agnetendorf.
+
+KARL, HAUPTMANN, Schreiberhau.
+
+GUSTAV HELLMANN, Professor of Meteorology, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM HERRMANN, Professor of Protestant Theology, Marburg.
+
+ANDREAS HEUSLER, Professor of Northern Philology, Berlin.
+
+ADOLF VON HILDEBRAND, Munich.
+
+LUDWIG HOFFMANN, City Architect. Berlin.
+
+ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK, Berlin.
+
+LEOPOLD GRAF KALCKREUTH, President of the German Confederation of
+Artists, Eddelsen.
+
+ARTHUR KAMPF, Berlin.
+
+FRITZ AUG. VON KAULBACH, Munich.
+
+THEODOR KIPP, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.
+
+FELIX KLEIN, Professor of Mathematics, Goettingen.
+
+MAX KLINGER, Leipsic.
+
+ALOIS KNOEPFLER, Professor of History of Art, Munich.
+
+ANTON KOCH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Münster.
+
+PAUL LABAND, Professor of Jurisprudence, Strassburg.
+
+KARL LEMPRECHT, Professor of History, Leipsic.
+
+PHILIPP LENARD, Professor of Physics, Heidelberg.
+
+MAX LENZ, Professor of History, Hamburg.
+
+MAX LIEBERMANN, Berlin.
+
+FRANZ VON LISZT, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.
+
+LUDWIG MANZEL, President of the Academy of Arts, Berlin.
+
+JOSEF MAUSBACH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Münster.
+
+GEORG VON MAYR, Professor of Political Sciences, Munich.
+
+SEBASTIAN MERKLE, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Wurzburg.
+
+EDUARD MEYER, Professor of History, Berlin.
+
+HEINRICH MORF, Professor of Roman Philology, Berlin.
+
+FRIEDRICH NAUMANN, Berlin.
+
+ALBERT NEISSER, Professor of Medicine, Breslau.
+
+WALTER NERNST, Professor of Physics, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM OSTWALD, Professor of Chemistry, Leipsic.
+
+BRUNO PAUL, Director of School for Applied Arts, Berlin.
+
+MAX PLANCK, Professor of Physics, Berlin.
+
+ALBERT PLEHN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.
+
+GEORG REICKE, Berlin.
+
+Prof. MAX REINHARDT, Director of the German Theatre, Berlin.
+
+ALOIS RIEHL, Professor of Philosophy, Berlin.
+
+KARL ROBERT, Professor of Archaeology, Halle.
+
+WILHELM ROENTGEN, Professor of Physics, Munich.
+
+MAX RUBNER, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.
+
+FRITZ SCHAPER, Berlin.
+
+ADOLF VON SCHLATTER, Professor of Protestant Theology, Tubingen.
+
+AUGUST SCHMIDLIN, Professor of Sacred History, Münster.
+
+GUSTAV VON SCHMOLLER, Professor of National Economy, Berlin.
+
+FRANZ VON STUCK, Munich.
+
+REINHOLD SEEBERG, Professor of Protestant Theology, Berlin.
+
+MARTIN SPAHN, Professor of History, Strassburg.
+
+HERMANN SUDERMANN, Berlin.
+
+HANS THOMA, Karlsruhe.
+
+WILHELM TRUEBNER, Karlsruhe.
+
+KARL VOLLMOELLER, Stuttgart.
+
+RICHARD VOTZ, Berchtesgaden.
+
+KARL VOTZLER, Professor of Roman Philology, Munich.
+
+SIEGFRIED WAGNER, Baireuth.
+
+WILHELM WALDEYER, Professor of Anatomy, Berlin.
+
+AUGUST VON WASSERMANN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.
+
+FELIX VON WEINGARTNER.
+
+THEODOR WIEGAND, Museum Director, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM WIEN, Professor of Physics, Wurzburg.
+
+ULRICH VON WILAMOWITZ-MOELLEN-DORFF, Professor of Philology, Berlin.
+
+RICHARD WILLSTAETTER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM WINDELBAND, Professor of Philosophy, Heidelberg.
+
+WILHELM WUNDT, Professor of Philosophy, Leipsic,
+
+
+
+
+*Appeal of the German Universities*
+
+
+The campaign of systematic lies and slander which has been carried on
+against the German people and empire for years has since the outbreak of
+the war surpassed everything with which one might have credited even the
+most unscrupulous press. To repudiate any charges raised against our
+Kaiser and his Government rests with the authorities in question. They
+have done so, and their defense is substantiated by striking proofs. He
+who wants to know the truth can learn it, and we trust that truth will
+prevail. But if we are to look on, when our enemies, guided by envy and
+malice, are shameless enough to charge our army and with it our whole
+nation with barbarous atrocities and senseless vandalism, and when their
+statements appear to be believed, to a certain extent, among neutrals
+and in places which, at other times, were well disposed toward us; if we
+are quietly to look on when all this happens, we, the appointed trustees
+of culture and education in our Fatherland, feel in duty bound to break
+the reserve which our calling and position impose on us with a strong
+expression of protest. Hence we now appeal to the learned bodies with
+whom we hitherto worked in common in the interests of the highest ideals
+of the human race and with whom, even at this time, when hatred and
+passion rule the world and confuse the minds of men, we hope to remain
+of the same mind, in the same service of truth. We appeal to them in the
+confident belief that our voice will find hearing, and that the
+expression of our honest indignation will meet with credence. Moreover,
+we appeal to the love of truth and to the sense of justice of the many
+thousands all over the world who, being welcome guests in our
+educational institutions, have taken part in the inheritance of German
+culture, and who thus have had an opportunity of watching and
+appreciating the German people in peaceful labor, their industry and
+uprightness, their sense of order and discipline, their reverence for
+intellectual work of every kind, and their profound love for sciences
+and arts. All of you who know that our army is no mercenary host but
+embraces the entire nation from first to last, that it is led by the
+country's best sons, and that, at this very hour, thousands from our
+midst, teachers as well as students, are shedding their life's blood as
+officers and soldiers on the battlefields of Russia and France; you who
+have seen and heard for yourselves in what spirit and with what success
+our youths are treated and taught, and that nothing is stamped upon
+their minds more deeply than reverence and admiration for artistic,
+scientific and technical creations of the human mind, no matter what
+country and nation brought them forth; we call upon you who know all
+this as witnesses, whether it can be true what our enemies report that
+the German Army is a horde of barbarians and a band of incendiaries who
+take pleasure in leveling defenseless cities to the ground and in
+destroying venerable monuments of history and art. If you wish to pay
+honor to the cause of truth you will be as firmly convinced as we are
+that German troops, wherever they had to do destructive work, could only
+have done so in the bitterness of defensive warfare. But we appeal to
+all those whom the slanderous reports of our enemies reach and who are
+not yet altogether blinded by passion, in the name of truth and justice,
+to shut their ears to such insults to the German people, and not allow
+themselves to be prejudiced by those who prove ever anew that they hope
+to be victorious by the instrumentality of lies. Now, if in this fearful
+war, in which our nation is compelled to fight not only for its power,
+but for its very existence and its entire civilization, the work of
+destruction should be greater than in former wars, and if many a
+precious achievement of culture falls to ruin, the responsibility for
+all this entirely rests with those who were not content with letting
+loose this ruthless war, nay, who did not even shrink from pressing
+murderous weapons upon a peaceful population for them to fall
+surreptitiously upon our troops who trusted in the observance of the
+military usages of all civilized peoples. They alone are the guilty
+authors of everything which happens here. Upon their heads the verdict
+of history will fall for the lasting injury which culture suffers.
+
+September, 1914.
+
+
+UNIVERSITIES.
+
+Tuebingen, Berlin, Bonn, Breslau, Erlangen, Frankfurt, Freiburg,
+Giessen, Goettingen, Greifswald, Halle, Heidelberg, Jena, Kiel,
+Königsberg, Leipzig, Marburg, Muenchen, Münster, Rostock, Strassburg,
+Wuerzburg.
+
+
+
+
+*Reply to the German Professors*
+
+*By British Scholars.*
+
+
+We see with regret the names of many German professors and men of
+science, whom we regard with respect and, in some cases, with personal
+friendship, appended to a denunciation of Great Britain so utterly
+baseless that we can hardly believe that it expresses their spontaneous
+or considered opinion. We do not question for a moment their personal
+sincerity when they express their horror of war and their zeal for "the
+achievements of culture." Yet we are bound to point out that a very
+different view of war, and of national aggrandizement based on the
+threat of war, has been advocated by such influential writers as
+Nietzsche, von Treitschke, von Bülow, and von Bernhardi, and has
+received widespread support from the press and from public opinion in
+Germany. This has not occurred, and in our judgment would scarcely be
+possible, in any other civilized country. We must also remark that it is
+German armies alone which have, at the present time, deliberately
+destroyed or bombarded such monuments of human culture as the Library at
+Louvain and the Cathedrals at Rheims and Malines.
+
+
+*The Diplomatic Papers.*
+
+No doubt it is hard for human beings to weigh justly their country's
+quarrels; perhaps particularly hard for Germans, who have been reared in
+an atmosphere of devotion to their Kaiser and his army; who are feeling
+acutely at the present hour, and who live under a Government which, we
+believe, does not allow them to know the truth. Yet it is the duty of
+learned men to make sure of their facts. The German "White Book"
+contains only some scanty and carefully explained selections from the
+diplomatic correspondence which preceded this war. And we venture to
+hope that our German colleagues will sooner or later do their best to
+get access to the full correspondence, and will form therefrom an
+independent judgment.
+
+They will then see that, from the issue of the Austrian note to Servia
+onward, Great Britain, whom they accuse of causing this war, strove
+incessantly for peace, Her successive proposals were supported by
+France, Russia, and Italy, but, unfortunately, not by the one power
+which could by a single word at Vienna have made peace certain. Germany,
+in her own official defense--incomplete as that document is--does not
+pretend that she strove for peace; she only strove for "the localization
+of the conflict." She claimed that Austria should be left free to
+"chastise" Servia in whatever way she chose. At most she proposed that
+Austria should not annex a portion of Servian territory--a futile
+provision, since the execution of Austria's demand would have made the
+whole of Servia subject to her will.
+
+Great Britain, like the rest of Europe, recognized that, whatever just
+grounds of complaint Austria may have had, the unprecedented terms of
+her note to Servia constituted a challenge to Russia and a provocation
+to war. The Austrian Emperor in his proclamation admitted that war was
+likely to ensue. The German "White Book" states in so many words: "We
+were perfectly aware that a possible warlike attitude of Austria-Hungary
+against Servia might bring Russia upon the field and therefore involve
+us in war. * * * We could not, however, * * * advise our ally to take a
+yielding attitude not compatible with his dignity." The German
+Government admits having known the tenor of the Austrian note
+beforehand, when it was concealed from all the other powers; admits
+backing it up after it was issued; admits that it knew the note was
+likely to precipitate war; and admits that, whatever professions it made
+to the other powers, in private it did not advise Austria to abate one
+jot of her demands. This, to our minds, is tantamount to admitting that
+Germany has, together with her unfortunate ally, deliberately provoked
+the present war.
+
+One point we freely admit. Germany would very likely have preferred not
+to fight Great Britain at this moment. She would have preferred to
+weaken and humiliate Russia; to make Servia a dependent of Austria; to
+render France innocuous and Belgium subservient; and then, having
+established an overwhelming advantage, to settle accounts with Great
+Britain. Her grievance against us is that we did not allow her to do
+this.
+
+
+*Britain's Love of Peace.*
+
+So deeply rooted is Great Britain's love of peace, so influential among
+us are those who have labored through many difficult years to promote
+good feeling between this country and Germany, that, in spite of our
+ties of friendship with France, in spite of the manifest danger
+threatening ourselves, there was still, up to the last moment, a strong
+desire to preserve British neutrality, if it could be preserved without
+dishonor. But Germany herself made this impossible.
+
+Great Britain, together with France, Russia, Prussia, and Austria, had
+solemnly guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium. In the preservation of
+this neutrality our deepest sentiments and our most vital interests are
+alike involved. Its violation would not only shatter the independence of
+Belgium itself: it would undermine the whole basis which renders
+possible the neutrality of any State and the very existence of such
+States as are much weaker than their neighbors. We acted in 1914 just as
+we acted in 1870. We sought from both France and Germany assurances that
+they would respect Belgian neutrality. In 1870 both powers assured us of
+their good intentions, and both kept their promises. In 1914 France gave
+immediately, on July 31, the required assurance; Germany refused to
+answer. When, after this sinister silence, Germany proceeded to break
+under our eyes the treaty which we and she had both signed, evidently
+expecting Great Britain to be her timid accomplice, then even to the
+most peace-loving Englishman hesitation became impossible. Belgium had
+appealed to Great Britain to keep her word, and she kept it.
+
+The German professors appear to think that Germany has in this matter
+some considerable body of sympathizers in the universities of Great
+Britain. They are gravely mistaken. Never within our lifetime has this
+country been so united on any great political issue. We ourselves have a
+real and deep admiration for German scholarship and science. We have
+many ties with Germany, ties of comradeship, of respect, and of
+affection. We grieve profoundly that, under the baleful influence of a
+military system and its lawless dreams of conquest, she whom we once
+honored now stands revealed as the common enemy of Europe and of all
+peoples which respect the law of nations. We must carry on the war on
+which we have entered. For us, as for Belgium, it is a war of defense,
+waged for liberty and peace.
+
+
+Sir CLIFFORD ALLBUTT, Regius Professor of Physics, Cambridge.
+
+T.W. ALLEN, Reader in Greek, Oxford.
+
+E. ARMSTRONG, Pro-Provost of Queen's College, Oxford.
+
+E.V. ARNOLD, Professor of Latin, University College of North Wales.
+
+Sir C.B. BALL, Regius Professor of Surgery, Dublin.
+
+Sir THOMAS BARLOW, President of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
+
+BERNARD BOSANQUET, formerly Professor of Moral Philosophy, St. Andrews.
+
+A.C. BRADLEY, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.
+
+W.H. BRAGG, Cavendish Professor of Physics, Leeds.
+
+Sir THOMAS BROCK, Membre d'honneur de la Société des Artistes Francais.
+
+A.J. BROWN, Professor of Biology and Chemistry of Fermentation,
+University of Birmingham.
+
+JOHN BURNET, Professor of Greek, St. Andrews.
+
+J.B. BURY, Regius Professor of Modern History, Cambridge.
+
+Sir W.W. CHEYNE, Professor of Clinical Surgery, King's College, London,
+President of the Royal College of Surgeons.
+
+J. NORMAN COLLIE, Professor of Organic Chemistry and Director of the
+Chemical Laboratories, University College, London.
+
+F.C. CONYBEARE, Honorary Fellow of University College, Oxford.
+
+Sir HENRY CRAIK, M.P. for Glasgow and Aberdeen Universities.
+
+Sir JAMES CRICHTON-BROWNE, Vice President and Treasurer, Royal
+Institution.
+
+Sir WILLIAM CROOKES, President of the Royal Society.
+
+Sir FOSTER CUNLIFFE, Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
+
+Sir FRANCIS DARWIN, late Reader in Botany, Cambridge.
+
+A.V. DICEY, Fellow of All Souls College and formerly Vinerian Professor
+of English Law, Oxford.
+
+Sir S. DILL, Hon. Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
+
+Sir JAMES DONALDSON, Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of
+St. Andrews.
+
+F.W. DYSON, Astronomer Royal.
+
+Sir EDWARD ELGAR.
+
+Sir ARTHUR EVANS, Extraordinary Professor of Prehistoric Archæology,
+Oxford.
+
+L.R. FARNELL, Rector of Exeter College, Oxford.
+
+C.H. FIRTH, Regius Professor of Modern History, Oxford.
+
+H.A.L. FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University.
+
+J.A. FLEMING, Professor of Electrical Engineering in the University of
+London.
+
+H.S. FOXWELL, Professor of Political Economy in the University of
+London.
+
+Sir EDWARD FRY, Ambassador Extraordinary and First British
+Plenipotentiary to The Hague Peace Conference in 1907.
+
+Sir ARCHIBALD GEIKIE, Past President of the Royal Society.
+
+W.M. GELDART, Fellow of All Souls and Vinerian Professor of English Law,
+Oxford.
+
+Sir RICKMAN GODLEE, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Surgery, University
+College, London.
+
+B.P. GRENFELL, late Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.
+
+E.H. GRIFFITHS, Principal of the University College of South Wales and
+Monmouthshire.
+
+W.H. HADOW, Principal of Armstrong College, Newcastle.
+
+J.S. HALDANE, late Reader in Physiology, Oxford.
+
+MARCUS HARTOG, Professor of Zoology in University College, Cork.
+
+F.J. HAVERFIELD, Camden Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.
+
+W.A. HERDMAN, Professor of Zoology at Liverpool, General Secretary of
+the British Association.
+
+Sir W.P. HERRINGHAM, Vice Chancellor of the University of London.
+
+E.W. HOBSON, Sadleirian Professor of Pure Mathematics, Cambridge.
+
+D.G. HOGARTH, Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
+
+Sir ALFRED HOPKINSON, late Vice Chancellor of Manchester University.
+
+A.S. HUNT, Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.
+
+HENRY JACKSON, Regius Professor of Greek, Cambridge.
+
+Sir THOMAS G. JACKSON, R.A.
+
+F.B. JEVONS, Professor of Philosophy, Durham.
+
+H.H. JOACHIM, Fellow of Merton College, Oxford.
+
+J. JOLLY, Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Dublin.
+
+COURTNEY KENNY, Downing Professor of the Laws of England, Cambridge.
+
+Sir F.G. KENYON, Director and Principal Librarian, British Museum.
+
+HORACE LAMB, Professor of Mathematics, Manchester University.
+
+J.N. LANGLEY, Professor of Physiology, Cambridge.
+
+WALTER LEAF, Fellow of London University, President of the Hellenic
+Society.
+
+Sir SIDNEY LEE, Editor of the Dictionary of National Biography,
+Professor of the English Language and Literature in the University of
+London.
+
+Sir OLIVER LODGE, Principal of Birmingham University.
+
+Sir DONALD MACALISTER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Glasgow.
+
+R.W. MACAN, Master of University College, Oxford.
+
+Sir WILLIAM MACEWEN, Professor of Surgery, Glasgow.
+
+J.W. MACKAIL, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.
+
+Sir PATRICK MANSON.
+
+R.R. MARETT, Reader in Social Anthropology, Oxford.
+
+D.S. MARGOLIOUTH, Laudian Professor of Arabic, Oxford.
+
+Sir H.A. MIERS, Principal of the University of London.
+
+FREDERICK W. MOTT, Fullerian Professor of Physiology, Royal Institution.
+
+LORD MOULTON OF BANK, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary.
+
+J.E.H. MURPHY, Professor of Irish, Dublin.
+
+GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek, Oxford.
+
+J.L. MYRES, Wykeham Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.
+
+G.H.F. NUTTALL, Quick Professor of Biology, Cambridge.
+
+Sir W. OSLER, Regius Professor of Medicine, Oxford.
+
+Sir ISAMBARD OWEN, Vice Chancellor of the University of Bristol.
+
+Sir WALTER PARRATT, Professor of Music, Oxford.
+
+Sir HUBERT PARRY, Director of Royal College of Music.
+
+W.H. PERKIN, Waynflete Professor of Chemistry, Oxford.
+
+W.M. FLINDERS PETRIE EDWARDS, Professor of Egyptology, University
+College, London.
+
+A.F. POLLARD, Professor of English History, London.
+
+Sir F. POLLOCK, formerly Corpus Professor of Jurisprudence, Oxford.
+
+EDWARD B. POULTON, Hope Professor of Zoology, Oxford.
+
+Sir E.J. POYNTER, President of the Royal Academy of Arts.
+
+Sir A. QUILLER-COUCH, King Edward VII. Professor of English Literature,
+Cambridge.
+
+Sir WALTER RALEIGH, Professor of English Literature, Oxford.
+
+Sir W. RAMSAY, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, London.
+
+Lord RAYLEIGH, Past President Royal Society, Nobel Laureate, Chancellor
+of Cambridge University.
+
+Lord REAY, First President British Academy.
+
+JAMES REID, Professor of Ancient History, Cambridge.
+
+WILLIAM RIDGEWAY, Disney Professor of Archaeology, Cambridge.
+
+T.F. ROBERTS, Principal of the University College of Wales, Aberystwith.
+
+J. HOLLAND ROSE, Reader in Modern History, Cambridge.
+
+Sir RONALD ROSS, formerly Professor of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool,
+Nobel Laureate.
+
+M.E. SADLER, Vice Chancellor of Leeds.
+
+W. SANDAY, Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity, Oxford.
+
+Sir J.E. SANDYS, Public Orator, Cambridge.
+
+Sir ERNEST SATOW, Second British Delegate to The Hague Peace Conference
+in 1907.
+
+A.H. SAYCE, Professor of Assyriology, Oxford.
+
+ARTHUR SCHUSTER, late Professor of Physics, Manchester.
+
+D.H. SCOTT, Foreign Secretary, Royal Society.
+
+C.S. SHERRINGTON, Waynflete Professor of Physiology, Oxford.
+
+GEORGE ADAM SMITH, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Aberdeen.
+
+G.C. MOORE SMITH, Professor of English Language and Literature,
+Sheffield.
+
+E.A. SONNENSCHEIN, Professor of Latin and Greek, Birmingham.
+
+W.R. SORLEY, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Cambridge.
+
+Sir C.V. STANFORD, Profesor of Music, Cambridge.
+
+V.H. STANTON, Ely Professor of Divinity, Cambridge.
+
+J. ARTHUR THOMSON, Regius Professor of Natural History, Aberdeen.
+
+Sir J.J. THOMSON, Professor of Experimental Physics, Cambridge.
+
+T.F. TOUT, Professor of Mediæval and Modern History, Manchester.
+
+Sir W. TURNER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Edinburgh.
+
+Sir C. WALDSTEIN, late Reader in Classical Archæology and Slade
+Professor of Fine Art, Cambridge.
+
+Sir J. WOLFE-BARRY.
+
+Sir ALMROTH WRIGHT, formerly Professor of Pathology, Netley.
+
+C.T. HAGBERG WRIGHT, Librarian, London Library.
+
+JOSEPH WRIGHT, Professor of Comparative Philology, Oxford.
+
+*Concerning the German Professors*
+
+*By Frederic Harrison.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of the London Morning Post_:
+
+Sir: I was not invited to join the reply of our distinguished scholars
+and professors, perhaps because it is so many years since I was the
+colleague of James Bryce as Professor of Jurisprudence to the Inns of
+Court. And, indeed, I do not care to bandy recriminations with these
+German defenders of the attack on civilization by the whole imperial,
+military, and bureaucratic order. It seems to me waste of time and loss
+of self-respect to notice these pedants.
+
+The whole German press and the entire academic class seem to be banded
+together as an official bureau in order to spread mendacious insults and
+spiteful slanders. Not a word comes from them to excuse or deny the
+defiance of public law and the mockery of public faith by the German
+Emperor, his Ministers, and his armies. These professors seem to exult
+in serving the new Attila--rather let us say the new Caligula, for
+Attila at least was an open soldier and did not skulk under the Red
+Cross behind barbed wire fences.
+
+We have long known that all German academic and scholastic officials are
+the creatures of the Government, as obedient to orders as any Drill
+Sergeant. They seem to have sold their consciences for place. Not a word
+comes from them even of regret for the massacre of civilians on false
+charges, for the wanton murder of children, for the wholesale rape of
+women, the showering of bombs upon sleeping towns in sheer cruelty of
+destruction. The intellectual energies of Kultur seem concentrated on
+distorting the meaning of our dispatches and the speeches of our
+statesmen, and in manufacturing for their people and neutrals venomous
+falsehoods. German Geist today is a huge machine to cram lies upon their
+own people, and to insinuate lies to the world around. Their system of
+war is based upon lying at home and abroad, on treachery and terrorism.
+They think that murdering a few civilians would terrify France into
+surrender, and will drive England to betray the Allies. Their poor
+conscripts are told that we kill and torture prisoners; their monuments
+at home are bedizened with mock laurels; and neutrals are poisoned with
+wild inventions.
+
+For years past their public men, have
+
+[Illustration: ADOLF VON HARNACK.
+
+_See Page_ 198]
+
+[Illustration: THEODORE NIEMEYER.
+
+_See Page_ 206]
+
+been tricking our politicians, journalists, and professors to accept
+them as peaceful leaders of a higher civilization--- while all the while
+their soldiers, diplomats, and spies (the three are really but one
+class) were secretly courting our own royalties and society, studying
+our naval and military defenses, filling our homes with tens of
+thousands of reservists having secret orders to spy, to destroy our
+arsenals and roads, and even planting out bogus industries and laying
+concrete bases for cannon, to bombard the open towns of friendly
+nations. We have been living unsuspectingly with a nation of assassins
+plotting to destroy us. Did these professors of Kultur not know of this
+elaborate conspiracy of Kaisertum, which unites the stealthy treachery
+of a Mohawk or a thug to the miracles of modern science? For years past
+the ideal of Kultur has been to lay down secret mines to destroy their
+peaceful neighbors. Did these professors of the Fatheland not know this?
+Then they are unable to grasp the most obvious facts--the life work of
+their own masters under their own eyes. And, if they did know it, and
+must at least know it now, and yet approve and glory in it, they must be
+beneath contempt. Why argue with such hypocrites?
+
+Not a few of us have known and watched this conspiracy for years. I have
+preached this ever since the advent of Bismarckism and the new Europe
+that was formed forty years ago. Not a few of us have foretold not only
+the tremendous attack on the British Empire designed by German sea power
+but the precise steps of the war upon France, through Belgium, and to be
+executed by an overwhelming force of sudden shock in the midst of peace.
+For my part, nothing in this war since July 30 has at all surprised me,
+unless it be the foul cruelty with which Belgian civilians have been
+treated. Indeed, in January, 1913, I wrote a warning which reads now
+like a summary of events that have since happened. I was denounced as a
+senile alarmist by some who are now the loudest in calling to arms.
+Alas! too late is their repentance.
+
+May I ask why our eminent academicians and scholars who still profess
+"friendship and admiration" for their German confrères never even
+suspected the huge conspiracy of which civilization has been the victim?
+Why did they accept the stars and crosses of Caligula-Attila? Why
+hob-nob with the docile creatures of his chancery, and spread at home
+and abroad the worship of Geist and Kultur? Are they fit to instruct us
+about politics, public law, and international relations, when they were
+so egregiously mistaken, so blind, so befooled, with regard to the most
+portentous catastrophe in the memory of living men? I am glad that they
+see their blindness now--but why this sentimental friendliness for those
+who hoodwinked them?
+
+Surely this should open their eyes to the mountains of pretentious
+clouds on which the claims of Kultur rest. I am myself a student of
+German learning, and quite aware of the enormous industry, subtlety, and
+ingenuity of German scholarship. We owe deep gratitude to the older race
+of the Savignys, Rankes, Mommsens. Since 1851 I have been five times in
+Germany on different occasions down to 1900. I read and speak the
+language, and twice I lived in Germany for months together, even in the
+house of a distinguished man of science. I study their theology, their
+sociology, economics, history, and their classics. I am quite aware of
+the supremacy of German scholars in ancient literature, in many branches
+of science, in the record of the past in art, manners, and civilization.
+But to have edited a Greek play or to have discovered a new explosive, a
+new comet, another microbe, does not qualify a savant to dogmatize on
+international morals and the hegemony of the world. Sixty years ago in
+Leipzig the editor of a famous journal undertook to prove to me that
+Shakespeare was a German. Our poet, he said, was the grandest output of
+the Teutonic mind; nine-tenths of the Teutonic mind was German-argal,
+Shakespeare was a German, Q.E.D.
+
+With the vast accumulation of solid knowledge of provable facts there is
+too often in the German mind a sudden bounding up into a cloudland of
+crude and unproved guesswork. In the logic of Kultur there seems to be a
+huge gap in the reasoning of the middle terms. A savant unearths a
+manuscript in Syria, which he deciphers with marvelous industry,
+learning, and ingenuity. Straightway he cries, "Eureka, behold the
+original Gospel--the true Gospel!" and he proceeds to turn Christianity
+upside down. He may have experimented on cultures of microbes for a
+generation; and then he calls on earth and heaven to acknowledge the
+mystery of the self-creation of the universe. We hear much of Treitschke
+today--no doubt a man of genius with a gift for research--but what
+ferocious pyrotechnics were poured forth by this apostle of mendacious
+swagger. And as to Nietzsche, he was anticipated by Shakespeare in
+Timon--a diseased cynic--
+
+ henceforth hated be
+ Of Timon, man and all humanity.
+
+They seem to think that to have put the critics right about a few lines
+in Sophocles, or to have discovered a new chemical dye, dispenses the
+German Superman from being bound to humanity, truthfulness, and honor.
+Charge them with the mutilation of little girls and the violation of
+nuns in Belgium, and they reply: Yes! but think of Kant and Hegel! It is
+treason to philosophy, they say, that a man who has translated
+Schopenhauer should condemn Germans for burning Malines and making
+captive women a screen for troops in battle. Kultur, it seems, has its
+own "higher law," which its professors expound to the decadent nations
+of Europe.
+
+Let us hold no parley with these arrogant sophists. Let all intellectual
+commerce be suspended until these official professors have unlearned the
+infernal code of "military necessity" and "world policy" which, to the
+indignation of the civilized world, they are ordered by the Vicegerent
+of God at Potsdam to teach to the great Teutonic Super-race. Yours, &c.,
+
+FREDERIC HARRISON.
+
+Bath, Oct. 29.
+
+
+
+
+*The Reply From France*
+
+
+*By M. Yves Guyot and Prof. Bellet.*
+
+ _The following is the text of an open lettert addressed by M. Yves
+ Guyot, Editor-in-Chief of the Journal des Economistes, and M.
+ Bellet, Professor at the Schools of Political Science and
+ Commercial Studies, to Prof. Brentano of the University of Munich,
+ the communication being a reply to the recent German Appeal to
+ Civilized Nations on the subject of the war_:
+
+
+PARIS, Oct. 15, 1914.
+
+_To Prof. Brentano of the University of Munich_:
+
+Very Learned Professor and Colleague: On reading the Appeal to Civilized
+Nations, (among which France is evidently not included,) which has just
+been sent forth by ninety-three persons declaring themselves to be
+representatives of German science and art, we were not surprised to find
+Prof. Schmoller's signature. He had already shown his hatred for France
+by refusing to assist at the gatherings organized, a little more than
+two years ago, to celebrate the seventieth anniversary of the Paris
+Society of Political Economy, (gatherings at which we were happy to
+enjoy your presence and that of your colleague, Mr. Lotz.) In his
+Rector's speech at the Berlin University, in 1897, he declared that
+German science had no other object than to celebrate the imperial
+messages of 1880 and 1890; and he pointed out that every disciple of
+Adam Smith who was not willing to make it a servant of that policy
+"should resign his seat." But we felt painful surprise when, at the foot
+of the said factum, we found your name side by side with his.
+
+You and the other representatives of German science and art accuse
+France, Great Britain, Belgium, and Russia of falsehood. Would you have
+submitted, on the part of one of your pupils, to so grave an imputation,
+so lightly bandied? Admitting you to be in absolute ignorance of the
+documents published since the war declaration, you have certainly been
+acquainted with the ultimatum pronounced by Austria to Servia. It must
+have struck you with surprise; for it stands as a unique diplomatic
+document in all history. Did you not ask yourselves whether the demands
+of Austria did not go beyond all bounds, seeing that they insisted on
+the abdication of an independent State? You learned that, in spite of
+Servia's humble reply, because it contained a reservation, immediately,
+without discussion, the Ambassador of Austria-Hungary left Belgrade, and
+that the following day Austria declared war. You do not ignore the steps
+taken by Great Britain and France, the demand for delay made by Russia,
+and the reply of the German Chancellor "that none should intervene
+between Austria and Servia." He elegantly qualified the attitude thus
+adopted as "localizing the conflict."
+
+Is there a single member among those who signed the document of
+Intellectuals who has been able to believe--have you been able to
+believe, Mr. Brentano, with your quick and perspicacious mind?--that
+this reply from Berlin did not imply war as a fatal consequence; for any
+nation accepting it was certain to be treated in future, by Germany, as
+the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy treated Servia? How, then, knowing the
+initial pretext of the war, are you able to realize that there was no
+other relation between this cause and the effect produced than the will
+of those who made use of it to provoke either a dishonoring humiliation
+for the countries accepting such a situation, or a general
+conflagration? How, then, do you, and the signatories of your appeal,
+dare to state: "It is not true that Germany provoked the war"? You dare
+to speak of proofs taken from authentic documents. Those published by
+Great Britain, Russia, and Belgium are known. All agree; and they give
+clear proof that the Austro-Hungarian ultimatum was pronounced with full
+complicity of the Berlin Chancellery. They prove, moreover, that the
+German Ambassador at Petrograd, fearing a withdrawal on the part of
+Hungary, precipitated events while your Emperor kept himself out of the
+way. Meanwhile, your General Staff had, in underhanded manner, mobilized
+a portion of its troops, by individual call, while in France we waited,
+unable to imagine that the German Government had resolved to engage in
+European war without motives. In the pocketbooks of your reservists have
+been found forms calling them to the army long before the end of July.
+Our friend and colleague, Courcelle-Seneuil, has seen the military book
+of a German living in Switzerland, at Bex, containing this call.
+
+
+*Bismarckian Loyalty.*
+
+Correspondence of official nature has been stopped at the Cape, which
+should have reached in full time officers of the German Navy, warning
+them to prepare for mid-July. Such advance taken by your troops has
+rendered the task the more difficult for ours. We were very simple, for
+we believed in the affirmations of your statesmen. You state that these
+are loyal war methods; so be it. That belongs to the diplomatic rules of
+loyalty bequeathed by Bismarck to his successors. But to attempt to
+carry on this falsehood, you have no longer the excuse of its utility.
+It is clear to all, except, it seems, the representatives of science and
+art in Germany, who are sufficiently devoid of perspicacity to ignore
+it.
+
+They affirm, moreover, that Germany has not violated the neutrality of
+Belgium; she merely contented herself with "taking the first step."
+Beyond the authentic proofs which have been published, we would draw
+your attention to an undeniable fact. Trusting in the treaty which
+guaranteed Belgium neutrality--and at the foot of which figured
+Germany's signature--in the promise made a short while ago to the King
+of the Belgians by your Emperor, we unfortunately left our northern
+frontier unguarded. You must be aware, professor, that the English did
+not move until Belgian soil had been effectively violated. It is true
+that we knew the plan of campaign set forth by Gen. Bernhardi, but we
+naïvely believed that, whatever might be the opinion of a General, the
+Chancellor of the Empire would consider a treaty bearing the imperial
+signature as something more than a mere "bit of paper." Germany has also
+been untrue to her signature by violating the treaty of neutrality of
+Luxembourg. You forgot to state that there also you only "took the first
+step." Your appeal echoes the German papers, which declare that it was
+the Belgians, and particularly the women, who "began against your
+troops." An American paper replied by stating that if it was the Belgian
+women who attacked German soldiers on Belgian soil, what were the
+soldiers doing there? The truth is that your troops, obeying their
+officers, as is proved by papers which have been seized and which you
+would find quoted in the report presented by the Belgian Commission to
+President Wilson, have executed orders which seem inspired by the
+ferocious inscriptions of Assyrian Kings, no doubt exhumed on the Bagdad
+railway line; and you think it quite natural that massacre and arson
+should have been perpetrated at Louvain because the civil population
+fired on your soldiers; but an inquiry made together with the
+representatives of the United States (whom you deign to consider
+sufficiently to ask them to represent your defenses) proved that the
+civil population was unarmed. If you today approve of the burning of the
+Louvain Library, have you until now approved of the destruction of the
+library at Alexandria? It is true there was no Deutsch Kultur there. The
+result of German culture as regards military matters is to place your
+soldiers on a stratum of civilization anterior to that of the Vandals,
+who, when taking Hippone, spared the library.
+
+In Paris, if one of us passing, on Friday, Oct. 9, in the Rue
+d'Edimbourg, to an office of the Societe d'Economie Politique, situated
+at No. 14, had passed near to that address, he might have been murdered
+by a bomb thrown from one of your Taubes on the civil population of a
+town whose bombarding had not been notified. Another Taube caused,
+through the throwing of a bomb, a fire at the Cathedral of Notre Dame.
+You cannot, to excuse such an assault, invoke the pretext put forward to
+excuse the destruction of the Cathedral of Rheims. No observer could
+have caught sight of a German soldier from the top of the towers.
+
+
+*Barbarian Soldiery.*
+
+Your co-signatories and you express indignation because the civilized
+world describes your soldiers as barbarians. Do you therefore consider
+such deeds as those specified to be a high expression of civilization?
+And here is the dilemma: either you are in ignorance of these deeds,
+then you are indeed very careless, or you approve of them, in which case
+you must make the defense of them enter into your works on right and
+ethics. In doing so you would only be following the theories of your
+military authors who have insisted on the necessity of striking terror
+into the hearts of the civil population, in order that it may weigh on
+its Government and its army so strongly that they may be forced to ask
+for peace. But those of your colleagues who profess psychology must, if
+they have approved such a theory, confess today that they made a great
+mistake; for such deeds, far from forcing the people to cowardly action,
+awaken indignation in all hearts and fire the courage of our soldiers.
+Nevertheless, your military authors have not stated that theft was a
+means of assuring victory. And yet the Crown Prince, your Emperor of
+tomorrow, gathered together at the castle of the Count of Baye articles
+in precious metals, belonging to a collection, which he had carefully
+packed up and sent off. Some of your officers' trunks have been found
+stuffed with goods which would constitute the stock of a second-hand
+clothes seller. Do you and your co-signatories include in German science
+and art the science and art of housebreaking? Are the law professors and
+the economists willing to defend such a manner of acquiring property?
+And, if so, what becomes of your penal code?
+
+You and your co-signatories affirm that the present struggle is directed
+against "German culture." If such culture teaches that the rights of men
+include contempt of treaties, contempt of private property, contempt of
+the lives of non-combatants, you cannot be surprised that the other
+nations show no desire to preserve it for your benefit and their
+detriment.
+
+It is not by arms but by arguments and facts that economists like us,
+faithful to the teachings of the physiocrats and of Adam Smith, have
+sought to protect ourselves against it. On the eve of the war, at the
+inauguration of Turgot's Monument, we set forth his ideas of liberty and
+humanity in opposition to the German realpolitik. We hope that the
+present events will cure those among our professors whom it had
+contaminated, and that they will cease to constitute themselves
+accomplices of that, form of Pan-Germanism which they introduced to
+public opinion and to our legislation. The acts of your diplomatists and
+of your Generals, and the approbation given them by you and other
+representatives of German science, are a terrible demonstration, but
+conclusive, of the dangers and vanity of German culture. You are its
+true destroyers.
+
+
+*Militarism and Civilization.*
+
+"Without our miltarism," say you, "our civilization would have been
+annihilated long ago." And you invoke the inheritance of Goethe,
+Beethoven, Kant. But Goethe, born in the free city of Frankfort, lived
+at the Court of Charles Augustus, which was a liberal and artistic
+centre ever threatened by Prussia. But Beethoven was of Flemish origin,
+and lived in Holland until the age of twenty-four, spending the rest of
+his life in Vienna, and he has nothing in common with Prussian
+militarism, so redoubtable for Austria. But Kant, if he was born and
+lived at Könisberg, the true capital of the Prussian Kingdom, welcomed
+the French Revolution, and when he died in 1804 it was not Prussian
+militarism which had recommended his writings to the world.
+
+But the solidarity which you establish between German militarism and
+German culture, of which you and your colleagues claim to be the
+representatives, is a proof of the confusion of German conceptions.
+
+To present Goethe, Beethoven, and Kant to the world you surround them
+with bayonets. In the same manner every tradesman and every merchant
+throughout Germany has got into the habit of saying: "I have four
+million bayonets behind me!" Your Emperor said to some tradesmen who
+complained of bad business: "I must travel!" And he went to
+Constantinople; he went to Tangier, after the speech at Bremen. In every
+one of his words, in each of his gestures, he affirmed the subordination
+of economic civilization to military civilization. He considered that it
+was his duty to open up markets and assert the value of German products
+with cannon and sword. Hence his formidable armaments, his perpetual
+threats which held all nations in a constant state of anxiety.
+
+There is the deep and true cause of the war. And it is due entirely to
+your Emperor and his environment. We readily understand that the greater
+number of "representatives of German science and art" who signed the
+appeal are incapable of fathoming this fact; but this is not your case,
+you who denounced the abuses and consequences of German protectionism,
+and we remember that at the Antwerp Congress you agreed with us in
+recognizing its aggressive nature.
+
+In conclusion, we beg to express the deep consideration which we feel
+for your science, hitherto so unerring.
+
+
+
+
+*To Americans In Germany*
+
+*By Prof. Adolf von Harnack.*
+
+
+Citizens of the United States, ladies and gentlemen: It is my pleasure
+and my privilege to address to you today a few words.
+
+Let me begin with a personal recollection. Ten years ago I was in the
+United States and I came away with some unforgettable memories. What
+impression was the strongest? Not the thundering fall of Niagara, not
+the wonderful entrance into New York Harbor with its skyscrapers, not
+the tremendous World's Fair of St. Louis in all its proud grandeur, not
+the splendid universities of Harvard and Columbia or the Congressional
+Library in Washington--these are all works of technique or of nature and
+cannot arouse our deepest admiration and make the deepest impression.
+What was the deepest impression? It was two-fold: first, the great work
+of the American Nation, and next, American hospitality.
+
+The great work of the American Nation, that is, the nation itself! From
+the smallest beginning the American Nation has in 200 years developed
+itself to a world power of more than 100,000,000 souls, and has not only
+settled but civilized the whole section of the world from the Atlantic
+to the Pacific, from the great lakes to the West Indies. And not only
+civilized: everything which has drifted to it has been welded together
+by this nation with an indescribable power, welded together to the unity
+of a great, noble nation of educated men--such a thing as has never
+before happened in all history. After two or at the most, three
+generations, all are welded together in the American body and the
+American spirit, and this without petty rules, without political
+pressure. In the definite frame of this people every individual
+character fits in without coercion, becomes American and yet retains its
+own quality. The world has never witnessed such a spectacle but it is
+witnessing it continually now. On the one side it hears and sees the
+fact that every alien after a short time announces, "America is now my
+Fatherland!" and on the other hand the old country still continues
+undisturbed the bond between them. Yes, here is at once a national
+strength and freedom which another could not copy from you very easily.
+
+
+*The Spirit of America.*
+
+But, further: Among those who have wandered to your shores are millions
+of Germans--several millions! For more than two years--where shall I
+begin to relate--since the days of Steuben and of Carl Schurz--but how
+can I name names?--they have been all received as brothers, bringing
+their best; and their best was not lost. More I cannot say.
+
+Furthermore, what sort was the spirit which received them? Upon each
+one, without and within, that spirit has imprinted its seal. Concerning
+this spirit I shall speak later, but for the present I will only say, it
+is the spirit of common courage and common freedom! And from this unity
+I saw had developed a tremendous contribution as the work of this
+nation, a contribution to agriculture, to technology, and, as we of the
+German universities have known for several decades, an extraordinary
+contribution to science. And this contribution has been derived from a
+combination such as we in Europe cannot effect, of the good old
+traditional wisdom which has been brought down out of the history of
+Europe and a youthful courage, I might almost say, a childlike spirit.
+These two combined, this circumspection and at the same time this
+courage of youth, which I met everywhere and which has stamped itself
+upon all American work, is what I have admired.
+
+And the second was the American hospitality!
+
+Like a warm breeze, this hospitality surrounded me and my friends.
+Wherever we went we breathed the air of this friendship, indeed, it
+almost took away our powers of will, so thoroughly did it anticipate
+every plan and every need. Like parcels of friendship, we were sent from
+place to place, always the feeling that we had all known each other
+forever. That was an experience for which all of us--for who of us
+Germans who have come over here has not experienced it?--will be
+perpetually thankful. That will never be forgotten.
+
+
+*Friendship for Germany.*
+
+But beautiful and noble as that was, your nation has furnished ours with
+something still more unforgettable. In those horrible days of 1870, when
+a great number of Germans were shut up in unfortunate Paris, the
+American Ambassador assumed the care of them, and what America did at
+that time she is again doing for all of our country--men who, surprised
+in the enemy's country by the war, have been detained there. They are
+intrusted to the special care of the American Ambassador, and we know
+with as much certainty as though it were an actual fact already that
+that care will be the best and the most loyal. That, my friends, is true
+service of friendship, which is not mere convention but such as it is in
+the Catechism: "Give us our daily bread and good friends." They belong
+together.
+
+But to answer the question why you are our good friends we must reflect
+a little for the answer which we might have given a few days ago--"You
+are our good friends as our blood relations"--alas! that answer no
+longer holds. That is over! God grant that in later days we may again be
+able to say it, but by a circumstance which has torn our very
+heartstrings it has been proved that blood is not thicker than water.
+But where then is the deep-lying reason for this friendship? Does it
+rest in the fact that we have so many Germans over there; that they have
+been received so cordially; that they have done so much for the building
+up of America, soul and body, or that we find friends in so many
+Americans on this side of the water? This is an important consideration,
+but it is not the ultimate cause we are seeking.
+
+My friends, when it is a powerful relationship, imbedded in rock as it
+were, which is under consideration, then the matter is more than
+superficial, and that which is at the bottom of this deeper fact,
+history is at this very moment showing us as she writes in characters of
+bronze before our eyes; because we have a common spirit which springs
+from the very depths of our hearts, for that reason are we friends!
+
+And what is that spirit? It is the spirit of the deep religious and
+moral culture which has possessed us through a succession of centuries
+and out of which this powerful American offshoot has sprung. To this
+culture belong three things, or, rather, it rests upon three pillars.
+The first pillar is the recognition of the eternal value of every human
+soul, consequently the recognition of personality and individuality.
+These are respected, nourished, striven for. Second is the recognition
+of the duty at any time to risk this human soul, which is to each one of
+us so dear, for that great ideal--"God, freedom, and the Fatherland."
+The dearer that human soul, that life, is prized by us, Germans and
+Americans, the more surely do we give it up willingly and joyously when
+a high cause demands it. And the third pillar is respect for law and
+therewith the capability for powerful organization in all lines and in
+all manner of communities.
+
+
+*A Different Culture.*
+
+But now before my eyes I see rising up against the culture which rests
+upon these three pillars--personality, duty to sacrifice all for ideals,
+law and organization--another culture, a culture of the horde whose
+Government is patriarchal, a civilization of the mob which is brought
+together and held together by despots, the Byzantine--I must extend it
+further--Mongolian-Muscovite culture.
+
+My friends, this was once a true culture, but it is no longer. This
+culture was not able to bear the light of the eighteenth century, still
+less that of the nineteenth, and now, in this twentieth century, it
+breaks out and threatens us--this unorganized mob, this mob of Asia;
+like the sands of the desert it would sweep down over our harvest
+fields. That we already know; we are already experiencing it. That, too,
+the Americans know, for every one who has stood upon the ground of our
+civilization and who with a keen glance regards the present situation
+knows that the word must be: "Peoples of Europe, save your most hallowed
+possessions!"
+
+
+*"I Cover My Head!"*
+
+This, our culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in large part,
+yes, almost wholly, intrusted to three peoples: to us, to the Americans,
+and--to the English. I will say no more! I cover my head! Two still
+remain, and must stand all the more firmly together where this culture
+is menaced. It is a question of our spiritual existence, and Americans
+will realize that it is also their existence. We have a common culture,
+and a common duty to protect it!
+
+To you, American citizens, we give the holy pledge that we shall offer
+our last drop of blood in the cause of this culture. May I in addition
+say to you, since I have made this pledge, that we shall as a matter of
+course protect those of you here in our land and care for you and do
+everything for you? If we have made the greater pledge, surely we can
+manage these trifles.
+
+But you, my dear fellow-countrymen, we are all thinking with one mind on
+what is now going on about us. It is a very grave but a splendid time.
+Whatever in the last analysis we shall go through, at present there is
+no longer any one of us who any longer regards life in the rôle of a
+blasé or critical spectator, but each one of us stands in the very midst
+of life, and, indeed, in the very midst of a higher life. God has of a
+sudden brought us out of the wretchedness of the day to a high place to
+which we have never before spiritually attained. But always where life
+emerges, a higher life or merely life itself, wherever there is a thirst
+for life, there is it set close around by death, as at every birth when
+something new comes to the light of day, and so if the most precious
+thing is to be gained, then death will stand close by life. But this we
+also know, that when death and life intertwine in this fashion, the fear
+of death vanishes away; in the intertwining, life only appears and full
+of life man goes through death and into death. It brings to my mind an
+old song, the powerful song of victory of our fathers:
+
+ It was a famous battle,
+ Fought 'twixt Life and Death;
+ Life came out the victor,
+ Triumphant over Death;
+ Already it was written
+ How one Death killed the other,
+ So making mock of Death!
+
+Death which is willingly met kills the great death and secures the
+higher life. Death makes us free. Thus spake Luther.
+
+Let me say a few words in closing. Before all of us there stands in time
+of crisis an image under which are the plain words: "He was faithful
+unto death, yea, even to death on the cross." Now the time for great
+faithfulness has come for us, for this obedience for which our neighbors
+in former times have ridiculed us, saying: "See, these are the faithful
+Germans, the men who do all on command and are so obedient!" Now they
+shall see that this great obedience was not mere discipline, but a
+matter of will. It was and still is discipline, but it is also will.
+They shall see that this great obedience is not pettiness and death, but
+power and life.
+
+From the east--I say it once more--the desert sands are sweeping down
+upon us; on the west we are opposed by old enemies and treacherous
+friends. When will the German be able to pray again, confessing:
+
+ God is the Orient,
+ God is the Occident;
+ Northernmost and Southern lands
+ Rest in peace beneath His hands.
+
+We shall hope that God may give us strength to make this true, not only
+for us but for all Europe.
+
+Until then, since we see the very springs of our higher life and our
+existence threatened, we shout: "Father, protect our springs of life and
+save us from the Huns."
+
+
+
+
+*A Reply to Prof. Harnack*
+
+*By Some British Theologians.*
+
+
+Prof. Harnack.
+
+Honored Sir: We, the undersigned, a group of theologians who owe more
+than we can express to you personally and to the great host of German
+teachers and leaders of thought, have noticed with pain a report of a
+speech recently delivered by you, in which you are said to have
+described the conduct of Great Britain in the present war as that of a
+traitor to civilization.
+
+We are quite sure that you could never have been betrayed into such a
+statement if you had been acquainted with the real motives which actuate
+the British Nation in the present crisis.
+
+Permit us, in the interests of a better understanding now and
+subsequently, to state to you the grounds on which we, whose obligations
+to Germany, personal and professional, are simply incalculable, have
+felt it our duty to support the British Government in its declaration of
+war against the land and people we love so well.
+
+We are not actuated by any preference for France over Germany--still
+less by any preference for Russia over Germany. The preference lies
+entirely the other way. Next to the peoples that speak the English
+tongue, there is no people in the world that stands so high in our
+affection and admiration as the people of Germany. Several of us have
+studied in German universities. Many of us have enjoyed warm personal
+friendship with your fellow-countrymen. All of us owe an immeasurable
+debt to German theology, philosophy, and literature. Our sympathies are
+in matters of the spirit so largely German that nothing but the very
+strongest reasons could ever lead us to contemplate the possibility of
+hostile relations between Great Britain and Germany.
+
+Nor have we the remotest sympathy with any desire to isolate Germany, or
+to restrict her legitimate expansion, commercial and colonial. We have
+borne resolute witness against the endeavor made by foes of Germany to
+foment anti-German suspicion and ill-will in the minds of our
+fellow-countrymen.
+
+
+*The Sanctity of Treaties.*
+
+But we recognize that all hopes of settled peace between the nations,
+and indeed of any civilized relations between the nations, rest on the
+maintenance inviolate of the sanctity of treaty obligations. We can
+never hope to put law for war if solemn international compacts can be
+torn up at the will of any power involved. These obligations are felt by
+us to be the more stringently binding in the case of guaranteed
+neutrality. For the steady extension of neutralization appears to us to
+be one of the surest ways of the progressive elimination of war from the
+face of the earth. All these considerations take on a more imperative
+cogency when the treaty rights of a small people are threatened by a
+great world power. We therefore believe that when Germany refused to
+respect the neutrality of Belgium, which she herself had guaranteed,
+Great Britain had no option, either in international law or in Christian
+ethics, but to defend the people of Belgium. The Imperial Chancellor of
+Germany has himself admitted, on Aug. 4, that the protest of the
+Luxembourg and Belgian Governments was "just," and that Germany was
+doing "wrong" and acting "contrary to the dictates of international
+law." His only excuse was "necessity"--which recalls our Milton's
+phrase, "necessity, the tyrant's plea." It has cost us all the deepest
+pain to find the Germany which we love so intensely committing this act
+of lawless aggression on a weak people, and a Christian nation becoming
+a mere army with army ethics. We loathe war of any kind. A war with
+Germany cuts us to the very quick. But we sincerely believe that Great
+Britain in this conflict is fighting for conscience, justice, Europe,
+humanity, and lasting peace.
+
+
+*Dictated Terms.*
+
+This conviction is deepened by the antecedents of the present unhappy
+war. In allowing her ally Austria to dictate terms to Servia which were
+quite incompatible with the independence of that little State, Germany
+gave proof of her disregard for the rights of smaller States. A similar
+disregard for the sovereign rights of greater States was shown in the
+demand that Russia should demobilize her forces. It was quite open to
+Germany to have answered Russia's mobilization with a
+counter-mobilization without resorting to war. Many other nations have
+mobilized to defend their frontiers without declaring war. Alike
+indirectly in regard to Servia and directly in regard to Russia, Germany
+was indisputably the aggressor. And this policy of lawless aggression
+became more nakedly manifest in the invasion of Belgium. Great Britain
+is not bound by any treaty rights to defend either Servia or Russia. But
+she is bound by the most sacred obligations to defend Belgium,
+obligations which France undertook to observe. We have been grieved to
+the heart to see in the successive acts of German policy a disregard of
+the liberties of States, small or great, which is the very negation of
+civilization. It is not our country that has incurred the odium of being
+a traitor to civilization or to the conscience of humanity.
+
+Doubtless you read the facts of the situation quite differently. You may
+think us entirely mistaken. But we desire to assure you, as
+fellow-Christians and fellow-theologians, that our motives are not open
+to the charge which has been made.
+
+We have been moved to approach you on this matter by our deep reverence
+for you and our high appreciation of the great services you have
+rendered to Christendom in general. We trust that you will receive what
+we have said in the spirit in which it was sent.
+
+We have the honor to be,
+
+Yours very sincerely,
+
+
+P.J. FORSYTH, M.A., D.D., Aberdeen University. Principal of Hackney
+College (Divinity School: University of London).
+
+HERBERT T. ANDREWS, B.A. Oxon. Professor of New Testament, Exegesis,
+Introduction and Criticism. New College, London (Divinity School:
+University of London).
+
+J. HERBERT DARLOW, M.A. Cambridge. Literary Superintendent of the
+British and Foreign Bible Society.
+
+JAMES R. GILLIES, M.A. Edinburgh, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church
+of England. Pastor of Hampstead Presbyterian Church, London.
+
+R. MACLEOD, Pastor of Frognal Presbyterian Church, London.
+
+W.M. MACPHAIL, M.A. Glasgow. General Secretary of the Presbyterian
+Church of England.
+
+RICHARD ROBERTS, Pastor of Crouch Hill Presbyterian Church, London.
+
+H.H. SCULLARD, M.A. Cambridge, M.A., D.D. London. Professor of
+Ecclesiastical History, Christian Ethics, and the History of Religions
+in New College (Divinity School: University of London).
+
+ALEX RAMSAY, M.A., B.D. Pastor of the Highgate Presbyterian Church,
+London.
+
+W.B. SELBIE, M.A., D.D. Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford. Chairman
+of the Congregational Union of England and Wales.
+
+J. HERBERT STEAD, M.A. Glasgow. Warden of the Robert Browning
+Settlement, London.
+
+
+
+
+*Prof. Harnack in Rebuttal*
+
+
+BERLIN, Sept. 10, 1914.
+
+Gentlemen: The words, "The conduct of Great Britain is that of a traitor
+to civilization," were not used by me, but you have expressed my general
+judgment of this conduct correctly. The sentence in question in my
+speech reads: "This, our culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in
+large part, yes, almost wholly, intrusted to three peoples: To us, to
+the Americans, and--to the English, I will say no more. I cover my
+head." To my deep sorrow I must, even after your communication, maintain
+this judgment.
+
+You claim that England has drawn and must draw the sword purely for the
+protection of the small nations of Servia and Belgium and for the sake
+of an international treaty. In this claim I see at the very least a
+fearful self-delusion.
+
+It is an actual fact that what Servia desired was that her Government
+should in no wise be mixed up with the shameful crime of Serajevo, and
+it is also an established fact that for years Servia, with the support
+of Russia, has attempted by the most despicable means to incite to
+rebellion the Austrian South Slavs. When Austria finally issued to her a
+decided ultimatum without making any actual attack on her territory, it
+was the duty of every civilized land--England as well--to keep hands
+off, for Austria's royal house, Austria's honor, and Austria's existence
+were attacked. Austria's yielding to Servia would mean the sovereignty
+of Russia in the eastern half of the Balkans, for Servia is nothing more
+than a Russian satrapy, and the Balkan federation brought about by
+Russia had for its ultimate purpose opposition to Austria. This is as
+well known in England as in Germany. If, gentlemen, in spite of this,
+you can presume to judge that in this circumstance it was purely a case
+of protecting the right of a small nation against a large one, I shall
+find great difficulty in believing in your good faith.
+
+
+*Against Pan-Slavism.*
+
+It was not a question of little Servia but of Austria's battle for life
+and the struggle of Western culture against Pan-Slavism. Servia is,
+after all, only an outpost of Russia and as opposed to this nation,
+Servia's "sovereignty" is less than a mere shadow; in fact it can hardly
+be protected by England, for in reality it does not exist. For in
+addition Servia, through the most dastardly murder known to history,
+struck her name from the list of the nations with which one does
+business as equals. What would England have done had the Prince of Wales
+been assassinated by the emissary of a little nation which had
+continually been inciting the Irish to revolt? Would it have issued a
+milder ultimatum than Austria's? But of all this you say not a word in
+your communication, but instead persist on seeing in the situation into
+which Servia and Russia have brought Austria, only the necessity of an
+oppressed little country to whose help haste must be made! Thus to judge
+would be more than blindness, indeed, it would be a crime that cries
+unto heaven, were it not known that the life problems of other great
+powers do not exist for Great Britain, because she is only concerned
+about her own life problems and those of little nations whose support
+can be useful to her.
+
+At bottom Servia is of as little consequence to you as to us. Austria,
+too, is of no consequence to you; and you realize that Austria had the
+right to punish Servia. But because Germany, who stands behind Austria,
+is to be struck; therefore Servia is the guiltless little State which
+must be spared! What is the result? Great Britain sides with Russia
+against Germany. What does that mean? That means that Great Britain has
+torn down the dike which has protected West Europe and its culture from
+the desert sands of the Asiatic barbarism of Russia and of Pan-Slavism.
+Now we Germans are forced to stop up the breach with our bodies. We
+shall do it amid streams of blood, and we shall hold out there. We must
+hold out, for we are protecting the labor of thousands of years for all
+of Europe, and for Great Britain! But that day when Great Britain tore
+down the dam will never be forgotten in the history of the world, and
+history's judgment shall read: On that day when Russian-Asiatic power
+rushed down upon the culture of Europe Great Britain declared that she
+must side with Russia because "the sovereignty of the murderer-nation
+Servia had been violated!"
+
+
+*As to Neutrality.*
+
+But no, the maintenance of Servians sovereignty is not according to your
+communication the first, but only the second reason for Great Britain's
+declaration of war against us. The first reason is our violation of
+Belgian neutrality; "Germany broke a treaty which she herself had
+guaranteed." Shall I remind you how Great Britain has disported herself
+in the matter of treaties and pleasant promises? How about Egypt for
+example? But I do not need to go into these flagrant and repeated
+violations of treaty rights, for a still more serious violation of the
+rights of a people stands today on your books against you; it has been
+proved that your army is making use of dumdum bullets and thereby
+turning a decent war into the most bloody butchery. In this Great
+Britain has severed herself from every right to complain about the
+violation of the rights of a people.
+
+But aside from that--in your communication you have again emphasized the
+main point. We did not declare war against Belgium, but we declared that
+since Russia and France compelled us to wage a war with two fronts
+(190,000,000 against 68,000,000) we had then to suffer defeat if we
+could not march through Belgium; that we should do that but that we
+should carefully keep from harming Belgium in any way and would
+indemnify all damage incurred--our hand upon it! Would Great Britain,
+had she been in our position, have hesitated a moment to do likewise?
+And would Great Britain have drawn the sword for us if France had
+violated the neutrality of Belgium by marching through it? You know well
+enough that both these questions must be answered in the negative.
+
+Our Imperial Chancellor has with his characteristic conscientiousness
+declared that we have on our side committed a certain wrong. I cannot
+agree with him in this judgment, and I cannot even recognize the
+commission of a formal wrong, for we were in a situation where
+formalities no longer obtain, and where moral duties only prevail. When
+David, in the extremity of his need, took the show-bread from the Table
+of the Lord, he was in every sense of the word justified, for the letter
+of the law ceased at that moment to exist. It is as well known to you as
+to me that there is a law of necessity which breaks iron asunder, to say
+nothing of treaties.
+
+Appreciate our position! Prove to me that Germany has flippantly
+constructed a law of necessity; prove it to me in this hour, when your
+country has gone over to our enemies, and we have half the world to
+fight. You cannot do that; you could not do it on the 4th of August, and
+consequently you have assumed the most miserable of pretexts, because
+you wished to destroy us. From your letter, gentlemen, I must believe
+that you are far from holding this view; but do you believe, and would
+you really try to make me believe, that your statesmen would have
+declared war against us only because we were determined to march through
+Belgium? You could not consider them so foolish and so flippant.
+
+
+*An Earlier Treachery.*
+
+But I am not yet at an end. It is not we who have first violated the
+neutrality of Belgium. Belgium, as we feared and as we now, informed by
+the actual facts, see still more clearly, was for a long time in
+alliance with France and--with you. France's airmen were flying over
+Belgium before we marched in; negotiations with France had already taken
+place, and in Maubeuge there was found an arsenal full of English
+munitions which had been stationed there before the declaration of war.
+This arsenal--you know where Maubeuge is situated!--points to agreements
+which Great Britain had made with France, and to which Belgium was also
+party. These agreements are before the whole world today, for the chain
+of evidence is complete and the treacherous plot of Great Britain is
+revealed. She has encouraged and pledged the Belgians against us, and
+therefore it is she who must answer for all the misery which has been
+visited upon that poor country. Had it been our responsibility, not a
+single hair of a Belgian's head should have been harmed. If, then, the
+Belgian wrongs like those of Servia are only the flimsiest pretexts for
+Great Britain's declaration of war against us, there remains,
+unfortunately, no other reason for this declaration of war save the
+intention of your statesmen either to destroy us or so to weaken us that
+Great Britain will rule supreme on the seas and in all distant parts of
+the world. This intention you personally deny and thus far I must take
+your word for it. But do you deny it also for your Government? That you
+cannot do, for the facts have been brought to light; when Great Britain
+determined to join the coalition of Russia with France, which is ruled
+by Russia, when it put aside all the differences that stood between her
+and Russia, when it set upon us not only the hordes of Russia but the
+scrupulous Japanese, "the yellow peril," and called upon all Europe,
+when it also sunk in the ocean its duties to European culture--for all
+of that there is but one explanation: England believes that the hour for
+our destruction has struck. Why does she wish to destroy us? Because she
+will not endure our power, our zeal, our perfection of growth! There is
+no other explanation!
+
+
+*Lifting Humanity.*
+
+We and Great Britain in alliance with America were able in peaceful
+co-operation to lift humanity to a higher plane, and to lead the world
+in peace, allowing to each his rights. We Germans, now know no, and have
+never known any, higher ideal than this. In order to realize this ideal
+the German Kaiser and the German people have made many sacrifices in the
+past 43 years. In proportion to the development of our strength, we
+should be able to lay claim to more territory than we now possess in the
+world. But we have never attempted to force this claim. We held that the
+strength of our nation should be in its zeal and in the peaceful fruits
+of that zeal. Great Britain has begrudged us that; she has been jealous
+of our powers, jealous of our fleet, jealous of our industries and our
+commerce, and jealousy is the root of all evil. Jealousy it is which has
+driven Great Britain into the most fearful war which history knows and
+the end of which is unforseen.
+
+What course is open to you, gentlemen, once you are enlightened as to
+the policy of your country? In the name of our Christian culture, which
+your Government has frivolously placed in jeopardy, I can offer you but
+one counsel: To burden your consciences no longer with Servia and
+Belgium, which you must protect, but to face about and stop your
+Government in its headlong course; it may not be too late. As far as we
+Germans are concerned, our way is clearly indicated, though not so our
+fate. Should we fall, which God and our strong arm prevent, then there
+sinks with us to its grave all the higher culture of our part of the
+world, whose defenders we were called to be; for neither with Russia nor
+against Russia will Great Britain be able longer to maintain that
+culture in Europe. Should we conquer--and victory is for us something
+more than mere hope--then shall we feel ourselves responsible, as
+formerly, for this culture, for the learning and the peace of Europe,
+and shall put from us any idea of setting up a hegemony in Europe. We
+shall stand by the one who, together in fraternal union with us, will
+create and maintain such a peaceful Europe.
+
+For the continuation of your cordial attitude toward me I am personally
+grateful. I would not unnecessarily sever the bond which holds me to the
+upright Christians and the learning of your country, but at the present
+moment this bond has no value for me.
+
+PROF. VON HARNACK.
+
+
+P.S.--It is in your power now to wage a battle which would be of honor
+to you. As a fourth great power arrayed against Germany, the lying
+international press has raised itself up, flooded the world with lies
+about our splendid and upright army, and slandered everything that is
+German. We have been almost entirely cut off from any possibility of
+protecting ourselves against this "beast of the pit." Do not believe the
+lies, and spread abroad the truth about us. We are today no different
+than Carlyle pictured us to you. HARNACK.
+
+
+
+
+*The Causes of the War*
+
+*By Theodore Niemeyer*
+
+ _Theodore Niemeyer, Kaiser Wilhelm Exchange Professor at Columbia
+ University for 1914-15, and well-known Professor of Kiel
+ University, has addressed the following letter to the editor of The
+ New Yorker Staats-Zeitung._
+
+
+KIEL, 14th August, 1914.
+
+_To the Editor of the New Yorker Staats-Zeitung_:
+
+Dear Sir: English papers publish a telegram from Mr. Andrew Carnegie, in
+which the view is expressed that the German Emperor, "in declining to
+take part In the peace conference proposed by Sir Edward Grey, an
+advocate of peace," proved unfaithful to that love of peace which he has
+shown during the past twenty-five years--that he, on the contrary, has
+taken up the rôle of a disturber of the peace of Europe.
+
+To the best of my knowledge, the German press has only referred to this
+telegram with the simple remark that intelligence of the real state of
+affairs has evidently not yet reached the ears of the sender of the
+telegram.
+
+This attitude of the German press is in conformity with its firm
+consciousness of the justice of its cause and its confidence in the
+ultimate triumph of truth. Both in this consciousness and in this
+confidence I will not be surpassed by any one, but to observe silence in
+the face of such accusations is beyond my power. To allow such a
+misconstruction to pass unchallenged through the world seems to me (and
+doubtless to many thousands besides me) unbearable.
+
+The misunderstanding about the Peace Conference is easily put right. Sir
+Edward Grey did not propose any peace conference at all, but a
+conference of the Ambassadors of those four powers which were at that
+time not directly concerned, namely Germany, England, France, and Italy.
+These powers were to attempt to exert their influence on Austria-Hungary
+and Russia in the same way as the Ambassador's Conference (or rather
+Ambassadorial Reunion) in London had done, in 1912 and 1913, on the
+Balkan States and Turkey. What the united six powers at that time
+undertook toward the Balkan States was now to be done by
+four--discordant--powers upon two others who are in a state of highest
+political tension. To this proposal Germany replied that the apparatus
+of an Ambassadorial Conference does not work quickly or effectually
+enough for the emergency of the moment, or to be able to ease the tense
+political situation.
+
+
+*The Kaiser's Efforts.*
+
+In place of this, however, the German Emperor undertook to negotiate in
+person with the Russian and Austrian monarch and was overwhelmed with
+grief when the leaders of Muscovite policy frustrated all his exertions
+by completely ignoring his efforts for peace, (made at the express
+desire of the Czar,) and then in real earnest amassing Russian forces on
+the German frontier, evidently resolved to force on a war under any
+circumstances--even against the will of the Czar.
+
+It is here that the clue to all the terrible events of the present day
+is to be found.
+
+The incessant intriguing of the Russian military party for many years
+past has at last succeeded in drawing first France and then England to
+their cause, by turning the mistrust, the dread of competition, the
+hopes of revenge, and the ever-increasing armaments to their use with
+incomparable skill. The task was facilitated by Germany's industrial
+up-growth, which--in willful misconstruction of the truths of the laws
+of international communities--has been represented as a calamity for
+other States.
+
+
+*England's Growing Friendship.*
+
+In quite recent times people in England began to recognize this
+misconstruction of facts as such. They began to understand that
+friendship with Germany might be a blessing and that in this way peace
+would be possible. This, however, meant the possibility of the Muscovite
+policy being completely frustrated. An Anglo-German understanding seemed
+already to be shaking the very foundations of the Triple Entente. Russia
+had been obliged during the two Balkan wars (the London Ambassadorial
+Conference was in fact the clearing house for this) to make important
+concessions to the detriment of her protégés, Servia and Montenegro, in
+order to retain the friendship of England, which ardently strove for
+peace. Now, however, it was highest time for Russia to pocket her gains;
+for the English people were slowly beginning to realize that in St.
+Petersburg they were trying to engage England in the cause of
+Pan-Slavism. The unnatural alliance was becoming more and more unpopular
+from day to day. How long would it be before Russia lost England's help
+forever?
+
+Before this took place Russia must bring about a European war. The iron,
+which had been prepared with the help of the English military party, had
+to be forged, for never again would there be a moment so favorable for
+the complete destruction of Austria and the humiliation of Germany.
+Servia was thrust to the front. Russia's Ambassador managed that
+wonderfully. The fire was set in so skillful a manner that the
+incendiaries knew in advance there was no possibility of extinguishing
+it. The conflagration must spread and soon blaze in all corners of
+Europe.
+
+What was the use of a Peace Conference in such circumstances? Conscious
+of the irresistible consequences of their action the real rulers of
+Russia sent forward their armies; it was now or never, if the work was
+to be done with the help of England. And without England perhaps even
+France would not consent to join.
+
+Thus it came about, and thus we have seen the peaceful policy of the
+German Emperor, which he has upheld for twenty-five years, completely
+wrecked.
+
+We are now fighting not only for our Fatherland, but also for the
+emancipation of our culture from a menace that has become insupportable.
+
+Yours faithfully,
+
+TH. NIEMEYER,
+
+Kaiser Wilhelm Professor, Columbia University.
+
+
+
+
+*Comment by Dr. Max Walter*
+
+
+To the letter addressed by Prof. Th. Niemeyer to the editor of The New
+Yorker Staats-Zeitung (see No. 237, 3, 2, of Frankfurter Zeitung) I
+should like to add the following remarks: During my activity as
+Professor of the Methodics of Foreign Language Teaching at Teachers
+College, Columbia University, New York, (January-June, 1911,) I was
+introduced to Mr. Andrew Carnegie, with whom I had a long interview. He
+expressed his views upon the peace question and arbitration, and spoke
+for a long time about the German Emperor who had repeatedly received him
+during his visits to Germany. He expressed his great appreciation of the
+important services rendered by our Emperor for the maintenance of peace,
+and declared that he, above all others, deserved the title of the
+Peace-loving Monarch, (Friedensfürst.) To him it was chiefly due that,
+during the various crises which had repeatedly brought Europe to the
+brink of war, the disaster had again and again been averted. The German
+Emperor, he considered, looked upon it as his chief pride that no war
+should take place during his reign, that Germany should develop and
+prosper in peaceful emulation with other countries, and his greatest
+desire was that other nations should recognize ungrudgingly that all
+Germany did to raise the moral and ethical standard of mankind was for
+the benefit of all.
+
+If now Carnegie has really declared, as this letter maintains, that he
+considers the German Emperor the "Disturber of Peace," it shows clearly
+how baleful the influence of the English press has been--that it could
+shake such a firm conviction in our Emperor's love of peace. Let us hope
+that this letter of Prof. Niemeyer's and other explanations to the same
+effect will induce him to recognize the horrible misrepresentations of
+English papers and to return to his former conviction.
+
+It was on this occasion, too, that Andrew Carnegie indorsed Prof.
+Burgess's view, that the three nations--America, Germany, and
+England--should unite, and then they would be able to keep the peace of
+the world. When I expressed my doubts in the real friendship of England,
+he replied, then America and Germany, at least, must hold together to
+secure universal peace. Hitherto I have refrained from publishing this
+interview, but now I consider it my duty to make known the views that
+Carnegie once held, and to which, if he has really changed them, we may
+hope he, who has done so much in his noble striving after peace, will
+return right away.
+
+If there should remain the least doubt in Mr. Andrew Carnegie's mind, he
+has only to read the telegrams exchanged between the Emperor William and
+the Czar on the one hand, and King George and the Emperor on the other.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of New York Times, Current History, Vol
+1, Issue 1, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13635 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13635 ***</div>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src='images/thenewyorktimes.jpg' height='60' alt='The New York Times'
+ title='The New York Times' />
+ </center>
+ <h1>CURRENT HISTORY</h1>
+ <h3>A MONTHLY MAGAZINE</h3>
+ <h2>THE EUROPEAN WAR</h2>
+ <h2>VOLUME I.</h2>
+ <h3>From the Beginning to March, 1915</h3>
+ <h4>With Index</h4>
+ <center>
+ <img src='images/logo.jpg' height='60' alt='The New York Times Logo'
+ title='The New York Times Logo' />
+ </center>
+ <h4>NEW YORK<br />
+ THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY<br />
+ 1915</h4>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <h4>Copyright 1914, 1915,<br />
+ By The New York Times Company</h4>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <table align='center' border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='2'
+ summary='Table of contents'>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h3>NUMBER I.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>WHAT MEN OF LETTERS SAY</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left' width='90%'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='left' width='10%'>Page</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>COMMON SENSE ABOUT THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page11">11</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Bernard Shaw</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SHAW'S NONSENSE ABOUT BELGIUM</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page60">60</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Arnold Bennett</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BENNETT STATES THE GERMAN CASE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page63">63</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Bernard Shaw</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FLAWS IN SHAW'S LOGIC</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page65">65</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Cunninghame Graham</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>EDITORIAL COMMENT ON SHAW</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page66">66</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SHAW EMPTY OF GOOD SENSE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page68">68</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Christabel Pankhurst</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>COMMENT BY READING OF SHAW</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page73">73</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT WILSON</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page76">76</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Bernard Shaw</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A GERMAN LETTER TO G. BERNARD SHAW</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page80">80</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Herbert Eulenberg</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BRITISH AUTHORS DEFEND ENGLAND'S WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page82">82</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>With Facsimile Signatures</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FOURTH OF AUGUST--EUROPE AT WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page87">87</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H. G. Wells</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>IF THE GERMANS RAID ENGLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page89">89</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H. G. Wells</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SIR OLIVER LODGE'S COMMENT</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page92">92</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHAT THE GERMAN CONSCRIPT THINKS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page93">93</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Arnold Bennett</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FELIX ADLER'S COMMENT</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page95">95</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHEN PEACE IS SERIOUSLY DESIRED</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page97">97</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Arnold Bennett</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BARRIE AT BAY: WHICH WAS BROWN?</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page100">100</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>An Interview on the War</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A CREDO FOR KEEPING FAITH</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page102">102</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Galsworthy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HARD BLOWS, NOT HARD WORDS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page103">103</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Jerome K. Jerome</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"AS THEY TESTED OUR FATHERS"</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page106">106</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Rudyard Kipling</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>KIPLING AND "THE TRUCE OF THE BEAR"</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page107">107</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ON THE IMPENDING CRISIS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page107">107</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Norman Angell</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHY ENGLAND CAME TO BE IN IT</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page108">108</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Gilbert K. Chesterton</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SOUTH AFRICA'S BOERS AND BRITONS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page125">125</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H. Rider Haggard</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CAPT. MARK HAGGARD'S DEATH IN BATTLE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page128">128</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H. Rider Haggard</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AN ANTI-CHRISTIAN WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page129">129</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Robert Bridges</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ENGLISH ARTISTS' PROTEST</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page130">130</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO ARMS!</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page132">132</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CONAN DOYLE ON BRITISH MILITARISM</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page140">140</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE NEED OF BEING MERCILESS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page144">144</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Maurice Maeterlinck</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LETTERS TO DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page146">146</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE VITAL ENERGIES OF FRANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page153">153</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Henri Bergson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FRANCE THROUGH ENGLISH EYES</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page153">153</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>With Rene Bazin's Appreciation</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SOLDIER OF 1914</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page156">156</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Rene Doumic</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY'S CIVILIZED BARBARISM</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page160">160</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Emile Boutroux</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE GERMAN RELIGION OF DUTY</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page170">170</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Gabriele Reuter</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A LETTER TO GERHART HAUPTMANN</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page174">174</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Romain Rolland</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A REPLY TO ROLLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page175">175</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Gerhart Hauptmann</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ANOTHER REPLY TO ROLLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page176">176</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Karl Wolfskehl</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ARE WE BARBARIANS?</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page178">178</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Gerhart Hauptmann</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO AMERICANS FROM A GERMAN FRIEND</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page180">180</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Ludwig Fulda</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>APPEAL TO THE CIVILIZED WORLD</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page185">185</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Professors of Germany</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>APPEAL OF THE GERMAN UNIVERSITIES</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page187">187</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>REPLY TO THE GERMAN PROFESSORS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page188">188</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By British Scholars</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CONCERNING THE GERMAN PROFESSORS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page192">192</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Frederic Harrison</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE REPLY FROM FRANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page194">194</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By M. Yves Guyot and Prof Bellet</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO AMERICANS IN GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page198">198</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Prof. Adolf von Harnack</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A REPLY TO PROF. HARNACK</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page201">201</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Some British Theologians</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PROF. HARNACK IN REBUTTAL</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page203">203</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE CAUSES OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page206">206</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Theodore Niemeyer</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>COMMENT BY DR. MAX WALTER</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page208">208</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER II.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>WHO BEGAN THE WAR AND WHY?</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SPEECHES BY KAISER WILHELM II.</td>
+ <td align='left'>210</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE MIGHTY FATE OF EUROPE</td>
+ <td align='left'>219</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>As Interpreted by Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg, German
+ Imperial Chancellor.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AUSTRIA-HUNGARY'S VERSION OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>226</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Kaiser Frawz Josef and Count Berchtold</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A GERMAN REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>228</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Certified by Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, German ex-Colonial
+ Secretary</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"TRUTH ABOUT GERMANY"</td>
+ <td align='left'>244</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Attested by Thirty-four German Dignitaries</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SPECULATIONS ABOUT PEACE, SEPTEMBER, 1914</td>
+ <td align='left'>273</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Report by James W. Gerard, American Ambassador at Berlin, to
+ President Wilson.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FIRST WARNINGS OF EUROPE'S PERIL</td>
+ <td align='left'>277</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Speeches by British Ministers</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GREAT BRITAIN'S MOBILIZATION</td>
+ <td align='left'>294</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Measures Taken Throughout the Empire Upon the Outbreak of
+ War</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SUMMONS OF THE NATION TO ARMS</td>
+ <td align='left'>308</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>British People Roused by Their Leaders</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TEACHINGS OF GEN. VON BERNHARDI</td>
+ <td align='left'>343</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Viscount Bryce</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ENTRANCE OF FRANCE INTO THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>350</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By President Poincare and Premier Viviani</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIA TO HER ENEMY</td>
+ <td align='left'>358</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"THE FACTS ABOUT BELGIUM"</td>
+ <td align='left'>365</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Statement Issued by the Belgian Legation at
+ Washington</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BELGO-BRITISH PLOT ALLEGED BY GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'>369</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Statement Issued by German Embassy at Washington, Oct.
+ 13.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ATROCITIES OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>374</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BOMBARDMENT OF RHEIMS CATHEDRAL</td>
+ <td align='left'>392</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Protest Issued to Neutral Powers from French Foreign Office,
+ Bordeaux, Sept. 21.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SOCIALISTS' PART</td>
+ <td align='left'>397</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER III.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>WHAT AMERICANS SAY TO EUROPE</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CIVILIZATION</td>
+ <td align='left'>413</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Argued by James M. Beck</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CRITICS DISPUTE MR. BECK</td>
+ <td align='left'>431</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>DEFENSE OF THE DUAL ALLIANCE--REPLY</td>
+ <td align='left'>438</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Dr. Edmund von Mach</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHAT GLADSTONE SAID ABOUT BELGIUM</td>
+ <td align='left'>448</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Louis Beer</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FIGHT TO THE BITTER END</td>
+ <td align='left'>451</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>An Interview with Andrew Carnegie</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WOMAN AND WAR--"Shot, Tell His Mother" (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>458</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By W.E.P. French, Captain, U.S. Army</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE WAY TO PEACE</td>
+ <td align='left'>459</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>An Interview with Jacob H. Schiff</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PROF. MATHER ON MR. SCHIFF</td>
+ <td align='left'>464</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE ELIOT-SCHIFF LETTERS</td>
+ <td align='left'>465</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Jacob H. Schiff and Charles W. Eliot</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LA CATHEDRALE (Poem Translated by Frances C. Fay)</td>
+ <td align='left'>472</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Edmond Rostand</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PROBABLE CAUSES AND OUTCOME OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>473</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Series of Five Letters by Charles W. Eliot, with Related
+ Correspondence</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE LORD OF HOSTS (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>501</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Joseph B. Gilder</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A WAR OF DISHONOR</td>
+ <td align='left'>502</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By David Starr Jordan</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>MIGHT OR RIGHT</td>
+ <td align='left'>503</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Grier Hibben</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>JEANNE D'ARC--1914 (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>506</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Alma Durant Nicholson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE KAISER AND BELGIUM (With controversial letters)</td>
+ <td align='left'>507</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John W. Burgess</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AMERICA'S PERIL IN JUDGING GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'>515</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William M. Sloane</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>POSSIBLE PROFITS FROM WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>526</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Interview with Franklin H. Giddings</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"TO AMERICANS LEAVING GERMANY"</td>
+ <td align='left'>533</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>A German Circular</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN DECLARATIONS</td>
+ <td align='left'>534</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Rudolf Eucken and Ernst Haeckel</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE EUCKEN AND HAECKEL CHARGES</td>
+ <td align='left'>537</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Warbeke</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CONCERNING GERMAN CULTURE</td>
+ <td align='left'>541</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Brander Matthews</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CULTURE VS. KULTUR</td>
+ <td align='left'>543</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Frank Jewett Mather, Jr.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE TRESPASS IN BELGIUM</td>
+ <td align='left'>545</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Grier Hibben</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>APPORTIONING THE BLAME</td>
+ <td align='left'>548</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Arthur v. Briesen</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PARTING (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>553</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Louise von Wetter</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FRENCH HATE AND ENGLISH JEALOUSY</td>
+ <td align='left'>554</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Kuno Francke</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>IN DEFENSE OF AUSTRIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>559</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Baron L. Hengelmuller</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIAN ATROCITIES</td>
+ <td align='left'>563</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Haven Putnam</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"THE UNITED STATES OF EUROPE"</td>
+ <td align='left'>565</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Interview with Nicholas Murray Butler</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A NEW WORLD MAP</td>
+ <td align='left'>571</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Wilhelm Ostwald</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE VERDICT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE</td>
+ <td align='left'>573</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Newell Dwight Hillis</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TIPPERARY (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>581</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John B. Kennedy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AS AMERICA SEES THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>582</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Harold Begbie</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO MELOS, POMEGRANATE ISLE (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>587</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Grace Harriet Macurdy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHAT AMERICA CAN DO</td>
+ <td align='left'>588</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Lord Channing of Wellingborough</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO A COUSIN GERMAN (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>593</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Adeline Adams</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHAT THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS MAY BE</td>
+ <td align='left'>594</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Irving Fisher</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>EFFECTS OF WAR ON AMERICA</td>
+ <td align='left'>600</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Roland G. Usher</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY OF THE FUTURE</td>
+ <td align='left'>605</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Interview with M. de Lapredelle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY THE AGGRESSOR</td>
+ <td align='left'>609</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Albert Sauveur</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>MILITARISM AND CHRISTIANITY</td>
+ <td align='left'>610</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Lyman Abbott</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>VIGIL (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>612</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Hortense Flexner</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>NIETZSCHE AND GERMAN CULTURE</td>
+ <td align='left'>613</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Abraham Solomon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BELGIUM'S BITTER NEED</td>
+ <td align='left'>614</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sir Gilbert Parker</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER IV.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>THE WAR AT CLOSE QUARTERS</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SIR JOHN FRENCH'S OWN STORY</td>
+ <td align='left'>619</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Famous Dispatches of the British Commander in Chief to Lord
+ Kitchener</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>STORY OF THE "EYE WITNESS"</td>
+ <td align='left'>650</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Col. E.D. Swinton of the Intelligence Department of the
+ British General Staff</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE DAWN OF A NEW DAY (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>678</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Edward Neville Vose</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE GERMAN ENTRY INTO BRUSSELS (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>679</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Boon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FALL OF ANTWERP</td>
+ <td align='left'>682</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AS THE FRENCH FELL BACK ON PARIS</td>
+ <td align='left'>689</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By G. H. Perris</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE RETREAT TO PARIS</td>
+ <td align='left'>691</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Philip Gibbs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A ZOUAVE'S STORY</td>
+ <td align='left'>704</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Philip Gibbs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHEN WAR BURST ON ARRAS</td>
+ <td align='left'>707</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Special Correspondent</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BATTLES IN BELGIUM (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>711</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SEEKING WOUNDED ON BATTLE FRONT</td>
+ <td align='left'>714</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Philip Gibbs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AT THE KAISER'S HEADQUARTERS</td>
+ <td align='left'>718</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Cyril Brown of The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW THE BELGIANS FIGHT</td>
+ <td align='left'>725</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily News</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A VISIT TO THE FIRING LINE IN FRANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>727</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>UNBURIED DEAD STREW LORRAINE (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>729</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Philip Gibbs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ALONG THE GERMAN LINES NEAR METZ</td>
+ <td align='left'>731</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SLAUGHTER IN ALSACE</td>
+ <td align='left'>736</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John H. Cox</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RENNENKAMPF ON THE RUSSIAN BORDER</td>
+ <td align='left'>738</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FIRST FIGHT AT LODZ (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>740</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Perceval Gibbon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FIRST INVASION OF SERBIA (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>742</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Standard</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE ATTACK ON TSING-TAU</td>
+ <td align='left'>745</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Jefferson Jones</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE GERMAN ATTACK ON TAHITI</td>
+ <td align='left'>748</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>As Told by Miss Geni La France, an Eyewitness</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BLOODLESS CAPTURE OF GERMAN SAMOA</td>
+ <td align='left'>749</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Malcolm Ross, F.R.G.S.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW THE CRESSY SANK</td>
+ <td align='left'>752</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Edgar Rowan</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN STORY OF THE HELIGOLAND FIGHT</td>
+ <td align='left'>754</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Special Correspondent of The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SINKING OF THE CRESSY AND THE HOGUE</td>
+ <td align='left'>755</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By the Senior Surviving Officers, Commander Bertram W.L.
+ Nicholson and</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>Commander Reginald A. Norton</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SINKING OF THE HAWKE</td>
+ <td align='left'>757</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE EMDEN'S LAST FIGHT</td>
+ <td align='left'>758</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By the Cable Operator at Cocos Islands</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CROWDS SEE THE NIGER SINK</td>
+ <td align='left'>760</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LIEUTENANT WEDDIGEN'S OWN STORY</td>
+ <td align='left'>762</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Herbert B. Swope and Capt. Lieut. Otto Weddigen</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SOLILOQUY OF AN OLD SOLDIER (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>764</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By O.C.A. Child</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE EFFECTS OF WAR IN FOUR COUNTRIES</td>
+ <td align='left'>765</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Irvin S. Cobb</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW PARIS DROPPED GAYETY</td>
+ <td align='left'>767</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Anne Rittenhouse</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PARIS IN OCTOBER</td>
+ <td align='left'>770</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The London Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FRANCE AND ENGLAND AS SEEN IN WAR TIME</td>
+ <td align='left'>772</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Interview with F. Hopkinson Smith</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE HELPLESS VICTIMS</td>
+ <td align='left'>776</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Mrs. Nina Larrey Duryee</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A NEW RUSSIA MEETS GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'>777</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Perceval Gibbon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BELGIAN CITIES GERMANIZED</td>
+ <td align='left'>780</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Cyril Brown of The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BELGIAN RUIN</td>
+ <td align='left'>786</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By J.H. Whitehouse, M.P.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE WOUNDED SERB</td>
+ <td align='left'>788</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The London Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SPY ORGANIZATION IN ENGLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'>790</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>British Home Office Communication</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>793</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE MEN OF THE EMDEN (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>816</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Thomas R. Ybarra</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER V.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>THE NEW RUSSIA SPEAKS</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AN APPEAL BY RUSSIAN AUTHORS, ARTISTS AND ACTORS</td>
+ <td align='left'>817</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>With Their Signatures</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIA IN LITERATURE</td>
+ <td align='left'>819</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By British Men of Letters</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIA AND EUROPE'S WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>821</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Paul Vinogradoff</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIAN APPEAL FOR THE POLES</td>
+ <td align='left'>825</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By A. Konovalov of the Russian Duma</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>I AM FOR PEACE (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>826</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Lurana Sheldon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>UNITED RUSSIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>827</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Peter Struve</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PRINCE TRUBETSKOI'S APPEAL TO RUSSIANS</td>
+ <td align='left'>830</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>To Help the Polish Victims of War</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW PROHIBITION CAME TO RUSSIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>831</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>An Interview with the Reformer Tchelisheff</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>INFLUENCE OF THE WAR UPON RUSSIAN INDUSTRY</td>
+ <td align='left'>834</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By the Russian Ministry of Commerce</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>DECLARATION OF THE RUSSIAN INDUSTRIAL INTERESTS</td>
+ <td align='left'>835</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A RUSSIAN FINANCIAL AUTHORITY ON THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>836</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Prof. Migoulin</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PROPOSED INTERNAL LOANS OF RUSSIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>837</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>(<i>Prof. Migoulin's Plan</i>)</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW RUSSIAN MANUFACTURERS FEEL</td>
+ <td align='left'>838</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Digested from Russkia Vedomosti</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>NEW SOURCES OF REVENUE NEEDED</td>
+ <td align='left'>839</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By A. Sokolov</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>OUR RUSSIAN ALLY</td>
+ <td align='left'>840</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CONFISCATION OF GERMAN PATENTS</td>
+ <td align='left'>849</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By the Russian Ministry of Commerce</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A RUSSIAN INCOME TAX</td>
+ <td align='left'>850</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Proposed by the Ministry of Finance</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TOOLS OF THE RUSSIAN JUGGERNAUT</td>
+ <td align='left'>851</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By M.J. Bonn</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FATE OF THE JEWS IN POLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'>854</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Georg Brandes</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>COMMERCIAL TREATIES AFTER THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>863</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By P. Maslov</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PHOTOGRAPHIC REVIEW OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>865</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>48 War Pictures Printed in Rotogravure</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PATRIOTISM AND ENDURANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>913</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>The Pastoral Letter of Cardinal D.J. Mercier, Archbishop of
+ Malines</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>APPEAL TO AMERICA FOR BELGIUM (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>924</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Thomas Hardy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WITH THE GERMAN ARMY</td>
+ <td align='left'>925</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Cyril Brown</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>STORY OF THE MAN WHO FIRED ON RHEIMS CATHEDRAL</td>
+ <td align='left'>928</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RICHARD HARDING DAVIS'S COMMENT</td>
+ <td align='left'>931</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE GERMAN AIRMEN</td>
+ <td align='left'>932</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN GENERALS TALK OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>934</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SWIFT REVERSAL TO BARBARISM</td>
+ <td align='left'>939</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Vance Thompson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CIVIL LIFE IN BERLIN</td>
+ <td align='left'>943</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The London Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BELGIAN BOY TELLS STORY OF AERSCHOT</td>
+ <td align='left'>945</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE NEUTRALS (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>948</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Beatrice Barry</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FIFTEEN MINUTES ON THE YSER</td>
+ <td align='left'>949</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SEEING NIEUPORT UNDER SHELL FIRE</td>
+ <td align='left'>951</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RAID ON SCARBOROUGH SEEN FROM A WINDOW</td>
+ <td align='left'>954</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Ruth Kauffmann</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW THE BARONESS HID HER HUSBAND ON A VESSEL</td>
+ <td align='left'>956</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WARSAW SWAMPED WITH REFUGEES</td>
+ <td align='left'>957</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H.W. Bodkinson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AFTER THE RUSSIAN ADVANCE IN GALICIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>958</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The London Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>OFFICER IN BATTLE HAD LITTLE FEELING</td>
+ <td align='left'>959</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BATTLE OF NEW YEAR'S DAY</td>
+ <td align='left'>961</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Perceval Gibbon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BASS'S STORY</td>
+ <td align='left'>963</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE WASTE OF GERMAN LIVES</td>
+ <td align='left'>964</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Perceval Gibbon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FLIGHT INTO SWITZERLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'>966</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Ethel Therese Hugh</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ONCE FAIR BELGRADE IS A SKELETON CITY</td>
+ <td align='left'>969</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LETTERS AND DIARIES</td>
+ <td align='left'>971</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>A Group of Soldiers' Letters</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"CHANT OF HATE AGAINST ENGLAND"</td>
+ <td align='left'>984</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>How Ernst Lissauer's Lines were "Sung to Pieces" in
+ Germany</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ANSWERING THE "CHANT OF HATE"</td>
+ <td align='left'>988</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Beatrice M. Barry</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ENGLAND CAUSED THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>989</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By T. von Bethmann-Hollweg, German Imperial
+ Chancellor</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A SONG OF THE SIEGE GUN (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>992</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Katharine Drayton Mayrant Simons, Jr.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHY ENGLAND FIGHTS GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'>993</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Hilaire Belloc</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AT THE VILLA ACHILLEION, CORFU (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>999</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H.T. Sudduth</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY'S STRATEGIC RAILWAYS (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1000</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Walter Littlefield</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GLORY OF WAR (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1004</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Adeline Adams</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>1007</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER VI.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>THE CALDRON OF THE BALKANS</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW TURKEY WENT TO WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>1025</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SERBIA AND HER NEIGHBORS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1036</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LITTLE MONTENEGRO SPEAKS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1043</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BULGARIA'S ATTITUDE</td>
+ <td align='left'>1044</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GREECE'S WATCHFUL WAITING</td>
+ <td align='left'>1050</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHERE RUMANIA STANDS IN THE CRISIS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1054</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>EXIT ALBANIA?</td>
+ <td align='left'>1062</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE WAR IN THE BALKANS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1068</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By A. T. Polyzoides</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE EUROPEAN WAR AS SEEN BY CARTOONISTS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1073</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY VS. BELGIUM</td>
+ <td align='left'>1101</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Case of the Secret Military Documents Presented by Both
+ Sides</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BIG AND THE GREAT (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1114</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William Archer</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"FROM THE BODY OF THIS DEATH" (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1119</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sidney Low</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"A SCRAP OF PAPER"</td>
+ <td align='left'>1120</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg and Sir Edward
+ Grey</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE KAISER AT DONCHERY</td>
+ <td align='left'>1125</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HAIL! A HYMN TO BELGIUM (Music by F. H. Cowen)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1126</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Galsworthy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOLLAND'S FUTURE (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1128</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H.G. Wells</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FRENCH OFFICIAL REPORT ON GERMAN ATROCITIES</td>
+ <td align='left'>1133</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A FRENCH MAYOR'S PUNISHMENT</td>
+ <td align='left'>1163</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WE WILL FIGHT TO THE END</td>
+ <td align='left'>1164</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Premier Viviani of France</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>NUITS BLANCHES</i></td>
+ <td align='left'>1166</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H.S. Haskins</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>UNCONQUERED FRANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>1167</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From the Bulletin Francais</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FOUR MONTHS OF WAR (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1169</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From the Bulletin des Armees</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LONG LIVE THE ALLIES!</td>
+ <td align='left'>1174</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Claude Monet</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>UNITED STATES FAIR TO ALL</td>
+ <td align='left'>1175</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William J. Bryan, American Secretary of State</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE HOUSE WITH SEALED DOORS (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1183</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Edith M. Thomas</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SEIZURES OF AMERICAN CARGOES</td>
+ <td align='left'>1184</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William J. Bryan, American Secretary of State</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN CROWN PRINCE TO AMERICA</td>
+ <td align='left'>1187</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE OFFICIAL BRITISH EXPLANATION</td>
+ <td align='left'>1188</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sir Edward Grey</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ITALY AND THE WAR (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1192</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William Roscoe Thayer</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HE HEARD THE BUGLES CALLING (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1198</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Carey C.D. Briggs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN SOLDIERS WRITE HOME</td>
+ <td align='left'>1199</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WAR CORRESPONDENCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>1207</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BROKEN ROSE (TO KING ALBERT)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1210</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Annie Vivanti Chartres</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE HEROIC LANGUAGE (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1216</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Alice Meynell</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>1224</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO HIS MAJESTY KING ALBERT (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1228</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William Watson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/shaw.jpg"><img src='images/shaw_thumb.jpg' width='264' height='400'
+ alt='GEORGE BERNARD SHAW' title='GEORGE BERNARD SHAW' /></a> <a
+ href="images/bennett.jpg"><img src='images/bennet_thumb.jpg' width='245'
+ height='400' alt='ARNOLD BENNETT. See Page 60.' title='ARNOLD BENNETT' />
+ </a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>GEORGE BERNARD SHAW</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>ARNOLD BENNETT. See <a href="#page60">Page 60</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>{11}</span>
+ <h2>"Common Sense About the War"</h2>
+ <h3>By George Bernard Shaw.</h3>
+ <h3>I.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"<i>Let a European war break out&mdash;the war, perhaps, between the Triple
+ Alliance and the Triple Entente, which so many journalists and politicians in
+ England and Germany contemplate with criminal levity. If the combatants prove to be
+ equally balanced, it may, after the first battles, smoulder on for thirty years.
+ What will be the population of London, or Manchester, or Chemnitz, or Bremen, or
+ Milan, at the end of it</i>?" ("The Great Society," by Graham Wallas. June,
+ 1914.)</p>
+ <p>(<i>Copyright, 1914, By The New York Times Company.</i>)</p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The time has now come to pluck up courage and begin to talk and write soberly
+ about the war. At first the mere horror of it stunned the more thoughtful of us; and
+ even now only those who are not in actual contact with or bereaved relation to its
+ heartbreaking wreckage can think sanely about it, or endure to hear others discuss it
+ coolly. As to the thoughtless, well, not for a moment dare I suggest that for the
+ first few weeks they were all scared out of their wits; for I know too well that the
+ British civilian does not allow his perfect courage to be questioned; only
+ experienced soldiers and foreigners are allowed the infirmity of fear. But they
+ certainly were&mdash;shall I say a little upset? They felt in that solemn hour that
+ England was lost if only one single traitor in their midst let slip the truth about
+ anything in the universe. It was a perilous time for me. I do not hold my tongue
+ easily; and my inborn dramatic faculty and professional habit as a playwright prevent
+ me from taking a one-sided view even when the most probable result of taking a
+ many-sided one is prompt lynching. Besides, until Home Rule emerges from its present
+ suspended animation, I shall retain my Irish capacity for criticising England with
+ something of the detachment of a foreigner, and perhaps with a certain slightly
+ malicious taste for taking the conceit out of her. Lord Kitchener made a mistake the
+ other day in rebuking the Irish volunteers for not rallying faster to the defense of
+ "their country." They do not regard it as their country yet. He should have asked
+ them to come forward as usual and help poor old England through a stiff fight. Then
+ it would have been all right.</p>
+ <p>Having thus frankly confessed my bias, which you can allow for as a rifleman
+ allows for the wind, I give my views for what they are worth. They will be of some
+ use; because, however blinded I may be by prejudice or perversity, my prejudices in
+ this matter are not those which blind the British patriot, and therefore I am fairly
+ sure to see some things that have not yet struck him.</p>
+ <p>And first, I do not see this war as one which has welded Governments and peoples
+ into complete and sympathetic solidarity as against the common enemy. I see the
+ people of England united in a fierce detestation and defiance of the views and acts
+ of Prussian Junkerism. And I see the German people stirred to the depths by a similar
+ antipathy to English Junkerism, and anger at the apparent treachery and duplicity of
+ the attack made on them by us in their extremest peril from France and Russia. I see
+ both nations duped, but alas! not quite unwillingly duped, by their Junkers and
+ Militarists into wreaking on one another the wrath they should have <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>{12}</span>spent in destroying
+ Junkerism and Militarism in their own country. And I see the Junkers and Militarists
+ of England and Germany jumping at the chance they have longed for in vain for many
+ years of smashing one another and establishing their own oligarchy as the dominant
+ military power in the world. No doubt the heroic remedy for this tragic
+ misunderstanding is that both armies should shoot their officers and go home to
+ gather in their harvests in the villages and make a revolution in the towns; and
+ though this is not at present a practicable solution, it must be frankly mentioned,
+ because it or something like it is always a possibility in a defeated conscript army
+ if its commanders push it beyond human endurance when its eyes are opening to the
+ fact that in murdering its neighbours it is biting off its nose to vex its face,
+ besides riveting the intolerable yoke of Militarism and Junkerism more tightly than
+ ever on its own neck. But there is no chance&mdash;or, as our Junkers would put it,
+ no danger&mdash;of our soldiers yielding to such an ecstasy of common sense. They
+ have enlisted voluntarily; they are not defeated nor likely to be; their
+ communications are intact and their meals reasonably punctual; they are as pugnacious
+ as their officers; and in fighting Prussia they are fighting a more deliberate,
+ conscious, tyrannical, personally insolent, and dangerous Militarism than their own.
+ Still, even for a voluntary professional army, that possibility exists, just as for
+ the civilian there is a limit beyond which taxation, bankruptcy, privation, terror,
+ and inconvenience cannot be pushed without revolution or a social dissolution more
+ ruinous than submission to conquest. I mention all this, not to make myself wantonly
+ disagreeable, but because military persons, thinking naturally that there is nothing
+ like leather, are now talking of this war as likely to become a permanent institution
+ like the Chamber of Horrors at Madame Tussaud's, forgetting, I think, that the rate
+ of consumption maintained by modern military operations is much greater relatively to
+ the highest possible rate of production maintainable under the restrictions of war
+ time than it has ever been before.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Day of Judgment.</b></p>
+ <p>The European settlement at the end of the war will be effected, let us hope, not
+ by a regimental mess of fire-eaters sitting around an up-ended drum in a vanquished
+ Berlin or Vienna, but by some sort of Congress in which all the Powers (including,
+ very importantly, the United States of America) will be represented. Now I foresee a
+ certain danger of our being taken by surprise at that Congress, and making ourselves
+ unnecessarily difficult and unreasonable, by presenting ourselves to it in the
+ character of Injured Innocence. We shall not be accepted in that character. Such a
+ Congress will most certainly regard us as being, next to the Prussians (if it makes
+ even that exception), the most quarrelsome people in the universe. I am quite
+ conscious of the surprise and scandal this anticipation may cause among my more
+ highminded (<i>hochnaesig</i>, the Germans call it) readers. Let me therefore break
+ it gently by expatiating for a while on the subject of Junkerism and Militarism
+ generally, and on the history of the literary propaganda of war between England and
+ Potsdam which has been going on openly for the last forty years on both sides. I beg
+ the patience of my readers during this painful operation. If it becomes unbearable,
+ they can always put the paper down and relieve themselves by calling the Kaiser
+ Attila and Mr. Keir Hardie a traitor twenty times or so. Then they will feel, I hope,
+ refreshed enough to resume. For, after all, abusing the Kaiser or Keir Hardie or me
+ will not hurt the Germans, whereas a clearer view of the political situation will
+ certainly help us. Besides, I do not believe that the trueborn Englishman in his
+ secret soul relishes the pose of Injured Innocence any more than I do myself. He puts
+ it on only because he is told that it is respectable.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Junkers All.</b></p>
+ <p>What is a Junker? Is it a German <span class="pagenum"><a name="page13"
+ id="page13"></a>{13}</span>officer of twenty-three, with offensive manners, and a
+ habit of cutting down innocent civilians with his sabre? Sometimes; but not at all
+ exclusively that or anything like that. Let us resort to the dictionary. I turn to
+ the <i>Encyclopaedisches Woerterbuch</i> of Muret Sanders. Excuse its quaint
+ German-English.</p>
+ <p><b>Junker</b> = Young nobleman, younker, lording, country squire, country
+ gentleman, squirearch. <b>Junkerberrschaft</b> = squirearchy, landocracy.
+ <b>Junkerleben</b> = life of a country gentleman, (<i>figuratively</i>) a jolly life.
+ <b>Junkerpartei</b> = country party. <b>Junkerwirtschaft</b> = doings of the country
+ party.</p>
+ <p>Thus we see that the Junker is by no means peculiar to Prussia. We may claim to
+ produce the article in a perfection that may well make Germany despair of ever
+ surpassing us in that line. Sir Edward Grey is a Junker from his topmost hair to the
+ tips of his toes; and Sir Edward is a charming man, incapable of cutting down even an
+ Opposition front bencher, or of telling a German he intends to have him shot. Lord
+ Cromer is a Junker. Mr. Winston Churchill is an odd and not disagreeable compound of
+ Junker and Yankee: his frank anti-German pugnacity is enormously more popular than
+ the moral babble (Milton's phrase) of his sanctimonious colleagues. He is a bumptious
+ and jolly Junker, just as Lord Curzon is an uppish Junker. I need not string out the
+ list. In these islands the Junker is literally all over the shop.</p>
+ <p>It is very difficult for anyone who is not either a Junker or a successful
+ barrister to get into an English Cabinet, no matter which party is in power, or to
+ avoid resigning when we strike up the drum. The Foreign Office is a Junker Club. Our
+ governing classes are overwhelmingly Junker: all who are not Junkers are riff-raff
+ whose only claim to their position is the possession of ability of some sort: mostly
+ ability to make money. And, of course, the Kaiser is a Junker, though less true-blue
+ than the Crown Prince, and much less autocratic than Sir Edward Grey, who, without
+ consulting us, sends us to war by a word to an ambassador and pledges all our wealth
+ to his foreign allies by a stroke of his pen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>What Is a Militarist?</b></p>
+ <p>Now that we know what a Junker is, let us have a look at the Militarists. A
+ Militarist is a person who believes that all real power is the power to kill, and
+ that Providence is on the side of the big battalions. The most famous Militarist at
+ present, thanks to the zeal with which we have bought and quoted his book, is General
+ Friedrich von Bernhardi. But we cannot allow the General to take precedence of our
+ own writers as a Militarist propagandist. I am old enough to remember the beginning
+ of the anti-German phase of that very ancient propaganda in England. The
+ Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left Europe very much taken aback. Up to that date
+ nobody was afraid of Prussia, though everybody was a little afraid of France; and we
+ were keeping "buffer States" between ourselves and Russia in the east. Germany had
+ indeed beaten Denmark; but then Denmark was a little State, and was abandoned in her
+ hour of need by those who should have helped her, to the great indignation of Ibsen.
+ Germany had also beaten Austria; but somehow everybody seems able to beat Austria,
+ though nobody seems able to draw the moral that defeats do not matter as much as the
+ Militarists think, Austria being as important as ever. Suddenly Germany beat France
+ right down into the dust, by the exercise of an organized efficiency in war of which
+ nobody up to then had any conception. There was not a State in Europe that did not
+ say to itself: "Good Heavens! what would happen if she attacked <i>us</i>?" We in
+ England thought of our old-fashioned army and our old-fashioned commander George
+ Ranger (of Cambridge), and our War Office with its Crimean tradition of imbecility;
+ and we shook in our shoes. But we were not such fools as to leave it at that. We soon
+ produced the first page of the Bernhardian literature: an anonymous booklet entitled
+ <i>The Battle of Dorking</i>. It was not the first page of English <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>{14}</span>Militarist literature:
+ you have only to turn back to the burst of glorification of war which heralded the
+ silly Crimean campaign (Tennyson's <i>Maud</i> is a surviving sample) to find paeans
+ to Mars which would have made Treitschke blush (perhaps they did); but it was the
+ first page in which it was assumed as a matter of course that Germany and not France
+ or Russia was England's natural enemy. <i>The Battle of Dorking</i> had an enormous
+ sale; and the wildest guesses were current as to its authorship. And its moral was
+ "To arms; or the Germans will besiege London as they besieged Paris." From that time
+ until the present, the British propaganda of war with Germany has never ceased. The
+ lead given by <i>The Battle of Dorking</i> was taken up by articles in the daily
+ press and the magazines. Later on came the Jingo fever (anti-Russian, by the way; but
+ let us not mention that just now), Stead's <i>Truth About the Navy</i>, Mr. Spenser
+ Wilkinson, the suppression of the Channel Tunnel, Mr. Robert Blatchford, Mr. Garvin,
+ Admiral Maxse, Mr. Newbolt, Mr. Rudyard Kipling, <i>The National Review</i>, Lord
+ Roberts, the Navy League, the imposition of an Imperialist Foreign Secretary on the
+ Liberal Cabinet, Mr. Wells's <i>War in the Air</i> (well worth re-reading just now),
+ and the Dreadnoughts. Throughout all these agitations the enemy, the villain of the
+ piece, the White Peril, was Prussia and her millions of German conscripts. At first,
+ in <i>The Battle of Dorking</i> phase, the note was mainly defensive. But from the
+ moment when the Kaiser began to copy our Armada policy by building a big fleet, the
+ anti-German agitation became openly aggressive; and the cry that the German fleet or
+ ours must sink, and that a war between England and Germany was bound to come some
+ day, speedily ceased to be merely a cry with our Militarists and became an axiom with
+ them. And what our Militarists said our Junkers echoed; and our Junker diplomatists
+ played for. The story of how they manoeuvred to hem Germany and Austria in with an
+ Anglo-Franco-Russian combination will be found told with soldierly directness and
+ with the proud candor of a man who can see things from his own side only in the
+ article by Lord Roberts in the current number of <i>The Hibbert Journal</i> (October,
+ 1914). There you shall see also, after the usual nonsense about Nietzsche, the vision
+ of "British administrators bearing the White Man's Burden," of "young men, fresh from
+ the public schools of Britain, coming eagerly forward to carry on the high traditions
+ of Imperial Britain in each new dependency which comes under our care," of "our
+ fitness as an Imperial race," of "a great task committed to us by Providence," of
+ "the will to conquer that has never failed us," of our task of "assuming control of
+ one-fifth of the earth's surface and the care of one in five of all the inhabitants
+ of the world." Not a suggestion that the inhabitants of the world are perhaps able to
+ take care of themselves. Not even a passing recollection when that White Man's Burden
+ is in question that the men outside the British Empire, and even inside the German
+ Empire, are by no means exclusively black. Only the <i>sancta simplicitas</i> that
+ glories in "the proud position of England," the "sympathy, tolerance, prudence and
+ benevolence of our rule" in the east (as shown, the Kaiser is no doubt sarcastically
+ remarking, in the Delhi sedition trial), the chivalrous feeling that it is our
+ highest duty to save the world from the horrible misfortune of being governed by
+ anybody but those young men fresh from the public schools of Britain. Change the
+ words Britain and British to Germany and German, and the Kaiser will sign the article
+ with enthusiasm. <i>His</i> opinion, <i>his</i> attitude (subject to that merely
+ verbal change) word for word.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Six of One: Half-a-Dozen of The Other.</b></p>
+ <p>Now, please observe that I do not say that the agitation was unreasonable. I
+ myself steadily advocated the formation of a formidable armament, and ridiculed the
+ notion that, we, who are wasting hundreds of millions annually on idlers and wasters,
+ could not easily afford double, treble, quadruple our military <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15"></a>{15}</span>and naval expenditure. I
+ advocated the compulsion of every man to serve his country, both in war and peace.
+ The idlers and wasters perceiving dimly that I meant the cost to come out of their
+ pockets and meant to use the admission that riches should not exempt a man from
+ military service as an illustration of how absurd it is to allow them to exempt him
+ from civil service, did not embrace my advocacy with enthusiasm; so I must reaffirm
+ it now lest it should be supposed that I am condemning those whose proceedings I am
+ describing. Though often horribly wrong in principle, they were quite right in
+ practice as far as they went. But they must stand to their guns now that the guns are
+ going off. They must not pretend that they were harmless Radical lovers of peace, and
+ that the propaganda of Militarism and of inevitable war between England and Germany
+ is a Prussian infamy for which the Kaiser must be severely punished. That is not
+ fair, not true, not gentlemanly. We began it; and if they met us half-way, as they
+ certainly did, it is not for us to reproach them. When the German fire-eaters drank
+ to The Day (of Armageddon) they were drinking to the day of which our Navy League
+ fire-eaters had first said "It's bound to come." Therefore, let us have no more
+ nonsense about the Prussian Wolf and the British Lamb, the Prussian Machiavelli and
+ the English Evangelist. We cannot shout for years that we are boys of the bulldog
+ breed, and then suddenly pose as gazelles. No. When Europe and America come to settle
+ the treaty that will end this business (for America is concerned in it as much as we
+ are), they will not deal with us as the lovable and innocent victims of a treacherous
+ tyrant and a savage soldiery. They will have to consider how these two incorrigibly
+ pugnacious and inveterately snobbish peoples, who have snarled at one another for
+ forty years with bristling hair and grinning fangs, and are now rolling over with
+ their teeth in one another's throats, are to be tamed into trusty watch-dogs of the
+ peace of the world. I am sorry to spoil the saintly image with a halo which the
+ British Jingo journalist sees just now when he looks in the glass; but it must be
+ done if we are to behave reasonably in the imminent day of reckoning.</p>
+ <p>And now back to Friedrich von Bernhardi.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>General Von Bernhardi.</b></p>
+ <p>Like many soldier-authors, Friedrich is very readable; and he maintains the good
+ and formidable part of the Bismarck tradition: that is, he is not a humbug. He looks
+ facts in the face; he deceives neither himself nor his readers; and if he were to
+ tell lies&mdash;as he would no doubt do as stoutly as any British, French, or Russian
+ officer if his country's safety were at stake&mdash;he would know that he was telling
+ them. Which last we think very bad taste on his part, if not downright
+ wickedness.</p>
+ <p>It is true that he cites Frederick the Great as an exemplary master of war and of
+ <i>Weltpolitik</i>. But his chief praise in this department is reserved for England.
+ It is from our foreign policy, he says, that he has learnt what our journalists
+ denounce as "the doctrine of the bully, of the materialist, of the man with gross
+ ideals: a doctrine of diabolical evil." He frankly accepts that doctrine from us (as
+ if our poor, honest muddle-heads had ever formulated anything so intellectual as a
+ doctrine), and blames us for nothing but for allowing the United States to achieve
+ their solidarity and become formidable to us when we might have divided them by
+ backing up the South in the Civil War. He shows in the clearest way that if Germany
+ does not smash England, England will smash Germany by springing at her the moment she
+ can catch her at a disadvantage. In a word he prophesies that we, his great masters
+ in <i>Realpolitik</i>, will do precisely what our Junkers have just made us do, It is
+ we who have carried out the Bernhardi programme: it is Germany who has neglected it.
+ He warned Germany to make an alliance with Italy, Austria, Turkey, and America,
+ before undertaking the subjugation, first of France, then of England. But a prophet
+ is not with<span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>{16}</span>out
+ honour save in his own country; and Germany has allowed herself to be caught with no
+ ally but Austria between France and Russia, and thereby given the English Junkers
+ their opportunity. They have seized it with a punctuality that must flatter Von
+ Bernhardi, even though the compliment be at the expense of his own country. The
+ Kaiser did not give them credit for being keener Junkers than his own. It was an
+ unpleasant, indeed an infuriating surprise. All that a Kaiser could do without
+ unbearable ignominy to induce them to keep their bulldogs off and give him fair play
+ with his two redoubtable foes, he did. But they laughed Frederick the Great's laugh
+ and hurled all our forces at him, as he might have done to us, on Bernhardian
+ principles, if he had caught us at the same disadvantage. Officially, the war is
+ Junker-cut-Junker, militarist-cut-Militarist; and we must fight it out, not
+ <i>Heuchler</i>-cut-Hypocrite, but hammer and tongs.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Militarist Myopia.</b></p>
+ <p>Unofficially, it is quite another matter. Democracy, even Social-Democracy, though
+ as hostile to British Junkers as to German ones, and under no illusion as to the
+ obsolescence and colossal stupidity of modern war, need not lack enthusiasm for the
+ combat, which may serve their own ends better than those of their political
+ opponents. For Bernhardi the Brilliant and our own very dull Militarists are alike
+ mad: the war will not do any of the things for which they rushed into it. It is much
+ more likely to do the things they most dread and deprecate: in fact, it has already
+ swept them into the very kind of organization they founded an Anti-Socialist League
+ to suppress. To shew how mad they are, let us suppose the war carries out their
+ western program to the last item. Suppose France rises from the war victorious, happy
+ and glorious, with Alsace and Lorraine regained, Rheims cathedral repaired in the
+ best modern trade style, and a prodigious indemnity in her pocket! Suppose we tow the
+ German fleet into Portsmouth, and leave Hohenzollern metaphorically under the heel of
+ Romanoff and actually in a comfortable villa in Chislehurst, the hero of all its tea
+ parties and the judge of all its gymkhanas! Well, cry the Militarists, suppose it by
+ all means: could we desire anything better? Now I happen to have a somewhat active
+ imagination; and it flatly refuses to stop at this convenient point. I must go on
+ supposing. Suppose France, with its military prestige raised once more to the
+ Napoleonic point, spends its indemnity in building an invincible Armada, stronger and
+ nearer to us than the German one we are now out to destroy! Suppose Sir Edward Grey
+ remonstrates, and Monsieur Delcasse replies, "Russia and France have humbled one
+ Imperial Bully, and are prepared to humble another. I have not forgotten Fashoda.
+ Stop us if you can; or turn, if you like, for help to the Germany we have smashed and
+ disarmed!" Of what use will all this bloodshed be then, with the old situation
+ reproduced in an aggravated form, the enemy closer to our shores, a raid far more
+ feasible, the tradition of "natural enmity" to steel the foe, and Waterloo to be
+ wiped out like Sedan? A child in arms should be able to see that this idiotic notion
+ of relaxing the military pressure on us by smashing this or that particular Power is
+ like trying to alter the pressure of the ocean by dipping up a bucket of water from
+ the North Sea and pouring it into the Bay of Biscay.</p>
+ <p>I purposely omit more easterly supposings as to what victorious Russia might do.
+ But a noble emancipation of Poland and Finland at her own expense, and of Bosnia and
+ Harzegovina at Austria's, might easily suggest to our nervous Militarists that a
+ passion for the freedom of Egypt and India might seize her, and remind her that we
+ were Japan's ally in the day of Russia's humiliation in Manchuria. So there at once
+ is your Balance of Power problem in Asia enormously aggravated by throwing Germany
+ out of the anti-Russian scale and grinding her to powder. Even in North
+ Africa&mdash;but enough is enough. You can <i>durchhauen</i> your way out of the
+ frying pan, but only into the fire. Better take Nietzsche's brave advice, and make it
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>{17}</span>your point of
+ honour to "live dangerously." History shews that it is often the way to live
+ long.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Learning Nothing: Forgetting Everything.</b></p>
+ <p>But let me test the Militarist theory, not by a hypothetical future, but by the
+ accomplished and irrevocable past. Is it true that nations must conquer or go under,
+ and that military conquest means prosperity and power for the victor and annihilation
+ for the vanquished? I have already alluded in passing to the fact that Austria has
+ been beaten repeatedly: by France, by Italy, by Germany, almost by everybody who has
+ thought it worth while to have a whack at her; and yet she is one of the Great
+ Powers; and her alliance has been sought by invincible Germany. France was beaten by
+ Germany in 1870 with a completeness that seemed impossible; yet France has since
+ enlarged her territory whilst Germany is still pleading in vain for a place in the
+ sun. Russia was beaten by the Japanese in Manchuria on a scale that made an end
+ forever of the old notion that the West is the natural military superior of the East;
+ yet it is the terror of Russia that has driven Germany into her present desperate
+ onslaught on France; and it is the Russian alliance on which France and England are
+ depending for their assurance of ultimate success. We ourselves confess that the
+ military efficiency with which we have so astonished the Germans is the effect, not
+ of Waterloo and Inkerman, but of the drubbing we got from the Boers, who we aid
+ probably have beaten us if we had been anything like their own size. Greece has
+ lately distinguished herself in war within a few years by a most disgraceful beating
+ of the Turks. It would be easy to multiply instances from remoter history: for
+ example, the effect on England's position of the repeated defeats of our troops by
+ the French under Luxembourg in the Balance of Power War at the end of the seventeenth
+ century differed surprisingly little, if at all, from the effect of our subsequent
+ victories under Marlborough. And the inference from the Militarist theory that the
+ States which at present count for nothing as military Powers necessarily count for
+ nothing at all is absurd on the face of it. Monaco seems to be, on the whole, the
+ most prosperous and comfortable State in Europe.</p>
+ <p>In short, Militarism must be classed as one of the most inconsiderately foolish of
+ the bogus "sciences" which the last half century has produced in such profusion, and
+ which have the common characteristic of revolting all sane souls, and being stared
+ out of countenance by the broad facts of human experience. The only rule of thumb
+ that can be hazarded on the strength of actual practice is that wars to maintain or
+ upset the Balance of Power between States, called by inaccurate people Balance of
+ Power wars, and by accurate people Jealousy of Power wars, never establish the
+ desired peaceful and secure equilibrium. They may exercise pugnacity, gratify spite,
+ assuage a wound to national pride, or enhance or dim a military reputation; but that
+ is all. And the reason is, as I shall shew very conclusively later on, that there is
+ only one way in which one nation can really disable another, and that is a way which
+ no civilized nation dare even discuss.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Are We Hypocrites?</b></p>
+ <p>And now I proceed from general considerations to the diplomatic history of the
+ present case, as I must in order to make our moral position clear. But first, lest I
+ should lose all credit by the startling incompatibility between the familiar personal
+ character of our statesmen and the proceedings for which they are officially
+ responsible, I must say a word about the peculiar psychology of English
+ statesmanship, not only for the benefit of my English readers (who do not know that
+ it is peculiar just as they do not know that water has any taste because it is always
+ in their mouths), but as a plea for a more charitable construction from the wider
+ world.</p>
+ <p>We know by report, however unjust it may seem to us, that there is an opinion
+ abroad, even in the quarters most friendly to us, that our excellent qualities are
+ marred by an incorrigible hypocrisy. To <span class="pagenum"><a name="page18"
+ id="page18"></a>{18}</span>France we have always been Perfidious Albion. In Germany,
+ at this moment, that epithet would be scorned as far too flattering to us. Victor
+ Hugo explained the relative unpopularity of <i>Measure for Measure</i> among
+ Shakespeare's plays on the ground that the character of the hypocrite Angelo was a
+ too faithful dramatization of our national character. Pecksniff is not considered so
+ exceptional an English gentleman in America as he is in England.</p>
+ <p>Now we have not acquired this reputation for nothing. The world has no greater
+ interest in branding England with this particular vice of hypocrisy than in branding
+ France with it; yet the world does not cite Tartuffe as a typical Frenchman as it
+ cites Angelo and Pecksniff as typical Englishmen. We may protest against it as
+ indignantly as the Prussian soldiers protest against their equally universal
+ reputation for ferocity in plunder and pillage, sack and rapine; but there is
+ something in it. If you judge an English statesman, by his conscious intentions, his
+ professions, and his personal charm, you will often find him an amiable, upright,
+ humane, anxiously truthful man. If you judge him, as a foreigner must, solely on the
+ official acts for which he is responsible, and which he has to defend in the House of
+ Commons for the sake of his party, you will often be driven to conclude that this
+ estimable gentleman is, in point of being an unscrupulous superprig and fool, worse
+ than Caesar Borgia and General Von Bernhardi rolled into one, and in foreign affairs
+ a Bismarck in everything except commanding ability, blunt common sense, and freedom
+ from illusion as to the nature and object of his own diplomacy. And the permanent
+ officials in whose hands he is will probably deserve all that and something to spare.
+ Thus you will get that amazing contrast that confronts us now between the
+ Machiavellian Sir Edward Grey of the Berlin newspapers and the amiable and popular
+ Sir Edward Grey we know in England. In England we are all prepared to face any World
+ Congress and say, "We know that Sir Edward Grey is an honest English gentleman, who
+ meant well as a true patriot and friend of peace; we are quite sure that what he did
+ was fair and right; and we will not listen to any nonsense to the contrary." The
+ Congress will reply, "We know nothing about Sir Edward Grey except what he did; and
+ as there is no secret and no question as to what he did, the whole story being
+ recorded by himself, we must hold England responsible for his conduct, whilst taking
+ your word for the fact, which has no importance for us, that his conduct has nothing
+ to do with his character."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Our Intellectual Laziness.</b></p>
+ <p>The general truth of the situation is, as I have spent so much of my life in
+ trying to make the English understand, that we are cursed with a fatal intellectual
+ laziness, an evil inheritance from the time when our monopoly of coal and iron made
+ it possible for us to become rich and powerful without thinking or knowing how; a
+ laziness which is becoming highly dangerous to us now that our monopoly is gone or
+ superseded by new sources of mechanical energy. We got rich by pursuing our own
+ immediate advantage instinctively; that is, with a natural childish selfishness; and
+ when any question of our justification arose, we found it easy to silence it with any
+ sort of plausible twaddle (provided it flattered us, and did not imply any trouble or
+ sacrifice) provided by our curates at &pound;70 a year, or our journalists at a penny
+ a line, or commercial moralists with axes to grind. In the end we became fatheaded,
+ and not only lost all intellectual consciousness of what we were doing, and with it
+ all power of objective self-criticism, but stacked up a lumber of pious praises for
+ ourselves which not only satisfied our corrupted and half atrophied consciences, but
+ gave us a sense that there is something extraordinarily ungentlemanly and politically
+ dangerous in bringing these pious phrases to the test of conduct. We carried Luther's
+ doctrine of Justification by Faith to the insane point of believing that as long as a
+ man says what we have agreed to accept as the right thing it does not <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>{19}</span>matter in the least what
+ he actually does. In fact, we do not clearly see why a man need introduce the subject
+ of morals at all, unless there is something questionable to be whitewashed. The
+ unprejudiced foreigner calls this hypocrisy: that is why we call him prejudiced. But
+ I, who have been a poor man in a poor country, understand the foreigner better.</p>
+ <p>Now from the general to the particular. In describing the course of the diplomatic
+ negotiations by which our Foreign Office achieved its design of at last settling
+ accounts with Germany at the most favourable moment from the Militarist point of
+ view, I shall have to exhibit our Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs as behaving
+ almost exactly as we have accused the Kaiser of behaving. Yet I see him throughout as
+ an honest gentleman, "perplexed in the extreme," meaning well, revolted at the last
+ moment by the horror of war, clinging to the hope that in some vague way he could
+ persuade everybody to be reasonable if they would only come and talk to him as they
+ did when the big Powers were kept out of the Balkan war, but hopelessly destitute of
+ a positive policy of any kind, and therefore unable to resist those who had positive
+ business in hand. And do not for a moment imagine that I think that the conscious Sir
+ Edward Grey was Othello, and the subconscious, Iago. I do think that the Foreign
+ Office, of which Sir Edward is merely the figure head, was as deliberately and
+ consciously bent on a long deferred Militarist war with Germany as the Admiralty was;
+ and that is saying a good deal. If Sir Edward Grey did not know what he wanted, Mr.
+ Winston Churchill was in no such perplexity. He was not an "ist" of any sort, but a
+ straightforward holder of the popular opinion that if you are threatened you should
+ hit out, unless you are afraid to. Had he had the conduct of the affair he might
+ quite possibly have averted the war (and thereby greatly disappointed himself and the
+ British public) by simply frightening the Kaiser. As it was, he had arranged for the
+ co-operation of the French and British fleets; was spoiling for the fight; and must
+ have restrained himself with great difficulty from taking off his coat in public
+ whilst Mr. Asquith and Sir Edward Grey were giving the country the assurances which
+ were misunderstood to mean that we were not bound to go to war, and not more likely
+ to do so than usual. But though Sir Edward did not clear up the misunderstanding, I
+ think he went to war with the heavy heart of a Junker Liberal (such centaurs exist)
+ and not with the exultation of a Junker Jingo.</p>
+ <p>I may now, without more than the irreducible minimum of injustice to Sir Edward
+ Grey, proceed to tell the story of the diplomatic negotiations as they will appear to
+ the Congress which, I am assuming, will settle the terms on which Europe is to live
+ more or less happily ever after.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Diplomatic History of the War.</b></p>
+ <p>The evidence of how the Junker diplomatists of our Foreign Office let us in for
+ the war is in the White Paper, Miscellaneous No. 6 (1914), containing correspondence
+ respecting the European crisis, and since reissued, with a later White Paper and some
+ extra matter, as a penny bluebook in miniature. In these much-cited and little-read
+ documents we see the Junkers of all the nations, the men who have been saying for
+ years "It's bound to come," and clamouring in England for compulsory military service
+ and expeditionary forces, momentarily staggered and not a little frightened by the
+ sudden realization that it has come at last. They rush round from foreign office to
+ embassy, and from embassy to palace, twittering "This is awful. Can't you stop it?
+ Won't you be reasonable? Think of the consequences," etc., etc. One man among them
+ keeps his head and looks the facts in the face. That man is Sazonoff, the Russian
+ Secretary for Foreign Affairs. He keeps steadily trying to make Sir Edward Grey face
+ the inevitable. He says and reiterates, in effect, "You know very well that you
+ cannot keep out of a European war. You know you are pledged to fight Germany <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>{20}</span>if Germany attacks
+ France. You know that your arrangments for the fight are actually made; that already
+ the British army is commanded by a Franco-British Council of War; that there is no
+ possible honourable retreat for you. You know that this old man in Austria, who would
+ have been superannuated years ago if he had been an exciseman, is resolved to make
+ war on Servia, and sent that silly forty-eight hours ultimatum when we were all out
+ of town so that he could begin fighting before we could get back to sit on his head.
+ You know that he has the Jingo mob of Vienna behind him. You know that if he makes
+ war, Russia must mobilize. You know that France is bound to come in with us as you
+ are with France. You know that the moment we mobilize, Germany, the old man's ally,
+ will have only one desperate chance of victory, and that is to overwhelm our ally,
+ France, with one superb rush of her millions, and then sweep back and meet us on the
+ Vistula. You know that nothing can stop this except Germany remonstrating with
+ Austria, and insisting on the Servian case being dealt with by an international
+ tribunal and not by war. You know that Germany dares not do this, because her
+ alliance with Austria is her defence against the Franco-Russian alliance, and that
+ she does not want to do it in any case, because the Kaiser naturally has a strong
+ class prejudice against the blowing up of Royal personages by irresponsible
+ revolutionists, and thinks nothing too bad for Servia after the assassination of the
+ Archduke. There is just one chance of avoiding Armageddon: a slender one, but worth
+ trying. You averted war in the Algeciras crisis, and again in the Agadir crisis, by
+ saying you would fight. Try it again. The Kaiser is stiffnecked because he does not
+ believe you are going to fight this time. Well, convince him that you are. The odds
+ against him will then be so terrible that he may not dare to support the Austrian
+ ultimatum to Servia at such a price. And if Austria is thus forced to proceed
+ judicially against Servia, we Russians will be satisfied; and there will be no
+ war."</p>
+ <p>Sir Edward could not see it. He is a member of a Liberal Government, in a country
+ where there is no political career for the man who does not put his party's tenure of
+ office before every other consideration. What would <i>The Daily News</i> and <i>The
+ Manchester Guardian</i> have said had he, Bismarck-like, said bluntly: "If war once
+ breaks out, the old score between England and Prussia will be settled, not by
+ ambassadors' tea parties and Areopaguses, but by blood and iron?" In vain did
+ Sazonoff repeat, "But if you are going to fight, as you know you are, why not say
+ so?" Sir Edward, being Sir Edward and not Winston Churchill or Lloyd George, could
+ not admit that he was going to fight. He might have forestalled the dying Pope and
+ his noble Christian "I bless peace" by a noble, if heathen, "I fight war." Instead,
+ he persuaded us all that he was under no obligation whatever to fight. He persuaded
+ Germany that he had not the slightest serious intention of fighting. Sir Owen Seaman
+ wrote in <i>Punch</i> an amusing and witty No-Intervention poem. Sporting Liberals
+ offered any odds that there would be no war for England. And Germany, confident that
+ with Austria's help she could break France with one hand and Russia with the other if
+ England held aloof, let Austria throw the match into the magazine.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Battery Unmasked.</b></p>
+ <p>Then the Foreign Office, always acting through its amiable and popular but
+ confused instrument Sir Edward, unmasked the Junker-Militarist battery. He suddenly
+ announced that England must take a hand in the war, though he did not yet tell the
+ English people so, it being against the diplomatic tradition to tell them anything
+ until it is too late for them to object. But he told the German Ambassador, Prince
+ Lichnowsky, caught in a death trap, pleaded desperately for peace with Great Britain.
+ Would we promise to spare Germany if Belgium were left untouched? No. Would we say on
+ what conditions we would spare Germany? No. Not if the Germans promised not to annex
+ French territory? No. Not even if they prom<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21"
+ id="page21"></a>{21}</span>ised not to touch the French colonies? No. Was there no
+ way out? Sir Edward Grey was frank. He admitted there was just one chance; that
+ Liberal opinion might not stand the war if the neutrality of Belgium were not
+ violated. And he provided against that chance by committing England to the war the
+ day before he let the cat out of the bag in Parliament.</p>
+ <p>All this is recorded in the language of diplomacy in the White Paper on or between
+ the lines. That language is not so straightforward as my language; but at the crucial
+ points it is clear enough. Sazonoff's tone is politely diplomatic in No. 6; but in
+ No. 17 he lets himself go. "I do not believe that Germany really wants war; but her
+ attitude is decided by yours. If you take your stand firmly with France and Russia
+ there will be no war. If you fail them now, rivers of blood will flow, and you will
+ in the end be dragged into war." He was precisely right; but he did not realize that
+ war was exactly what our Junkers wanted. They did not dare to tell themselves so; and
+ naturally they did not dare to tell him so. And perhaps his own interest in war was
+ too strong to make him regret the rejection of his honest advice. To break up the
+ Austrian Empire and achieve for Russia the Slav Caliphate of South-East Europe whilst
+ defeating Prussia with the help of France and of Russia's old enemy and Prussia's old
+ ally England, was a temptation so enormous that Sazonoff, in resisting it so far as
+ to shew Sir Edward Grey frankly the only chance of preventing it, proved himself the
+ most genuine humanitarian in the diplomatic world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Number 123.</b></p>
+ <p>The decisive communication between Sir Edward Grey and Prince Lichnowsky is
+ recorded in the famous No. 123. With the rather childish subsequent attempt to
+ minimize No. 123 on the ground that the Prince was merely an amiable nincompoop who
+ did not really represent his fiendish sovereign, neither I nor any other serious
+ person need be concerned. What is beyond all controversy is that after that
+ conversation Prince Lichnowsky could do nothing but tell the Kaiser that the
+ <i>Entente</i>, having at last got his imperial head in chancery, was not going to
+ let him off on any terms, and that it was now a fight to a finish between the British
+ and German empires. Then the Kaiser said: "We are Germans. God help us!" When a crowd
+ of foolish students came cheering for the war under his windows, he bade them go to
+ the churches and pray. His telegrams to the Tsar (the omission of which from the
+ penny bluebook is, to say the least, not chivalrous) were dignified and pathetic. And
+ when the Germans, taking a line from the poet they call "unser Shakespeare," said:
+ "Come the four quarters of the world in arms and we shall shock them," it was, from
+ the romantic militarist point of view, fine. What Junker-led men could do they have
+ since done to make that thrasonical brag good. But there is no getting over the fact
+ that, in Tommy Atkins's phrase, they had asked for it. Their Junkers, like ours, had
+ drunk to The Day; and they should not have let us choose it after riling us for so
+ many years. And that is why Sir Edward had a great surprise when he at last owned up
+ in Parliament.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>How the Nation Took It.</b></p>
+ <p>The moment he said that we could not "stand aside with our arms folded" and see
+ our friend and neighbour France "bombarded and battered," the whole nation rose to
+ applaud him. All the Foreign Office distrust of public opinion, the concealment of
+ the Anglo-French plan of campaign, the disguise of the <i>Entente</i> in a quaker's
+ hat, the duping of the British public and the Kaiser with one and the same
+ prevarication, had been totally unnecessary and unpopular, like most of these
+ ingenuities which diplomatists think subtle and Machiavellian. The British Public had
+ all along been behind Mr. Winston Churchill. It had wanted Sir Edward to do just what
+ Sazonoff wanted him to do, and what I, in the columns of <i>The Daily News</i>
+ proposed he should do nine months ago (I must really be allowed to claim that I am
+ not merely wise after the event), which was to arm <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page22" id="page22"></a>{22}</span>to the teeth regardless of an expense which
+ to us would have been a mere fleabite, and tell Germany that if she, laid a finger on
+ France we would unite with France to defeat her, offering her at the same time as
+ consolation for that threat, the assurance that we would do as much to France if she
+ wantonly broke the peace in the like fashion by attacking Germany. No unofficial
+ Englishman worth his salt wanted to snivel hypocritically about our love of peace and
+ our respect for treaties and our solemn acceptance of a painful duty, and all the
+ rest of the nauseous mixture of school-master's twaddle, parish magazine cant, and
+ cinematograph melodrama with which we were deluged. We were perfectly ready to knock
+ the Kaiser's head off just to teach him that if he thought he was going to ride
+ roughshod over Europe, including our new friends the French, and the plucky little
+ Belgians, he was reckoning without old England. And in this pugnacious but perfectly
+ straightforward and human attitude the nation needed no excuses because the nation
+ honestly did not know that we were taking the Kaiser at a disadvantage, or that the
+ Franco-Russian alliance had been just as much a menace to peace as the Austro-German
+ one. But the Foreign Office knew that very well, and therefore began to manufacture
+ superfluous, disingenuous, and rather sickening excuses at a great rate. The nation
+ had a clean conscience, and was really innocent of any aggressive strategy: the
+ Foreign Office was redhanded, and did not want to be found out. Hence its
+ sermons.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Mr. H.G. Wells Hoists the Country's Flag.</b></p>
+ <p>It was Mr. H.G. Wells who at the critical moment spoke with the nation's voice.
+ When he uttered his electric outburst of wrath against "this drilling, trampling
+ foolery in the heart of Europe" he gave expression to the pent-up exasperation of
+ years of smouldering revolt against swank and domineer, guff and bugaboo, calling
+ itself blood and iron, and mailed fist, and God and conscience and anything else that
+ sounded superb. Like Nietzsche, we were "fed up" with the Kaiser's imprisonments of
+ democratic journalists for <i>Majestaetsbeleidigung</i> (monarch disparagement), with
+ his ancestors, and his mission, and his gospel of submission and obedience for poor
+ men, and of authority, tempered by duelling, for rich men. The world had become
+ sore-headed, and desired intensely that they who clatter the sword shall perish by
+ the sword. Nobody cared twopence about treaties: indeed, it was not for us, who had
+ seen the treaty of Berlin torn up by the brazen seizure of Bosnia and Herzegovina by
+ Austria in 1909, and taken that lying down, as Russia did, to talk about the
+ sacredness of treaties, even if the wastepaper baskets of the Foreign Offices were
+ not full of torn up "scraps of paper," and a very good thing too; for General von
+ Bernhardi's assumption that circumstances alter treaties is not a page from
+ Machiavelli: it is a platitude from the law books. The man in the street understood
+ little or nothing about Servia or Russia or any of the cards with which the
+ diplomatists were playing their perpetual game of Beggar my Neighbour. We were rasped
+ beyond endurance by Prussian Militarism and its contempt for us and for human
+ happiness and common sense; and we just rose at it and went for it. We have set out
+ to smash the Kaiser exactly as we set out to smash the Mahdi. Mr. Wells never
+ mentioned a treaty. He said, in effect: "There stands the monster all freedom-loving
+ men hate; and at last we are going to fight it." And the public, bored by the
+ diplomatists, said: "Now you're talking!" We did not stop to ask our consciences
+ whether the Prussian assumption that the dominion of the civilized earth belongs to
+ German culture is really any more bumptious than the English assumption that the
+ dominion of the sea belongs to British commerce. And in our island security we were
+ as little able as ever to realize the terrible military danger of Germany's
+ geographical position between France and England on her west flank and Russia on her
+ east: all three leagued for her de<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23"
+ id="page23"></a>{23}</span>struction; and how unreasonable it was to ask Germany to
+ lose the fraction of a second (much less Sir Maurice de Runsen's na&iuml;ve "a few
+ days' delay") in dashing at her Western foe when she could obtain no pledge as to
+ Western intentions. "We are now in a state of necessity; and Necessity knows no law,"
+ said the Imperial Chancellor in the Reichstag. "It is a matter of life and death to
+ us," said the German Minister for Foreign Affairs to our Ambassador in Berlin, who
+ had suddenly developed an extraordinary sense of the sacredness of the Treaty of
+ London, dated 1839, and still, as it happened, inviolate among the torn fragments of
+ many subsequent and similar "scraps of paper." Our Ambassador seems to have been of
+ Sir Maurice's opinion that there could be no such tearing hurry. The Germans could
+ enter France through the line of forts between Verdun and Toul if they were really
+ too flustered to wait a few days on the chance of Sir Edward Grey's persuasive
+ conversation and charming character softening Russia and bringing Austria to
+ conviction of sin. Thereupon the Imperial Chancellor, not being quite an angel, asked
+ whether we had counted the cost of crossing the path of an Empire fighting for its
+ life (for these Militarist statesmen do really believe that nations can be killed by
+ cannon shot). That was a threat; and as we cared nothing about Germany's peril, and
+ wouldn't stand being threatened any more by a Power of which we now had the inside
+ grip, the fat remained in the fire, blazing more fiercely than ever. There was only
+ one end possible to such a clash of high tempers, national egotisms, and reciprocal
+ ignorances.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Delicate Position of Mr. Asquith.</b></p>
+ <p>It seemed a splendid chance for the Government to place itself at the head of the
+ nation. But no British Government within my recollection has ever understood the
+ nation. Mr. Asquith, true to the Gladstonian tradition (hardly just to Gladstone, by
+ the way) that a Liberal Prime Minister should know nothing concerning foreign
+ politics and care less, and calmly insensible to the real nature of the popular
+ explosion, fell back on 1839, picking up the obvious barrister's point about the
+ violation of the neutrality of Belgium, and tried the equally obvious barrister's
+ claptrap about "an infamous proposal" on the jury. He assured us that nobody could
+ have done more for peace than Sir Edward Grey, though the rush to smash the Kaiser
+ was the most popular thing Sir Edward had ever done.</p>
+ <p>Besides, there was another difficulty. Mr. Asquith himself, though serenely
+ persuaded that he is a Liberal statesman, is, in effect, very much what the Kaiser
+ would have been if he had been a Yorkshireman and a lawyer, instead of being only
+ half English and the other half Hohenzollern, and an anointed emperor to boot. As far
+ as popular liberties are concerned, history will make no distinction between Mr.
+ Asquith and Metternich. He is forced to keep on the safe academic ground of Belgium
+ by the very obvious consideration that if he began to talk of the Kaiser's
+ imprisonments of editors and democratic agitators and so forth, a Homeric laughter,
+ punctuated with cries of, "How about Denshawai?" "What price Tom Mann?" "Votes for
+ women!" "Been in India lately?" "Make McKenna Kaiser," "Or dear old Herbert
+ Gladstone," etc., etc., would promptly spoil that pose. The plain fact is that,
+ Militarism apart, Germany is in many ways more democratic in practice than England;
+ indeed the Kaiser has been openly reviled as a coward by his Junkers because he falls
+ short of Mr. Asquith in calm indifference to Liberal principles and blank ignorance
+ of working-class sympathies, opinions, and interests.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Asquith had also to distract public attention from the fact that three
+ official members of his Government, all men of unquestioned and conspicuous
+ patriotism and intellectual honesty, walked straight out into private life on the
+ declaration of war. One of them, Mr. John Burns, did so at an enormous personal
+ sacrifice, and has since maintained a grim silence far more eloquent than the famous
+ speech <span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>{24}</span>Germany
+ invented for him. It is not generally believed that these three statesmen were
+ actuated by a passion for the violation of Belgian neutrality.</p>
+ <p>On the whole, it was impossible for the Government to seize its grand chance and
+ put itself at the head of the popular movement that responded to Sir Edward Grey's
+ declaration: the very simple reason being that the Government does not represent the
+ nation, and is in its sympathies just as much a Junker government as the Kaiser's.
+ And so, what the Government cannot do has to be done by unofficial persons with clean
+ and brilliant anti-Junker records like Mr. Wells, Mr. Arnold Bennett, Mr. Neil Lyons,
+ and Mr. Jerome K. Jerome. Neither Mr. Asquith nor Sir Edward Grey can grasp, as these
+ real spokesmen of their time do, the fact that we just simply want to put an end to
+ Potsdamnation, both at home and abroad. Both of them probably think Potsdam a very
+ fine and enviable institution, and want England to out-Potsdam Potsdam and to
+ monopolize the command of the seas; a monstrous aspiration. We, I take it, want to
+ guarantee that command of the sea which is the common heritage of mankind to the
+ tiniest State and the humblest fisherman that depends on the sea for a livelihood. We
+ want the North Sea to be as safe for everybody, English or German, as Portland
+ Place.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Need for Recrimination.</b></p>
+ <p>And now somebody who would rather I had not said all this (having probably talked
+ dreadful nonsense about Belgium and so forth for a month past) is sure to ask: "Why
+ all this recrimination? What is done is done. Is it not now the duty of every
+ Englishman to sink all differences in the face of the common peril?" etc., etc. To
+ all such prayers to be shielded from that terrible thing, the truth, I must reply
+ that history consists mainly of recrimination, and that I am writing history because
+ an accurate knowledge of what has occurred is not only indispensable to any sort of
+ reasonable behaviour on our part in the face of Europe when the inevitable day of
+ settlement comes, but because it has a practical bearing on the most perilously
+ urgent and immediate business before us: the business of the appeal to the nation for
+ recruits and for enormous sums of money. It has to decide the question whether that
+ appeal shall be addressed frankly to our love of freedom, and our tradition (none the
+ less noble and moving because it is so hard to reconcile with the diplomatic facts)
+ that England is a guardian of the world's liberty, and not to bad law about an
+ obsolete treaty, and cant about the diabolical personal disposition of the Kaiser,
+ and the wounded propriety of a peace-loving England, and all the rest of the slosh
+ and tosh that has been making John Bull sick for months past. No doubt at first, when
+ we were all clasping one another's hands very hard and begging one another not to be
+ afraid, almost anything was excusable. Even the war notes of Mr. Garvin, which stood
+ out as the notes of a gentleman amid a welter of scurrilous rubbish and a rather
+ blackguardly <i>Punch</i> cartoon mocking the agony of Berlin (<i>Punch</i> having
+ turned its non-interventionist coat very promptly), had sometimes to run: "We know
+ absolutely nothing of what is happening at the front, except that the heroism of the
+ British troops will thrill the ages to the last syllable of recorded time," or words
+ to that effect. But now it is time to pull ourselves together; to feel our muscle; to
+ realize the value of our strength and pluck; and to tell the truth unashamed like men
+ of courage and character, not to shirk it like the official apologists of a Foreign
+ Office plot.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>What Germany Should Have Done.</b></p>
+ <p>And first, as I despise critics who put people in the wrong without being able to
+ set them right, I shall, before I go any further with my criticism of our official
+ position, do the Government and the Foreign Office the service of finding a correct
+ official position for them; for I admit that the popular position, though sound as
+ far as it goes, is too crude for official use. This correct official position can be
+ found only by considering what Germany should have done, and might have done had she
+ not <span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>{25}</span>been, like our
+ own Junkers, so fascinated by the Militarist craze, and obsessed by the chronic
+ Militarist panic, that she was "in too great hurry to bid the devil good morning."
+ The matter is simple enough: she should have entrusted the security of her western
+ frontier to the public opinion of the west of Europe and to America, and fought
+ Russia, if attacked, with her rear not otherwise defended. The Militarist theory is
+ that we, France and England, would have immediately sprung at her from behind; but
+ that is just how the Militarist theory gets its votaries into trouble by assuming
+ that Europe is a chess board. Europe is not a chess board; but a populous continent
+ in which only a very few people are engaged in military chess; and even those few
+ have many other things to consider besides capturing their adversary's king. Not only
+ would it have been impossible for England to have attacked Germany under such
+ circumstances; but if France had done so England could not have assisted her, and
+ might even have been compelled by public opinion to intervene by way of a joint
+ protest from England and America, or even by arms, on her behalf if she were
+ murderously pressed on both flanks. Even our Militarists and diplomatists would have
+ had reasons for such an intervention. An aggressive Franco-Russian hegemony, if it
+ crushed Germany, would be quite as disagreeable to us as a German one. Thus Germany
+ would at worst have been fighting Russia and France with the sympathy of all the
+ other Powers, and a chance of active assistance from some of them, especially those
+ who share her hostility to the Russian Government. Had France not attacked
+ her&mdash;and though I am as ignorant of the terms of the Franco-Russian alliance as
+ Sir Edward Grey is strangely content to be, I cannot see how the French Government
+ could have justified to its own people a fearfully dangerous attack on Germany had
+ Russia been the aggressor&mdash;Germany would have secured fair play for her fight
+ with Russia. But even the fight with Russia was not inevitable. The ultimatum to
+ Servia was the escapade of a dotard: a worse crime than the assassination that
+ provoked it. There is no reason to doubt the conclusion in Sir Maurice de Bunsen's
+ despatch (No. 161) that it could have been got over, and that Russia and Austria
+ would have thought better of fighting and come to terms. Peace was really on the
+ cards; and the sane game was to play for it.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Achilles Heel of Militarism.</b></p>
+ <p>Instead, Germany flew at France's throat, and by incidentally invading Belgium
+ gave us the excuse our Militarists wanted to attack her with the full sympathy of the
+ nation. Why did she do this stupid thing? Not because of the counsels of General von
+ Bernhardi. On the contrary, he had warned her expressly against allowing herself to
+ be caught between Russia and a Franco-British combination until she had formed a
+ counterbalancing alliance with America, Italy, and Turkey. And he had most certainly
+ not encouraged her to depend on England sparing her: on the contrary, he could not
+ sufficiently admire the wily ruthlessness with which England watches her opportunity
+ and springs at her foe when the foe is down. (He little knew, poor man, how much he
+ was flattering our capacity for Realpolitik!) But he had reckoned without his creed's
+ fatal and fundamental weakness, which is, that as Junker-Militarism promotes only
+ stupid people and snobs, and suppresses genuine realists as if they were snakes, it
+ always turns out when a crisis arrives that "the silly people don't know their own
+ silly business." The Kaiser and his ministers made an appalling mess of their job.
+ They were inflamed by Bernhardi; but they did not understand him. They swallowed his
+ flattery, but did not take in his strategy or his warnings. They knew that when the
+ moment came to face the Franco-Russian alliance, they were to make a magnificient
+ dash at France and sweep her pieces off the great chess board before the Russians had
+ time to mobilize; and then return and crush <span class="pagenum"><a name="page26"
+ id="page26"></a>{26}</span>Russia, leaving the conquest of England for another day.
+ This was honestly as much as their heads could hold at one time; and they were
+ helplessly unable to consider whether the other conditions postulated by Bernhardi
+ were present, or indeed, in the excitement of their schoolboyish imaginations, to
+ remember whether he had postulated any at all. And so they made their dash and put
+ themselves in the wrong at every point morally, besides making victory humanly
+ impossible for themselves militarily. That is the nemesis of Militarism: the
+ Militarist is thrown into a big game which he is too stupid to be able to play
+ successfully. Philip of Spain tried it 300 years ago; and the ruin he brought on his
+ empire has lasted to this day. He was so stupid that though he believed himself to be
+ the chosen instrument of God (as sure a sign of a hopeless fool in a man who cannot
+ see that every other man is equally an instrument of that Power as it is a guarantee
+ of wisdom and goodwill in the man who respects his neighbor as himself) he attempted
+ to fight Drake on the assumption that a cannon was a weapon that no real gentleman
+ and good Catholic would condescend to handle. Louis XIV. tried again two centuries
+ ago, and, being a more frivolous fool, got beaten by Marlborough and sent his
+ great-grandson from the throne to the guillotine. Napoleon tried it 100 years ago. He
+ was more dangerous, because he had prodigious personal ability and technical military
+ skill; and he started with the magnificent credential of the French Revolution. All
+ that carried him farther than the Spanish bigot or the French fop; but he, too,
+ accreted fools and knaves, and ended defeated in St. Helena after pandering for
+ twenty years to the appetite of idiots for glory and bloodshed; waging war as "a
+ great game"; and finding in a field strewn with corpses "un beau spectacle." In
+ short, as strong a magnet to fools as the others, though so much abler.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Our Own True Position</b>.</p>
+ <p>Now comes the question, in what position did this result of a mad theory and a
+ hopelessly incompetent application of it on the part of Potsdam place our own
+ Government? It left us quite clearly in the position of the responsible policeman of
+ the west. There was nobody else in Europe strong enough to chain "the mad dog."
+ Belgium and Holland, Norway and Sweden, Denmark and Switzerland could hardly have
+ been expected to take that duty on themselves, even if Norway and Sweden had not good
+ reason to be anti-Russian, and the Dutch capitalists were not half convinced that
+ their commercial prosperity would be greater under German than under native rule. It
+ will not be contended that Spain could have done anything; and as to Italy, it was
+ doubtful whether she did not consider herself still a member of the Triple Alliance.
+ It was evidently England or nobody. For England to have refrained, from hurling
+ herself into the fray, horse, foot, and artillery, was impossible from every point of
+ view. From the democratic point of view it would have meant an acceptance of the
+ pretension of which Potsdam, by attacking the French Republic, had made itself the
+ champion: that is, the pretension of the Junker class to dispose of the world on
+ Militarist lines at the expense of the lives and limbs of the masses. From the
+ international Socialist point of view, it would have been the acceptance of the
+ extreme nationalist view that the people of other countries are foreigners, and that
+ it does not concern us if they choose to cut one another's throats. Our Militarist
+ Junkers cried "If we let Germany conquer France it will be our turn next." Our
+ romantic Junkers added "and serve us right too: what man will pity us when the hour
+ strikes for us, if we skulk now?" Even the wise, who loathe war, and regard it as
+ such a dishonour and disgrace in itself that all its laurels cannot hide its brand of
+ Cain, had to admit that police duty is necessary and that war must be made on such
+ war as the Germans had made by attacking France in an avowed attempt to substitute a
+ hegemony of cannon for the comity of nations. There was no <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page27" id="page27"></a>{27}</span>alternative. Had the Foreign Office been the
+ International Socialist Bureau, had Sir Edward Grey been Jaures, had Mr. Ramsay
+ MacDonald been Prime Minister, had Russia been Germany's ally instead of ours, the
+ result would still have been the same: we must have drawn the sword to save France
+ and smash Potsdam as we smashed and always must smash Philip, Louis, Napoleon, <i>et
+ hoc genus omne</i>.</p>
+ <p>The case for our action is thus as complete as any <i>casus belli</i> is ever
+ likely to be. In fact its double character as both a democratic and military (if not
+ Militarist) case makes it too complete; for it enables our Junkers to claim it
+ entirely for themselves, and to fake it with pseudo-legal justifications which
+ destroy nine-tenths of our credit, the military and legal cases being hardly a tenth
+ of the whole: indeed, they would not by themselves justify the slaughter of a single
+ Pomeranian grenadier. For instance, take the Militarist view that we must fight
+ Potsdam because if the Kaiser is victorious, it will be our turn next! Well: are we
+ not prepared to fight always when our turn comes? Why should not we also depend on
+ our navy, on the extreme improbability of Germany, however triumphant, making two
+ such terrible calls on her people in the same generation as a war involves, on the
+ sympathy of the defeated, and on the support of American and European public opinion
+ when our turn comes, if there is nothing at stake now but the difference between
+ defeat and victory in an otherwise indifferent military campaign? If the welfare of
+ the world does not suffer any more by an English than by a German defeat who cares
+ whether we are defeated or not? As mere competitors in a race of armaments and an
+ Olympic game conducted with ball cartridge, or as plaintiffs in a technical case of
+ international law (already decided against us in 1870, by the way, when Gladstone had
+ to resort to a new treaty made <i>ad hoc</i> and lapsing at the end of the war) we
+ might as well be beaten as not, for all the harm that will ensue to anyone but
+ ourselves, or even to ourselves apart from our national vanity. It is as the special
+ constables of European life that we are important, and can send our men to the
+ trenches with the assurance that they are fighting in a worthy cause. In short, the
+ Junker case is not worth twopence: the Democratic case, the Socialist case, the
+ International case is worth all it threatens to cost.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The German Defence to Our Indictment.</b></p>
+ <p>What is the German reply to this case? Or rather, how would the Germans reply to
+ it if their official Militarist and Kaiserist panjandrums had the wit to find the
+ effective reply? Undoubtedly they would say that our Social-Democratic professions
+ are all very fine, but that our conversion to them is suspiciously sudden and recent.
+ They would remark that it is a little difficult for a nation in deadly peril to trust
+ its existence to a foreign public opinion which has not only never been expressed by
+ the people who really control England's foreign policy, but is flatly opposed to all
+ their known views and prejudices. They would ask why, instead of making an
+ <i>Entente</i> with France and Russia and refusing to give Germany any assurance
+ concerning its object except that we would not pledge ourselves to remain neutral if
+ the Franco-Russian <i>Entente</i> fell on Germany, we did not say straight out in
+ 1912 (when they put the question flatly to us), and again last July when Sazonoff
+ urged us so strongly to shew our hand, that if Germany attacked France we should
+ fight her, Russia or no Russia (a far less irritating and provocative attitude),
+ although we knew full well that an attack on France through Belgium would be part of
+ the German program if the Russian peril became acute. They would point out that if
+ our own Secretary for Foreign Affairs openly disclaimed any knowledge of the terms of
+ the Franco-Russian alliance, it was hard for a German to believe that they were
+ wholly fit for publication. In short, they would say "If you were so jolly wise and
+ well intentioned before the event, why did not your Foreign Minister and your
+ ambassadors in Berlin and Vienna and St. Petersburg&mdash;we beg pardon, Petro<span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>{28}</span>grad&mdash;invite us to
+ keep the peace and rely on western public opinion instead of refusing us every pledge
+ except the hostile one to co-operate with France against us in the North Sea, and
+ making it only too plain to us that your policy was a Junker policy as much as ours,
+ and that we had nothing to hope from your goodwill? What evidence had we that you
+ were playing any other game than this Militarist chess of our own, which you now so
+ piously renounce, but which none of you except a handful of Socialists whom you
+ despise and Syndicalists whom you imprison on Militarist pretexts has opposed for
+ years past, though it has been all over your Militarist anti-German platforms and
+ papers and magazines? Are your Social-Democratic principles sincere, or are they only
+ a dagger you keep up your sleeve to stab us in the back when our two most formidable
+ foes are trying to garotte us? If so, where does your moral superiority come in,
+ hypocrites that you are? If not, why, we repeat, did you not make them known to all
+ the world, instead of making an ambush for us by your senseless silence?"</p>
+ <p>I see no reply to that except a frank confession that we did not know our own
+ minds; that we came to a knowledge of them only when Germany's attack on France
+ forced us to make them up at last; that though doubtless a chronic state of perfect
+ lucidity and long prevision on our part would have been highly convenient, yet there
+ is a good deal to be said for the policy of not fording a stream until you come to
+ it; and that in any case we must entirely decline to admit that we are more likely
+ than other people to do the wrong thing when circumstances at last oblige us to think
+ and act. Also that the discussion is idle on the shewing of the German case itself;
+ for whether the Germans assumed us to be unscrupulous Militarists or conscientious
+ Democrats they were bound to come to the same conclusion: namely, that we should
+ attack them if they attacked France; consequently their assumption that we would not
+ interfere must have been based on the belief that we are simply "contemptible," which
+ is the sort of mistake people have to pay for in this wicked world.</p>
+ <p>On the whole, we can hector our way in the Prussian manner out of that discussion
+ well enough, provided we hold our own in the field. But the Prussian manner hardly
+ satisfies the conscience. True, the fact that our diplomatists were not able to
+ discover the right course for Germany does not excuse Germany for being unable to
+ find it for herself. Not that it was more her business than ours: it was a European
+ question, and should have been solved by the united counsels of all the ambassadors
+ and Foreign Offices and chanceries. Indeed it could not have been stably solved
+ without certain assurances from them. But it was, to say the least, as much Germany's
+ business as anyone else's, and terribly urgent for her: "a matter of life and death,"
+ the Imperial Chancellor thought. Still, it is not for us to claim moral superiority
+ to Germany. It was for us a matter of the life and death of many Englishmen; and
+ these Englishmen are dead because our diplomatists were as blind as the Prussians.
+ The war is a failure for secret Junker diplomacy, ours no less than the enemy's.
+ Those of us who have still to die must be inspired, not by devotion to the
+ diplomatists, but, like the Socialist hero of old on the barricade, by the vision of
+ "human solidarity." And if he purchases victory for that holy cause with his blood, I
+ submit that we cannot decently allow the Foreign Office to hang up his martyr's palm
+ over the War Office Mantelpiece.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The First Penalty of Disingenuousness.</b></p>
+ <p>The Foreign Office, however, can at lease shift its ground, and declare for the
+ good cause instead of belittling it with quibbling excuses. For see what the first
+ effect of the nonsense about Belgium has been! It carried with it the inevitable
+ conclusion that when the last German was cleared off Belgian soil, peace-loving
+ England, her reluctant work in this shocking war done, would calmly retire from the
+ conflict, and leave her <span class="pagenum"><a name="page29"
+ id="page29"></a>{29}</span>Allies to finish the deal with Potsdam. Accordingly, after
+ Mr. Asquith's oration at the Mansion House, the Allies very properly insisted on our
+ signing a solemn treaty between the parties that they must all stand together to the
+ very end. A pitifully thin attempt has been made to represent that the mistrusted
+ party was France, and that the Kaiser was trying to buy her off. All one can say to
+ that is that the people who believe that any French Government dare face the French
+ people now with anything less than Alsace and Lorraine as the price of peace, or that
+ an undefeated and indeed masterfully advancing German Kaiser (as he seemed then) dare
+ offer France such a price, would believe anything. Of course we had to sign; but if
+ the Prime Minister had not been prevented by his own past from taking the popular
+ line, we should not have been suspected of a possible backing-out when the demands of
+ our sanctimoniousness were satisfied. He would have known that we are not vindicating
+ a treaty which by accident remains among the fragments of treaties of Paris, of
+ Prague, of Berlin, of all sorts of places and dates, as the only European treaty that
+ has hitherto escaped flat violation: we are supporting the war as a war on war, on
+ military coercion, on domineering, on bullying, on brute force, on military law, on
+ caste insolence, on what Mrs. Fawcett called insensable deviltry (only to find the
+ papers explaining apologetically that she, as a lady, had of course been alluding to
+ war made by foreigners, not by England). Some of us, remembering the things we have
+ ourselves said and done, may doubt whether Satan can cast out Satan; but as the job
+ is not exactly one for an unfallen angel, we may as well let him have a try.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Blank Cheque.</b></p>
+ <p>In the meantime behold us again hopelessly outwitted by Eastern diplomacy as a
+ direct consequence of this ill-starred outburst of hypocrisy about treaties!
+ Everybody has said over and over again that this war is the most tremendous war ever
+ waged. Nobody has said that this new treaty is the most tremendous blank cheque we
+ have ever been forced to sign by our Parliamentary party trick of striking moral
+ attitudes. It is true that Mr. J.A. Hobson realised the situation at once, and was
+ allowed to utter a little croak in a corner; but where was the trumpet note of
+ warning that should have rung throughout the whole Press? Just consider what the
+ blank cheque means. France's draft on it may stop at the cost of recovering Alsace
+ and Lorraine. We shall have to be content with a few scraps of German colony and the
+ heavy-weight championship. But Russia? When will she say "Hold! Enough!" Suppose she
+ wants not only Poland, but Baltic Prussia? Suppose she wants Constantinople as her
+ port of access to the unfrozen seas, in addition to the dismemberment of Austria?
+ Suppose she has the brilliant idea of annexing all Prussia, for which there is really
+ something to be said by ethnographical map-makers, Militarist madmen, and Pan-Slavist
+ megalomaniacs? It may be a reasonable order; but it is a large one; and the fact that
+ we should have been committed to it without the knowledge of Parliament, without
+ discussion, without warning, without any sort of appeal to public opinion or
+ democratic sanction, by a stroke of Sir Edward Grey's pen within five weeks of his
+ having committed us in the same fashion to an appalling European war, shews how
+ completely the Foreign Office has thrown away all pretence of being any less absolute
+ than the Kaiser himself. It simply offers <i>carte blanche</i> to the armies of the
+ Allies without a word to the nation until the cheque is signed. The only limit there
+ is to the obligation is the certainty that the cheque will be dishonoured the moment
+ the draft on it becomes too heavy. And that may furnish a virtuous pretext for
+ another war between the Allies themselves. In any case no treaty can save each Ally
+ from the brute necessity of surrendering and paying up if beaten, whether the defeat
+ is shared by the others or not. Did I not say that the sooner we made up our minds to
+ the terms of the treaty of peace, so that we might know what we were fighting for,
+ and how far we <span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>{30}</span>were
+ bound to go, the better? Instead of which we sign a ridiculous "scrap of paper" to
+ save ourselves the intolerable fatigue of thought.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Belgium Crucified Between the European Powers.</b></p>
+ <p>And now, before I leave the subject of Belgium, what have we done for Belgium?
+ Have we saved her soil from invasion? Were we at her side with half a million men
+ when the avalanche fell on her? Or were we safe in our own country praising her
+ heroism in paragraphs which all contrived to convey an idea that the Belgian soldier
+ is about four feet high, but immensely plucky for his size? Alas, when the Belgian
+ soldier cried: "Where are the English?" the reply was "a mass of concrete as large as
+ a big room," blown into the air by a German siege gun, falling back and crushing him
+ into the earth we had not succeeded in saving from the worst of the horrors of war.
+ We have not protected Belgium: Belgium has protected us at the cost of being
+ conquered by Germany. It is now our sacred duty to drive the Germans out of Belgium.
+ Meanwhile we might at least rescue her refugees by a generous grant of public money
+ from the caprices of private charity. We need not press our offer to lend her money:
+ German capitalists will do that for her with the greatest pleasure when the war is
+ over. I think the Government realizes that now; for I note the after-thought that a
+ loan from us need not bear interest.</p>
+ <p>Now that we begin to see where we really are, what practical morals can we
+ draw?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Unpreparedness the Price of Secrecy.</b></p>
+ <p>First, that our autocratic foreign policy, in which the Secretary for Foreign
+ Affairs is always a Junker, and makes war and concludes war without consulting the
+ nation, or confiding in it, or even refraining from deceiving it as to his
+ intentions, leads inevitably to a disastrous combination of war and unpreparedness
+ for war. Wars are planned which require huge expeditionary armies trained and
+ equipped for war. But as such preparation could not be concealed from the public, it
+ is simply deferred until the war is actually declared and begun, at the most
+ frightful risk of such an annihilation of our little peace army as we escaped by the
+ skin of our teeth at Mons and Cambrai. The military experts tell us that it takes
+ four months to make an infantry and six to make a cavalry soldier. And our way of
+ getting an army able to fight the German army is to declare war on Germany just as if
+ we had such an army, and then trust to the appalling resultant peril and disaster to
+ drive us into wholesale enlistment, voluntary or (better still from the Junker point
+ of view) compulsory. It seems to me that a nation which tolerates such insensate
+ methods and outrageous risks must shortly perish from sheer lunacy. And it is all
+ pure superstition: the retaining of the methods of Edward the First in the reign of
+ George the Fifth. I therefore suggest that the first lesson of the war is that the
+ Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs be reduced to the level of a simple Prime
+ Minister, or even of a constitutional monarch, powerless to fire a single shot or
+ sign a treaty without the authority of the House of Commons, all diplomatic business
+ being conducted in a blaze of publicity, and the present regulation which exacts the
+ qualification of a private income of at least &pound;400 a year for a position in the
+ Diplomatic Service replaced by a new regulation that at least half the staff shall
+ consist of persons who have never dined out at the houses of hosts of higher rank
+ than unfashionable solicitors or doctors.</p>
+ <p>In these recommendations I am not forgetting that an effective check on diplomacy
+ is not easy to devise, and that high personal character and class disinterestedness
+ (the latter at present unattainable) on the part of our diplomatists will be as vital
+ as ever. I well know that diplomacy is carried on at present not only by official
+ correspondence meant for possible publication and subject to an inspection which is
+ in some degree a responsible inspection, but by private letters which the King
+ himself has no right <span class="pagenum"><a name="page31"
+ id="page31"></a>{31}</span>to read. I know that even in the United States, where
+ treaties and declarations of war must be made by Parliament, it is nevertheless
+ possible for the President to bring about a situation in which Congress, like our
+ House of Commons in the present instance, has no alternative but to declare war. But
+ though complete security is impracticable, it does not follow that no precautions
+ should be taken, or that a democratic tradition is no safer than a feudal tradition.
+ A far graver doubt is raised by the susceptibility of the masses to war fever, and
+ the appalling danger of a daily deluge of cheap newspapers written by nameless men
+ and women whose scandalously low payment is a guarantee of their ignorance and their
+ servility to the financial department, controlled by a moneyed class which not only
+ curries favour with the military caste for social reasons, but has large direct
+ interests in war as a method of raising the price of money, the only commodity the
+ moneyed class has to sell. But I am quite unable to see that our Junkers are less
+ susceptible to the influence of the Press than the people educated by public
+ elementary schools. On the contrary, our Democrats are more fool-proof than our
+ Plutocrats; and the ravings our Junkers send to the papers for nothing in war time
+ would be dear at a halfpenny a line. Plutocracy makes for war because it offers
+ prizes to Plutocrats: Socialism makes for peace because the interests it serves are
+ international. So, as the Socialist side is the democratic side, we had better
+ democratize our diplomacy if we desire peace.</p>
+ <h3>II.</h3>
+ <h3>RECRUITING.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>And now as to the question of recruiting. This is pressing, because it is not
+ enough for the Allies to win: we and not Russia must be the decisive factor in the
+ victory, or Germany will not be fairly beaten, and we shall be only rescued
+ <i>proteges</i> of Russia instead of the saviours of Western Europe. We must have the
+ best army in Europe; and we shall not get it under existing arrangements. We are
+ passing out of the first phase of the war fever, in which men flock to the colours by
+ instinct, by romantic desire for adventure, by the determination not, as Wagner put
+ it, "to let their lives be governed by fear of the end," by simple destitution
+ through unemployment, by rancour and pugnacity excited by the inventions of the
+ Press, by a sense of duty inculcated in platform orations which would not stand half
+ an hour's discussion, by the incitements and taunts of elderly non-combatants and
+ maidens with a taste for mischief, and by the verses of poets jumping at the cheapest
+ chance in their underpaid profession. The difficulty begins when all the men
+ susceptible to these inducements are enlisted, and we have to draw on the solid,
+ sceptical, sensible residuum who know the value of their lives and services and
+ liberties, and will not give them except on substantial and honourable conditions.
+ These Ironsides know that it is one thing to fight for your country, and quite
+ another to let your wife and children starve to save our rich idlers from a rise in
+ the supertax. They also know that it is one thing to wipe out the Prussian drill
+ sergeant and snob officer as the enemies of manhood and honour, and another to let
+ that sacred mission be made an excuse for subjecting us to exactly the same tyranny
+ in England. They have not forgotten the "On the knee" episode, nor the floggings in
+ our military prisons, nor the scandalous imprisonment of Tom Mann, nor the warnings
+ as to military law and barrack life contained even in Robert Blatchford's testimony
+ that the army made a man of him.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>What the Labour Party Owes to the Army.</b></p>
+ <p>And here is where the Labour Party should come in. The Labour Party's business is
+ to abolish the Militarist soldier, who is only a quaint survival of the King's
+ footman (himself a still quainter survival of the medieval baron's retainer), and
+ substitute for him a trained combatant with full civil rights, receiving the Trade
+ Union rate of wages proper to a skilled worker at <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page32" id="page32"></a>{32}</span>a dangerous trade. It must co-operate with
+ the Trade Unions in fixing this moral minimum wage for the citizen soldier, and in
+ obtaining for him a guarantee that the wage shall continue until he obtains civil
+ employment on standard terms at the conclusion of the war. It must make impossible
+ the scandal of a monstrously rich peer (his riches, the automatic result of ground
+ land-landlordism, having "no damned nonsense of merit about them") proclaiming the
+ official weekly allowance for the child of the British soldier in the trenches. That
+ allowance is eighteenpence, being less than one third of the standard allowance for
+ an illegitimate child under an affiliation order. And the Labour Party must deprive
+ the German bullet of its present double effect in killing an Englishman in France and
+ simultaneously reducing his widow's subsistence from a guinea a week to five
+ shillings. Until this is done we are simply provoking Providence to destroy us.</p>
+ <p>I wish I could say that it is hardly necessary to add that Trade Unionism must be
+ instituted in the Army, so that there shall be accredited secretaries in the field to
+ act as a competent medium of communication between the men on service and the
+ political representatives of their class at the War Office (for I shall propose this
+ representative innovation presently). It will shock our colonels; but I know of no
+ bodies of men for whom repeated and violent shocking is more needed and more likely
+ to prove salutary than the regimental masses of the British army. One rather pleasant
+ shock in store for them is the discovery that an officer and a gentleman, whose sole
+ professional interest is the honour and welfare of his country, and who is bound to
+ the mystical equality of life-and-death duty for all alike, will get on much more
+ easily with a Trade Union secretary than a commercial employer whose aim is simply
+ private profit and who regards every penny added to the wages of his employees as a
+ penny taken off his own income. Howbeit, whether the colonels like it or
+ not&mdash;that is, whether they have become accustomed to it or not&mdash;it has to
+ come, and its protection from Junker prejudice is another duty of the Labour Party.
+ The Party as a purely political body must demand that the defender of his country
+ shall retain his full civil rights unimpaired; that, the unnecessary, mischievous,
+ dishonourable and tyrannical slave code called military law, which at its most
+ savagely stern point produced only Wellington's complaint that "it is impossible to
+ get a command obeyed in the British Army," be carted away to the rubbish heap of
+ exploded superstitions; and that if Englishmen are not to be allowed to serve their
+ country in the field as freely as they do in the numerous civil industries in which
+ neglect and indiscipline are as dangerous as they are in war, their leaders and
+ Parliamentary representatives will not recommend them to serve at all. In wartime
+ these things may not matter: discipline either goes by the board or keeps itself
+ under the pressure of the enemy's cannon; and bullying sergeants and insolent
+ officers have something else to do than to provoke men they dislike into striking
+ them and then reporting them for two years' hard labour without trial by jury. In
+ battle such officers are between two fires. But soldiers are not always, or even
+ often, at war; and the dishonour of abdicating dearly-bought rights and liberties is
+ a stain both on war and peace. Now is the time to get rid of that stain. If any
+ officer cannot command men without it, as civilians and police inspectors do, that
+ officer has mistaken his profession and had better come home.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <center>
+ <br />
+ <a href="images/galsworthy.jpg"> <img src='images/galsworthy_thumb.jpg' width='252'
+ height='400' alt='JOHN GALSWORTHY. (Photo by E.O. Hoppe.) See Page 102' title='
+ JOHN GALSWORTHY' /></a> <a href="images/kipling.jpg"><img src='images/kipling_thumb.jpg'
+ width='253' height='400' alt='RUDYARD KIPLING (Photo by E.O. Hoppe)See Page 106'
+ title='RUDYARD KIPLING' /> <br />
+ </a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>JOHN GALSWORTHY. (Photo by E.O. Hoppe.) See <a href="#page102">Page
+ 102</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>RUDYARD KIPLING. (Photo by E.O. Hoppe.) See <a href="#page106">Page
+ 106</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <p><b>Obsolete Tests in the Army.</b></p>
+ <p>Another matter needs to be dealt with at the same time. There are immense numbers
+ of atheists in this country; and though most of them, like the Kaiser, regard
+ themselves as devout Christians, the best are intellectually honest enough to object
+ to profess beliefs they do not hold, especially in the solemn act of dedicating
+ themselves to death in the service of their country. Army form E 501 A (September,
+ 1912) secured to these the benefit<span class="pagenum"><a name="page33"
+ id="page33"></a>{33}</span> of the Bradlaugh Affirmation Act of 1888, as the
+ enlisting soldier said simply "I, So and So, do make Oath, &amp;c." But recruits are
+ now confronted with another form (E 501, June, 1914) running "I, So and So, swear by
+ Almighty God, &amp;c." On September 1st, at Lord Kitchener's call, a civil servant
+ obtained leave to enlist and had the oath put to him, in this form by the attesting
+ officer. He offered to swear in the 1912 form. This was refused; and we accordingly
+ lost a recruit of just that sturdily conscientious temper which has made the most
+ formidable soldiers known to history. I am bound to add, however, that the attesting
+ officer, on being told that the oath would be a blasphemous farce to the conscience
+ of the recruit, made no difficulty about that, and was quite willing to accept him if
+ he, on his part, would oblige by professing what he did not believe. Thus a Ghoorka's
+ religious conscience is respected: an Englishman's is insulted and outraged.</p>
+ <p>But, indeed, all these oaths are obstructive and useless superstitions. No recruit
+ will hesitate to pledge his word of honour to fight to the death for his country or
+ for a cause with which he sympathizes; and that is all we require. There is no need
+ to drag in Almighty God and no need to drag in the King. Many an Irishman, many a
+ colonial Republican, many an American volunteer who would fight against the Prussian
+ monarchy shoulder to shoulder with the French Republicans with a will, would rather
+ not pretend to do it out of devotion to the British throne. To vanquish Prussia in
+ this war we need the active aid or the sympathy of every Republican in the world.
+ America, for instance, sympathizes with England, but classes the King with the Kaiser
+ as an obsolete institution. Besides, even from the courtly point of view the
+ situation is a delicate one. Why emphasize the fact that, formally speaking, the war
+ is between two grandsons of Albert the Good, that thoroughbred German whose London
+ monument is so much grander than Cromwell's?</p>
+ <p>The Labour Party should also set its face firmly against the abandonment of Red
+ Cross work and finance, or the support of soldiers' families, or the patrolling of
+ the streets, to amateurs who regard the war as a wholesome patriotic exercise, or as
+ the latest amusement in the way of charity bazaars, or as a fountain of
+ self-righteousness. Civil volunteering is needed urgently enough: one of the
+ difficulties of war is that it creates in certain departments a demand so abnormal
+ that no peace establishment can cope with it. But the volunteers should be
+ disciplined and paid: we are not so poor that we need spunge on anyone. And in
+ hospital and medical service war ought not at present to cost more than peace would
+ if the victims of our commercial system were properly tended, and our Public Health
+ service adequately extended and manned. We should therefore treat our Red Cross
+ department as if it were destined to become a permanent service. No charity and no
+ amateur anarchy and incompetence should be tolerated. As to allowing that admirable
+ detective agency for the defence of the West End against begging letter writers, the
+ Charity Organization Society to touch the soldier's home, the very suggestion is an
+ outrage. The C.O.S., the Poor Law, and the charitable amateur, whether of the
+ patronizing or prying or gushing variety, must be kept as far from the army and its
+ folk as if they were German spies. The business of our fashionable amateurs is to pay
+ Income Tax and Supertax. This time they will have to pay through the nose, vigorously
+ wrung for that purpose by the House of Commons; so they had better set their own
+ houses in order and leave the business of the war to be officially and responsibly
+ dealt with and paid for at full standard rates.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Wanted: Labour Representation in the War Office.</b></p>
+ <p>But parliamentary activity is not sufficient. There must be a more direct contact
+ between representative Labour and the Army, because Parliament can only remedy
+ grievances, and that not be<span class="pagenum"><a name="page34"
+ id="page34"></a>{34}</span>fore years of delay and agitation elapse. Even then the
+ grievances are not dealt with on their merits; for under our party system, which is
+ the most abominable engine for the perversion and final destruction of all political
+ conscience ever devized by man, the House of Commons never votes on any question but
+ whether the Government shall remain in office or give the Opposition a turn, no
+ matter what the pretext for the division may be. Only in such emergencies as the
+ present, when the Government is forced to beg the Labour members to help them to
+ recruit, is there a chance of making reasonable conditions for the soldier.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Four Inoculations.</b></p>
+ <p>It is therefore necessary that the War Office should have working class
+ representatives on all committees and councils which issue notices to the public.
+ There is at present, it would seem, not a single person in authority there who has
+ the faintest notion of what the immense majority of possible British recruits are
+ thinking about. The results have been beyond description ludicrous and dangerous.
+ Every proclamation is urgently worded so as to reassure recruits with &pound;5,000 a
+ year and repel recruits with a pound a week. On the very day when the popular Lord
+ Kitchener, dropping even the <i>et rex meus</i> of Wolsey, frankly asked the nation
+ for 100,000 men for his army, and when it was a matter of life and death that every
+ encouragement should be held out to working men to enlist, the War Office decided
+ that this was the psychological moment to remind everybody that soldiers on active
+ service often die of typhoid fever, and to press inoculation on the recruits pending
+ the officially longed-for hour when Sir Almroth Wright's demand for compulsion can be
+ complied with. I say nothing here about the efficacy of inoculation. Efficacious or
+ not, Sir Almroth Wright himself bases his demand for compulsion on the ground that it
+ is hopeless to expect the whole army to submit to it voluntarily. That being so, it
+ seems to me that when men are hesitating on the threshold of the recruiting station,
+ only a German spy or our War Office (always worth ten thousand men to our enemies)
+ would seize that moment to catch the nervous postulant by the sleeve and say, "Have
+ you thought of the danger of dysentery?" The fact that the working class forced the
+ Government, very much against its doctor-ridden will, to abolish compulsory
+ vaccination, shews the extent to which its households loathe and dread these vaccines
+ (so called, but totally unconnected with cows or Jenner) which, as they are
+ continually reminded by energetic anti-inoculation propagandists in largely
+ circulated journals and pamphlets, not to mention ghastly photographs of disfigured
+ children, sometimes produce worse effects than the diseases they are supposed to
+ prevent. Indifferent or careless recruits are easily induced to submit to inoculation
+ by little privileges during the ensuing indisposition or by small money bribes; and
+ careful ones are proselytized by Sir Almroth's statistics; but on the whole both
+ inoculation and amateur medical statistics are regarded with suspicion by the poor;
+ and the fact that revaccination is compulsory in the regular army, and that the moral
+ pressure applied to secure both typhoid inoculation and vaccination both in the
+ regular army and the Territorials is such as only a few stalwarts are able to resist,
+ is deeply resented. At present the inoculation mania has reached the pitch of
+ proposing no less than four separate inoculations: revaccination, typhoid, cholera,
+ and&mdash;Sir Almroth's last staggerer&mdash;inoculation against wounds! When the War
+ Office and its medical advisers have been successfully inoculated against political
+ lunacy, it will be time enough to discuss such extravagances. Meanwhile, the sooner
+ the War Office issues a proclamation that no recruit will be either compelled or
+ importuned to submit to any sort of inoculation whatever against his will, the better
+ for the recruiting, and the worse for the enemy.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The War Office Bait of Starvation.</b></p>
+ <p>But this blunder was a joke compared <span class="pagenum"><a name="page35"
+ id="page35"></a>{35}</span>to the next exploit of the War Office. It suddenly began
+ to placard the country with frantic assurances to its five-thousand-a-year friends
+ that they would be "discharged with all possible speed THE MINUTE THE WAR IS OVER."
+ Only considerations of space restrained them, I presume, from adding "LAWN TENNIS,
+ SHOOTING, AND ALL THE DELIGHTS OF FASHIONABLE LIFE CAN BE RESUMED IMMEDIATELY ON THE
+ FIRING OF THE LAST SHOT." Now what does this mean to the wage worker? Simply that the
+ moment he is no longer wanted in the trenches he will be flung back into the labour
+ market to sink or swim without an hour's respite. If we had had a Labour
+ representative or two to help in drawing up these silly placards&mdash;I am almost
+ tempted to say if we had had any human being of any class with half the brains of a
+ rabbit there&mdash;the placards would have contained a solemn promise that no single
+ man should be discharged at the conclusion of the war, save at his own request, until
+ a job had been found for him in civil life. I ask the heavens, with a shudder, do
+ these class-blinded people in authority really intend to take a million men out of
+ their employment; turn them into soldiers; and then at one blow hurl them back,
+ utterly unprovided for, into the streets?</p>
+ <p>But a War Office capable of placarding Lord Roberts's declaration that the men who
+ are enlisting are doing "what all able-bodied men in the kingdom should do" is
+ clearly ignorant enough for anything. I do not blame Lord Roberts for his oratorical
+ flourish: we have all said things just as absurd on the platform in moments of
+ enthusiasm. But the officials who reproduced it in cold blood would have us believe
+ that soldiers live on air; that ammunition drops from heaven like manna; and that an
+ army could hold the field for twenty-four hours without the support of a still more
+ numerous body of civilians working hard to support it. Sane men gasp at such placards
+ and ask angrily, "What sort of fools do you take us for?" I have in my hand a copy of
+ <i>The Torquay Times</i> containing a hospitable invitation to soldiers' wives to
+ call at the War Office, Whitehall, S.W., if they desire "assistance and explanation
+ of their case." The return fare from Torquay to London is thirty shillings and
+ sixpence third class; but the War Office no doubt assumes that all soldiers' wives
+ keep motor cars. Still, let us be just even to the War Office. It did <i>not</i> ask
+ the soldiers' wives for forms of authorization to pay the separation allowance to
+ their bankers every six months. It actually offered the money monthly!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Delusive Promises.</b></p>
+ <p>The middle and upper classes are nearly as bad as the War Office. They talk of
+ keeping every man's place open for him until the end of the war. Obviously this is
+ flatly impossible. Some places can be kept, and no doubt are being kept. Some
+ functions are suspended by the war and cannot be resumed until the troops return to
+ civil life and resume them. Employers are so hardened to the daily commercial
+ necessity for discharging men without a thought as to what is to become of them that
+ they are quite ready to undertake to sack the replacers when the troops come back.
+ Also the return of peace may be followed by a revival of trade in which employment
+ may not be hard to find, even by discharged soldiers, who are always passed over in
+ the labour market in favour of civilians, as those well know who have the task of
+ trying to find places for them. But these considerations do not justify an attempt to
+ persuade recruits that they can go off soldiering for months&mdash;they are told by
+ Lord Kitchener that it will probably be for years&mdash;and then come back and walk
+ to their benches or into their offices and pick up their work as if they had left
+ only the night before. The very people who are promising this are raising the cry
+ "business as usual" in the same breath. How can business be carried on as usual, or
+ carried on at all, on unoccupied office stools and at counters with no men behind
+ them? Such rubbish is an insult to the recruit's intelligence. These promises of
+ keeping places open were made to the men who enlisted for <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page36" id="page36"></a>{36}</span>South Africa, and were of course broken, as
+ a promise to supply green cheese by quarrying the moon would have been broken. New
+ employees must be found to do the work of the men who are in the field; and these new
+ ones will not all be thrown into the street when the war is over to make room for
+ discharged soldiers, even if a good many of these soldiers are not disqualified by
+ their new training and habits for their old employment. I repeat, there is only one
+ assurance that can be given to the recruits without grossly and transparently
+ deluding them; and that is that they shall not be discharged, except at their own
+ request, until civil employment is available for them.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Funking Controversy.</b></p>
+ <p>This is not the only instance of the way in which, under the first scare of the
+ war, we shut our eyes and opened our mouths to every folly. For example, there was a
+ cry for the suspension of all controversy in the face of the national danger. Now the
+ only way to suspend controversial questions during a period of intense activity in
+ the very departments in which the controversy has arisen is to allow them all to be
+ begged. Perhaps I should not object if they were all begged in favour of my own side,
+ as, for instance, the question of Socialism was begged in favour of Socialism when
+ the Government took control of the railways; bought up all the raw sugar; regulated
+ prices; guaranteed the banks; suspended the operation of private contracts; and did
+ all the things it had been declaring utterly and eternally Utopian and imposible when
+ Socialists advocated them. But it is now proposed to suspend all popular liberties
+ and constitutional safeguards; to muzzle the Press, and actually to have no contests
+ at bye-elections! This is more than a little too much. We have submitted to have our
+ letters, our telegrams, our newspapers censored, our dividends delayed, our trains
+ cut off, our horses and even our houses commandeered, our streets darkened, our
+ restaurants closed, and ourselves shot dead on the public highways if we were slow to
+ realize that some excited person bawling in the distance was a sentry challenging us.
+ But that we are to be politically gagged and enslaved as well; that the able-bodied
+ soldier in the trenches, who depends on the able-minded civilian at home to guard the
+ liberties of his country and protect him from carelesness or abuse of power by the
+ authorities whom he must blindly and dumbly obey, is to be betrayed the moment his
+ back is turned to his fellow-citizens and his face to the foe, is not patriotism: it
+ is the paralysis of mortal funk: it is the worst kind of cowardice in the face of the
+ enemy. Let us hear no more of it, but contest our elections like men, and regain the
+ ancient political prestige of England at home as our expeditionary force has regained
+ it abroad.</p>
+ <p>The Labour Party, then, need have no hesitation in raising all the standing
+ controversies between Democracy and Junkerism in their acutest form, and taking
+ advantage of the war emergency to press them to a series of parliamentary victories
+ for Labour, whether in negotiations with the Government whips, in divisions on the
+ floor of the House, or in strenuously contested bye-elections. No doubt our Junkers
+ will try to disarm their opponents by representing that it would be in the last
+ degree unfair, un-English, and ungentlemanly on the part of the Labour members to
+ seize any tactical advantage in parliamentary warfare, and most treacherous and
+ unpatriotic to attack their country (meaning the Junker Party) when it is at war.
+ Some Labour members will be easily enough gulled in this way: it would be laughable,
+ if the consequences were not so tragic, to see how our parliamentary beginners from
+ the working class succumb to the charm of the Junker appeal. The Junkers themselves
+ are not to be coaxed in this manner: it is no use offering tracts to a missionary, as
+ the poor Kaiser found when he tried it on. The Labour Party will soon learn the value
+ of these polite demonstrations that it is always its duty not to hamper the governing
+ classes in their very difficult and delicate and dangerous task of safeguard<span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37"></a>{37}</span>ing the interests of this
+ great empire: in short, to let itself be gammoned by elegant phrases and by adroit
+ practisings on its personal good-nature, its inveterate proletarian sentimentality,
+ and its secret misgivings as to the correctness of its manners. The Junkers have
+ already taken the fullest advantage of the war to paralyze democracy. If the Labour
+ members do not take a vigorous counter-offensive, and fight every parliamentary
+ trench to the last division, the Labour Movement will be rushed back as precipitately
+ as General von Kluck rushed the Allies back from Namur to the gates of Paris. In
+ truth, the importance of the war to the immense majority of Englishmen, Frenchmen,
+ and Germans lies in the possibility that when Junkers fall out common men may come by
+ their own.</p>
+ <h3>III.</h3>
+ <h3>THE TERMS OF PEACE.</h3>
+ <br />
+ <b>Natural Limits to Duration of the War.</b> <br />
+
+ <p>So much for the recruiting. Now for the terms of peace. It is time to take that
+ subject in hand; for Lord Kitchener's notion that we are going to settle down to
+ years of war as we did a century ago is soldierly, but not sensible. It is, of
+ course, physically possible for us to continue for twenty years digging trenches and
+ shelling German troops and shoving German armies back when they are not shoving us,
+ whilst old women pull turnips and tend goats in the fire zones across which soldiers
+ run to shelter. But we cannot afford to withdraw a million male adults who have
+ passed a strictish health test from the work of parentage for several years unless we
+ intend to breed our next generation from parents with short sight, varicose veins,
+ rotten teeth, and deranged internal organs. Soldiers do not think of these things:
+ "theirs not to reason why: theirs but to do and die"; but sensible civilians have to.
+ And even soldiers know that you cannot make ammunition as fast as you can burn it,
+ nor produce men and horses as instantaneously as you can kill them by machinery. It
+ would be well, indeed, if our papers, instead of writing of ten-inch shells, would
+ speak of &pound;1,000 shells, and regimental bands occasionally finish the National
+ Anthem and the Braban&ccedil;onne and the Marseillaise with the old strain, "That's
+ the way the money goes: Pop goes the Ten Inch." It is easy to rebuke Mr. Norman
+ Angell and Herr Bloch for their sordid references to the cost of war; and Mr. H.G.
+ Wells is profoundly right in pointing out that the fact that war does not pay
+ commercially is greatly to its credit, as no high human activity ever does pay
+ commercially. But modern war does not even pay its way. Already our men have "pumped
+ lead" into retreating Germans who had no lead left to pump back again; and sooner or
+ later, if we go on indefinitely, we shall have to finish the job with our fists, and
+ congratulate ourselves that both Georges Carpentier and Bombardier Wells are on our
+ side. This war will stop when Germany throws up the sponge, which will happen long
+ before she is utterly exhausted, but not before we ourselves shall be glad enough of
+ a rest. Nations are like bees: they cannot kill except at the cost of their own
+ lives.</p>
+ <p>The question of terms will raise a fierce controversy. At the extremes of our
+ public opinion we have two temperaments, first, our gentlemen, our sportsmen, our
+ daredevils, our <i>preux chevaliers</i>. To these the notion of reviling your enemy
+ when he is up; kicking him when he is knocked down by somebody else; and gouging out
+ his eyes, cutting out his tongue, hewing off his right arm, and stealing all his
+ money, is abhorrent and cowardly. These gallants say, "It is not enough that we can
+ fight Germany to-day. We can fight her any day and every day. Let her come again and
+ again and yet again. We will fight her one to three; and if she comes on ten to one,
+ as she did at Mons, we will mill on the retreat, and drive her back again when we
+ have worn her down to our weight. If her fleet will not come out to fight us because
+ we have too many ships, we will send all the odds in our favour back to Portsmouth
+ and fight <span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>{38}</span>ship to
+ ship in the North Sea, and let the bravest and best win." That is how gallant
+ fighters talk, and how Drake is popularly (though erroneously) supposed to have
+ tackled the Armada.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Ignoble Attitude of Cruel Panic.</b></p>
+ <p>But we are not all <i>preux chevaliers.</i> We have at the other extremity the
+ people who are craving for loot and vengeance, who clamour for the humiliation and
+ torture of the enemy, who rave against the village burnings and shootings by the
+ Prussians in one column and exult in the same proceedings by the Russians in another,
+ who demand that German prisoners of war shall be treated as criminals, who depict our
+ Indian troops as savage cutthroats because they like to think of their enemies being
+ mauled in the spirit of the Indian Mutiny, who shriek that the Kaiser must be sent to
+ Devil's Island because St. Helena is too good for him, and who declare that Germany
+ must be so maimed and trodden into the dust that she will not be able to raise her
+ head again for a century. Let us call these people by their own favourite name, Huns,
+ even at the risk of being unjust to the real Huns. And let us send as many of them to
+ the trenches as we can possibly induce to go, in the hope that they may presently
+ join the lists of the missing. Still, as they rather cling to our soil, they will
+ have to be reckoned with when the settlement comes. But they will not count for much
+ then. Most of them will be heartily ashamed of what they said in those first three or
+ four weeks of blue funk (I am too timid myself not to make allowances for that most
+ distressing and universal, but fortunately transient effect of war); and most of
+ those who are not will be ashamed to bear malice publicly.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Commercial Attitude.</b></p>
+ <p>Far more weighty in the matter will be the intermediate sections. First, our
+ commercial main body, which thinks that chivalry is not business, and that rancour is
+ childish, but cannot see why we should not make the Germans pay damages and supply us
+ with some capital to set the City going again, forgetting that when France did that
+ after 1871 for Berlin, Berlin was set going so effectually that it went headlong to a
+ colossal financial smash, whilst the French peasant who had provided the capital from
+ his old stocking throve soberly on the interest at the expense of less vital classes.
+ Unfortunately Germany has set the example of this kind of looting. Prussian generals,
+ like Napoleon's marshals, have always been shameless brigands, keeping up the
+ seventeenth and eighteenth century tradition of making cities bribe them to refrain
+ from sack and pillage and even billeting, and being quite incapable of the
+ magnificence of the great Cond&eacute; (or was it Turenne?), who refused a payment
+ offered by a city on the ground that he had not intended to march through it.
+ Blucher's fury when Wellington would not allow him to plunder Paris, and his
+ exclamation when he saw London "What a city to loot!" is still regarded as fair
+ soldiering; and the blackmail levied recently by the Prussian generals on the Belgian
+ and French towns they have occupied must, I suppose, be let pass as ransom, not as
+ ordinary criminal looting. But if the penalty of looting be thus spared, the Germans
+ can hardly complain if they are themselves held to ransom when the fortunes of war go
+ against them. Li&egrave;ge and Lille and Antwerp and the rest must be paid their
+ money back with interest; and there will be a big builder's bill at Rheims. But we
+ should ourselves refrain strictly from blackmail. We should sell neither our blood
+ nor our mercy. If we sell either we are as much brigands as Blucher.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Vindictive Damages.</b></p>
+ <p>And we must not let ourselves be tempted to soil our hands under pretext of
+ vindictive damages. The man who thinks that all the money in Germany could pay for
+ the life of a single British drummer boy ought to be shot merely as an expression of
+ the feeling that he is unfit to live. We stake our blood as the Germans stake theirs;
+ and in that <i>ganz besonderes Saft</i> alone should we <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page39" id="page39"></a>{39}</span>[make**] or accept payment. We had better
+ not say to the Kaiser at the end of the war, "Scoundrel: you can never replace the
+ Louvain library, nor the sculpture of Rheims; and it follows logically that you shall
+ empty your pockets into ours." Much better say: "God forgive us all!" If we cannot
+ rise to this, and must soil our hands with plunder, at least let us call it plunder,
+ and not profane our language and our souls by giving it fine names.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Our Annihilationists.</b></p>
+ <p>Then we shall have the Militarists, who will want to have Germany "bled to the
+ white," dismembered and maimed, so that she may never do it again. Well, that is
+ quite simple, if you are Militarist enough to do it. Loading Germany with debt will
+ not do it. Towing her fleet into Portsmouth or sinking it will not do it. Annexing
+ provinces and colonies will not do it. The effective method is far shorter and more
+ practical. What has made Germany formidable in this war? Obviously her overwhelmingly
+ superior numbers. That was how she rushed us back almost to the gates of Paris. The
+ organization, the readiness, the sixteen-inch howitzer helped; but it was the
+ multitudinous <i>Kanonenfutter</i> that nearly snowed us under. The British soldier
+ at Cambrai and Le Cateau killed and killed until his rifle was too hot to hold and
+ his hand was paralyzed with slayer's cramp; but still they came and came.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Why Not Kill the German Women?</b></p>
+ <p>Well, there is no obscurity about that problem. Those Germans who took but an
+ instant to kill had taken the travail of a woman for three-quarters of a year to
+ breed, and eighteen years to ripen for the slaughter. All we have to do is to kill,
+ say, 75 per cent, of all the women in Germany under 60. Then we may leave Germany her
+ fleet and her money, and say "Much good may they do you." Why not, if you are really
+ going in to be what you, never having read "this Neech they talk of," call a
+ Nietzschean Superman? War is not an affair of sentiment. Some of our newspapers
+ complain that the Germans kill the wounded and fire on field hospitals and Red Cross
+ Ambulances. These same newspapers fill their columns with exultant accounts of how
+ our wounded think nothing of modern bullet wounds and hope to be back at the front in
+ a week, which I take to be the most direct incitement to the Germans to kill the
+ wounded that could be devized. It is no use being virtuously indignant: "stone dead
+ hath no fellow" is an English proverb, not a German one. Even the killing of
+ prisoners is an Agincourt tradition. Now it is not more cowardly to kill a woman than
+ to kill a wounded man. And there is only one reason why it is a greater crime to kill
+ a woman than a man, and why women have to be spared and protected when men are
+ exposed and sacrificed. That reason is that the destruction of the women is the
+ destruction of the community. Men are comparatively of no account: kill 90 per cent,
+ of the German men, and the remaining 10 per cent. can repeople her. But kill the
+ women, and <i>Delenda est Carthago</i>. Now this is exactly what our Militarists want
+ to happen to Germany. Therefore the objection to killing women becomes in this case
+ the reason for doing it. Why not? No reply is possible from the Militarist,
+ disable-your-enemy point of view. If disablement is your will, there is your way, and
+ the only effectual way. We really must not call the Kaiser and Von Bernhardi
+ disciples of the mythical Neech when they have either overlooked or shrunk from such
+ a glaring "biological necessity." A pair of puling pious sentimentalists if you like.
+ But Supermen! Nonsense. O, my brother journalists, if you revile the Prussians, call
+ them sheep led by snobs, call them beggars on horseback, call them sausage eaters,
+ depict them in the good old English fashion in spectacles and comforter, seedy
+ overcoat buttoned over paunchy figure, playing the contrabass tuba in a street band;
+ but do not flatter them with the heroic title of Superman, and hold up as magnificent
+ villainies worthy of Milton's Lucifer these common crimes of violence and raid and
+ lust that any <span class="pagenum"><a name="page40"
+ id="page40"></a>{40}</span>drunken blackguard can commit when the police are away,
+ and that no mere multiplication can dignify. As to Nietzsche, with his Polish hatred
+ of Prussia (who heartily reciprocated the sentiment), when did he ever tell the
+ Germans to allow themselves to be driven like sheep to the slaughter in millions by
+ mischievous dolts who, being for the most part incapable of reading ten sentences of
+ a philosophic treatise without falling asleep, allow journalists as illiterate as
+ themselves to persuade them that he got his great reputation by writing a cheap
+ gospel for bullies? Strictly between ourselves, we also are an illiterate people; but
+ we may at least hold our tongues about matters we don't understand, and not say in
+ the face of Europe that the English believe that the composer of Parsifal was a
+ Militarist Prussian (he was an exiled revolutionist); that Nietzsche was a diciple of
+ Wagner (Nietzsche preferred the music of Bizet, a Frenchman); and that the Kaiser is
+ a disciple of Nietzsche, who would have laughed his childish pietism to scorn.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Simple Answer.</b></p>
+ <p>Nietzsche would certainly have agreed that we must kill the German women if we
+ mean business when we talk of destroying Germany. But he would also have answered my
+ Why not?, which is more than any consistent Militarist can. Indeed, it needs no
+ philosopher to give the answer. The first ordinary anti-Militarist human person you
+ meet will tell you that it would be too horrible; that life would be unbearable if
+ people did such things. And he would be quite right; so please let us hear no more of
+ kicking your enemy when he is down so that he may be unable to rise for a whole
+ century. We may be unable to resist the temptation to loot Germany more or less if we
+ conquer her. We are already actively engaged in piracy against her, stealing her
+ ships and selling them in our prize courts, instead of honestly detaining them until
+ the war is over and keeping a strict account of them. When gentlemen rise in the
+ House of Commons and say that they owe Germans money and do not intend to pay it, one
+ must face the fact that there will be a strong popular demand for plunder. War, after
+ all, is simply a letting loose of organized murder, theft, and piracy on a foe; and I
+ have no doubt the average Englishman will say to me what Falstaff said to Pistol
+ concerning his share in the price of the stolen fan: "Reason, you rogue, reason: do
+ you think I'll endanger my soul <i>gratis</i>?" To which I reply, "If you can't
+ resist the booty, take it frankly, and know yourself for half patriot, half brigand;
+ but don't talk nonsense about disablement. Cromwell tried it in Ireland. He had
+ better have tried Home Rule. And what Cromwell could not do to Ireland we cannot do
+ to Germany."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Sensible People.</b></p>
+ <p>Finally we come to the only body of opinion in which there is any hope of
+ civilization: the opinion of the people who are bent, not on gallantry nor revenge
+ nor plunder nor pride nor panic nor glory nor any of the invidiousnesses of
+ patriotism, but on the problem of how to so redraw the map of Europe and reform its
+ political constitutions that this abominable crime and atrocious nuisance, a European
+ war, shall not easily occur again. The map is very important; for the open sores
+ which have at last suppurated and burst after having made the world uneasy for years,
+ were produced by altering the colour of Alsace and Lorraine and of Bosnia and
+ Herzegovina on the map. And the new map must be settled, not by conquest, but by
+ consent of the people immediately concerned. One of the broken treaties of Europe
+ which has been mentioned less frequently of late than the Belgian treaty is the
+ treaty of Prague, by which a plebiscite was to have been taken on the subject of the
+ nationality of Schleswig and Holstein. That plebiscite has never been taken. It may
+ have to be taken, with other plebiscites, before this war is settled.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>German Unity Inviolable.</b></p>
+ <p>But here let me warn those who are hoping for a disintegrated Germany like that
+ which Thackeray ridiculed, that their hopes are vain. The southern <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page41" id="page41"></a>{41}</span>Germans, the,
+ friendliest, most easy-going people in the world (as far as I know the world) dislike
+ the Prussians far more heartily than we do; but they know that they are respected and
+ strong and big as part of United Germany, and that they were weak and despised and
+ petty as separate kingdoms. Germany will hold together. No doubt the Germans may
+ reasonably say to the Prussian drill sergeant and his master Hohenzollern, "A nice
+ mess you have made of your job after all we have endured from you because we believed
+ you could make us invincible. We thought that if you were hard masters you were at
+ any rate good grenadiers; but here are these piffling little Belgians and these
+ Russians who were beaten by the Japanese, and these English who made such a poor show
+ against a handful of Boer farmers, fighting and organizing just as well as you. So,
+ as the French and English are organized as a republic and an extremely limited
+ monarchy, we will try how that sort of constitution will suit us." But they will not
+ break up: on the contrary, they are much more likely to extend the German community
+ by incorporating German Austria. And as this would raise the question whether
+ Hohenzollern or Hapsburg should rule the roost, the simplest solution would be to get
+ rid of them both, and take the sooner or later inevitable step into the democratic
+ republican form of Government to which Europe is visibly tending, though "this king
+ business," as my American correspondents call it, has certain conveniences when it is
+ limited and combined with an aristocracy also limited by primogeniture and
+ politically controlled by a commonalty into which all but the eldest brothers in the
+ aristocratic families fall, thus making the German segregation of the <i>adel</i>
+ class impossible. Such a monarchy, especially when the monarch is a woman, as in
+ Holland today, and in England under Victoria, is a fairly acceptable working
+ substitute for a formal republic in old civilizations with inveterate monarchical
+ traditions, absurd as it is in new and essentially democratic States. At any rate, it
+ is conceivable that the western allies might demand the introduction of some such
+ political constitution in Germany and Austria as a guarantee; for though the demand
+ would not please Russia, some of Russia's demands will not please us; and there must
+ be some give and take in the business.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Limits of Constitutional Interference.</b></p>
+ <p>Let us consider this possibility for a moment. First, it must be firmly postulated
+ that civilized nations cannot have their political constitutions imposed on them from
+ without if the object of the arrangement is peace and stability. If a victorious
+ Germany were to attempt to impose the Prussian constitution on France and England,
+ they would submit to it just as Ireland submitted to Dublin Castle, which, to say the
+ least, would not be a millennial settlement. Profoundly as we are convinced that our
+ Government of India is far better than any native Indian government could be (the
+ assumption that "natives" could govern at all being made for the sake of argument
+ with due reluctance), it is quite certain that until it becomes as voluntary as the
+ parliamentary government of Australia, and has been modified accordingly, it will
+ remain an artificial, precarious, and continually threatening political structure.
+ Nevertheless, we need not go to the opposite extreme and conclude that a political
+ constitution must fit a country so accurately that it must be home-made to measure.
+ Europe has a stock of ready-made constitutions, both Monarchical and Republican,
+ which will fit any western European nation comfortably enough. We are at present
+ considerably bothered by the number of Germans who, though their own country and
+ constitution is less than a day's journey away, settle here and marry Englishwomen
+ without feeling that our constitution is unbearable. Englishmen are never tired of
+ declaring that "they do things better abroad" (as a matter of fact they often do),
+ and that the ways of Prussia are smarter than the ways of Paddington. It is therefore
+ quite possible that a reach-me-down constitution proposed, <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page42" id="page42"></a>{42}</span>not by the conquerors, but by an
+ international congress with no interest to serve but the interests of peace, might
+ prove acceptable enough to a nation thoroughly disgusted with its tyrants.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Physician: Heal Thyself.</b></p>
+ <p>Now a congress which undertook the Liberalization of Germany would certainly not
+ stop there. If we invite a congress to press for a democratization of the German
+ constitution, we must consent to the democratization of our own. If we send the
+ Kaiser to St. Helena (or whatever the title of the Chiselhurst villa may be) we must
+ send Sir Edward Grey there, too. For if on the morrow of the peace we may all begin
+ to plot and plan one another's destruction over again in the secrecy of our Foreign
+ Office, so that in spite of Parliament and free democratic institutions the Foreign
+ Secretary may at any moment step down from the Foreign Office to the House of Commons
+ and say, "I arranged yesterday with the ambassador from Cocagne that England is to
+ join his country in fighting Brobdingnag; so vote me a couple of hundred millions,
+ and off with you to the trenches," we shall be just where we were before as far as
+ any likelihood of putting an end to war is concerned. The congress will certainly ask
+ us to pledge ourselves that if we shake the mailed fist at all we shall shake it
+ publicly, and that though we may keep our sword ready (let me interject in passing
+ that disarmament is all nonsense: nobody is going to disarm after this experience) it
+ shall be drawn by the representatives of the nation, and not by Junker diplomatists
+ who despise and distrust the nation, and have planned war behind its back for years.
+ Indeed they will probably demur to its being drawn even by the representative of the
+ nation until the occasion has been submitted to the judgment of the representatives
+ of the world, or such beginnings of a world representative body as may be possible.
+ That is the true <i>Weltpolitik</i>.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Hegemony of Peace.</b></p>
+ <p>For the main business of the settlement, if it is to have any serious business at
+ all, must be the establishment of a Hegemony of Peace, as desired by all who are
+ really capable of high civilization, and formulated by me in the daily Press in a
+ vain attempt to avert this mischief whilst it was brewing. Nobody took the smallest
+ public notice of me; so I made a lady in a play say "Not bloody likely," and
+ instantly became famous beyond the Kaiser, beyond the Tsar, beyond Sir Edward Grey,
+ beyond Shakespeare and Homer and President Wilson, the papers occupying themselves
+ with me for a whole week just as they are now occupying themselves with the war, and
+ one paper actually devoting a special edition to a single word in my play, which is
+ more than it has done for the Treaty of London (1839). I concluded then that this was
+ a country which really could not be taken seriously. But the habits of a lifetime are
+ not so easily broken; and I am not afraid to produce another dead silence by renewing
+ my good advice, as I can easily recover my popularity by putting still more shocking
+ expressions into my next play, especially now that events have shewn that I was right
+ on the point of foreign policy.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>East Is East; and West Is West.</b></p>
+ <p>I repeat, then, that there should be a definite understanding that whatever may
+ happen or not happen further east, England, France, and Germany solemnly pledge
+ themselves to maintain the internal peace of the west of Europe, and renounce
+ absolutely all alliances and engagements that bind them to join any Power outside the
+ combination in military operations, whether offensive or defensive, against one
+ inside it. We must get rid of the monstrous situation that produced the present war.
+ France made an alliance with Russia as a defence against Germany. Germany made an
+ alliance with Austria as a defence against Russia. England joined the Franco-Russian
+ alliance as a defence against Germany and Austria. The result was that Germany became
+ involved in a quarrel between Austria and Russia. Having no quarrel with France, and
+ only a second-hand quarrel with Russia, she was, nevertheless, <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page43" id="page43"></a>{43}</span>forced to attack France
+ in order to disable her before she could strike Germany from behind when Germany was
+ fighting France's ally, Russia. And this attack on France forced England to come to
+ the rescue of England's ally, France. Not one of the three nations (as distinguished
+ from their tiny Junker-Militarist cliques) wanted to fight; for England had nothing
+ to gain and Germany had everything to lose, whilst France had given up hope of her
+ Alsace-Lorraine <i>revanche</i>, and would certainly not have hazarded a war for it.
+ Yet because Russia, who has a great deal to gain by victory and nothing except
+ military prestige to lose by defeat, had a quarrel with Austria over Servia, she has
+ been able to set all three western friends and neighbours shedding "rivers of blood"
+ from one another's throats; an outrageous absurdity. Fifty years ago the notion of
+ England helping Russia and Japan to destroy Germany would have seemed as suicidal as
+ Canada helping the Apaches to destroy the United States of America; and though we now
+ think much better of the Japanese (and also, by the way, of the Apaches), that does
+ not make us any the more patient with the man who burns down his own street because
+ he admires the domestic architecture of Yokohama, especially when the fire presently
+ spreads to the cathedral of Rheims. It is bad enough that we should have betrayed
+ oriental Persia to oriental Russia as we did (and get nothing for our pains but what
+ we deserved); but when it comes to sacrificing occidental Germany to her as well, we
+ are sharpening a knife for our own occidental throat. The Russian Government is the
+ open enemy of every liberty we boast of. Charles I.'s unsuccessful attempt to arrest
+ five members of the House of Commons for disagreeing with him is ancient history
+ here: it occurred 272 years ago; but the Tsar's successful attempt to arrest thirty
+ members of the Duma and to punish them as dangerous criminals is a fact of to-day.
+ Under Russian government people whose worst crime is to find <i>The Daily News</i> a
+ congenial newspaper are hanged, flogged, or sent to Siberia as a matter of daily
+ routine; so that before 1906 even the articles in <i>The Times</i> on such events as
+ the assassinations of Bobrikoff and the Grand Duke were simply polite paraphrases of
+ "Serve him right." It may be asked why our newspapers have since ceased to report
+ examples of Russia's disregard of the political principles we are supposed to stand
+ for. The answer is simple. It was in 1906 that we began to lend Russia money, and
+ Russia began to advertise in <i>The Times</i>. Since then she has been welcome to
+ flog and hang her H.G. Wellses and Lloyd Georges by the dozen without a word of
+ remonstrance from our plutocratic Press, provided the interest is paid punctually.
+ Russia has been embraced in the large charity of cosmopolitan capital, the only
+ charity that does not begin at home.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Russian Russians and Their Prussian Tsars.</b></p>
+ <p>And here I must save my face with my personal friends who are either Russians or
+ discoverers of the soul of the Russian people. I hereby declare to Sasha Kropotkin
+ and Cunninghame Graham that my heart is with their Russia, the Russia of Tolstoy and
+ Turgenieff and Dostoieffsky, of Gorki and Tchekoff, of the Moscow Art Theatre and the
+ Drury Lane Ballet, of Peter Kropotkin and all the great humanitarians, great artists,
+ and charming people whom their very North German Tsars exile and imprison and flog
+ and generally do what in them lies to suppress and abolish. For the sake of Russian
+ Russia, I am prepared to strain every point in Prussian Russia's favour. I grant that
+ the Nihilists, much as we loved them, were futile romantic people who could have done
+ nothing if Alexander II. had abdicated and offered them the task of governing Russia
+ instead of persecuting them and being finally blown to bits by them. I grant that the
+ manners of the Fins to the Russians are described as insufferable both by the Swedes
+ and the Russians, and that we never listened to the Russian side of that story. I am
+ ready to grant Gil<span class="pagenum"><a name="page44"
+ id="page44"></a>{44}</span>bert Murray's plea that the recent rate of democratic
+ advance has been greater in Russia than anywhere else in Europe, though it does
+ remind me a little of the bygone days when the Socialists, scoring 20 votes at one
+ general election and forty at the next, were able to demonstrate that their gain of
+ 100 per cent. was immensely in excess of the wretched two or three per cent. that was
+ the best the Unionists or Liberals could shew. I am willing to forget how short a
+ time it is since Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman said: "The Duma is dead: long live the
+ Duma!" and since we refused to allow the Tsar to land in England when his ship was
+ within gangway's length of our shore, on which occasion I myself held up the
+ Anglo-Russian agreement for the partition of Persia to the execration of a crowd in
+ Trafalgar Square, whilst our Metropolitan Police snatched the <i>l'sarbeleidigend</i>
+ English newspapers from the sellers and tore them up precisely in the Cossack manner.
+ I have an enormous relish for the art of Russia; I perceive a spirit in Russia which
+ is the natural antidote to Potsdamnation; and I like most of the Russians I know
+ quite unaffectedly. I could find it in my heart to reproach the Kaiser for making war
+ on the Russia of these delightful people, just as I like to think that at this very
+ moment good Germans may be asking him how he can bring himself to discharge shrapnel
+ at the England of Bernard Shaw and Cunninghame Graham. History may not forgive him
+ for it; but the practical point at the moment is that he does it, and no doubt
+ attributes the perfidy of England to the popularity of our works. And as we have to
+ take the Kaiser as we find him, and not as the Hohenzollern legend glorifies him, I
+ have to take the Tsar as I find him. When we fight the Kaiser we are not fighting
+ Bach and Wagner and Strauss, to whom we have just joyfully surrendered without a blow
+ at the battle of Queen's Hall, but all the forces in Germany that made things hard
+ for Wagner and Strauss. And when we fight for the Tsar we are not fighting for
+ Tolstoy and Gorki, but for the forces that Tolstoy thundered against all his life and
+ that would have destroyed him had he not been himself a highly connected Junker as
+ well as a revolutionary Christian. And if I doubt whether the Tsar would feel
+ comfortable as a member of a Democratic League of Peace, I am not doubting the good
+ intent of Kropotkin: I am facing the record of Kropotkin's imperial jailer, and
+ standing on the proud fact that England is the only country in Europe, not excepting
+ even France, in which Kropotkin has been allowed to live a free man, and had his
+ birthday celebrated by public meetings all over the country, and his articles
+ welcomed by the leading review. In point of fact, it is largely on Kropotkin's
+ account that I regard the Tsar as a gentleman of slightly different views to
+ President Wilson, and hate the infamous tyranny of which he is the figurehead as I
+ hate the devil. And I know that practically all our disinterested and thoughtful
+ supporters of the war feel deeply uneasy about the Russian alliance. At all events, I
+ should be trifling grossly with the facts of the situation if I pretended that the
+ most absolute autocracy in Europe, commanding an inexhaustible army in an invincible
+ country with a dominion stretching from the Baltic to the Pacific, may not, if it
+ achieves a military success against the most dreaded military Power in Europe, be
+ stirred to ambitions far more formidable to western liberty and human welfare than
+ those of which Germany is now finding out the vanity after worrying herself and
+ everyone else with them for forty years. When all is said that can be said for
+ Russia, the fact remains that a forcibly Russianized German province would be just
+ such another open sore in Europe as Alsace-Lorraine, Poland, Macedonia or Ireland. It
+ is useless to dream of guarantees: if Russia undertook to govern democratically she
+ would not be able to redeem her promise: she would do better with primitive
+ Communism. Her city populations may be as capable of Democracy as our own (it is,
+ alas! not saying much); but the overwhelming mass of peasants to whom the Tsar is a
+ personal God will for a long time to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page45"
+ id="page45"></a>{45}</span>come make his bureaucracy irresistible. As against Russian
+ civilization German and Austrian civilization is our civilization: there is no
+ getting over that. A constitutional kingship of Poland and a sort of Caliphate of the
+ Slavs in remapped southeastern Europe, with that access to warm sea water which is
+ Russia's common human right, valid against all Balances of Power and Keys to India
+ and the like, must be her reward for her share in the war, even if we have to
+ nationalize Constantinople to secure it to her. But it cannot be too frankly said at
+ the outset that any attempt to settle Europe on the basis of the present hemming in
+ of a consolidated Germany and German Austria by a hostile combination of Russia and
+ the extreme states against it, would go to pieces by its own inherent absurdity, just
+ as it has already exploded most destructively by its own instability. Until Russia
+ becomes a federation of several separate democratic States, and the Tsar is either
+ promoted to the honourable position of hereditary President or else totally
+ abolished, the eastern boundary of the League of Peace must be the eastern boundary
+ of Swedish, German, and Italian civilization; and Poland must stand between it and
+ the quite different and for the moment unassimilable, civilization of Russia, whose
+ friendship we could not really keep on any other terms, as a closer alliance would
+ embarrass her as much as it would embarrass us. Meanwhile, we must trust to the march
+ of Democracy to de-Russianize Berlin and de-Prussianize Petrograd, and to put the
+ nagaikas of the Cossacks and the riding-whips with which Junker officers slash German
+ privates, and the forty tolerated homosexual brothels of Berlin, and all the other
+ psychopathic symptoms of overfeeding and inculcated insolence and sham virility in
+ their proper place, which I take to be the dustbin.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Driving Capital Out of the Country</b>.</p>
+ <p>But I must here warn everyone concerned that the most formidable opposition to the
+ break-up of these unnatural alliances between east and west, between Democracy and
+ Autocracy, between the twentieth century and the Dark Ages, will not come from the
+ Balancers of Power. They are not really Balance of Power alliances: in fact, they are
+ tending to an enormous overbalance of power in favor of the east as against the west
+ and in favor of Militarist Autocracy as against Democracy. They are at root
+ absolutely unpatriotic, even absolutely conscienceless products of commercial
+ finance; and the Balance of Power theories are only the attempts of our diplomats to
+ put a public spirited face on the operations of private cupidity. This is not the
+ first time nor the second that I have had to urge that the greatest danger to us in
+ the sphere of foreign politics is the tendency of capital to run away from
+ civilization: the one running downhill to hell as naturally as the other struggles
+ uphill to the Celestial City. The Englishman is allowed to produce the subsistence of
+ himself and his family only on condition that he produces the subsistence of the
+ capitalist and his retainers as well; and lo! he finds more and more that these
+ retainers are not Englishmen, but Russians, South Americans, Kaffirs, Persians, or
+ yellow or black barbarians armed for his destruction (not to mention Prussians and
+ Austrians), and that the treaties made by our diplomatists have less and less to do
+ with the security of the nation or the balance of power or any other public business,
+ and more and more with capitalist opportunities of making big dividends out of
+ slavish labour. For instance, the Anglo-Russian agreement is not a national treaty:
+ it is the memorandum of a commercial agreement settling what parts of Persia are to
+ be exploited by the Russian and English capitalists respectively; the capitalists,
+ always against State interference for the benefit of the people, being very strongly
+ in favor of it for coercing strikers at home and keeping foreign rivals off their
+ grass abroad. And the absurd part of it is that when the State has thus arranged for
+ our capitalists to exploit certain parts of Persia, and for their sakes to protect
+ the parliamentary liber<span class="pagenum"><a name="page46"
+ id="page46"></a>{46}</span>ties of the part left to Russia, they discovered that,
+ after all, the most profitable game was to lend Russia the money to exploit with, and
+ to facilitate the operation by allowing her to destroy the Persian parliament in the
+ face of our own exhortation to it to keep the flag flying, which we accordingly did
+ without a blush. The French capitalists had dragged France into an alliance with
+ Russia long before this; but the French Republic had the excuse of the German peril
+ and the need for an anti-German ally. Her natural ally for that purpose was England;
+ but as there was no market in England for her money, her plutocrats drove her into
+ the alliance with Russia as well; and it is that alliance and not the alliance with
+ England that has terrified Germany into flying at her throat and plunging Europe into
+ a frightful war. The natural alliance with England twice averted war: in the Moroccan
+ crises of Algeciras and Agadir, when Sir Edward Grey said boldly that we should
+ defend France, and took the first steps towards a joint military and naval control of
+ the French and English forces. Why he shrank from that firm position last July and
+ thereby led Germany to count so fatally on our neutrality I do not pretend to know;
+ it suffices for my argument that we were able to hold the balance between France and
+ Germany, but failed to hold it between Germany and Russia, and that it was the
+ placing of Russian loans in France and England that brought Russia into our western
+ affairs. It would have paid us ten times over to have made Russia a present of all we
+ and France have lent her (indemnifying, of course, the holders of the stock through
+ an addition to the income tax) rather than pay the price of a European war. But what
+ is the use of crying for spilt milk? I am merely explaining why, when French money
+ went to Russia, the French papers discovered that the Russians were a most
+ interesting people and their Government&mdash;properly understood&mdash;a
+ surprisingly Liberal Government; and why, when English money went to Russia, the
+ English press suddenly developed leanings towards the Greek Church, and deplored the
+ unofficial execution of Stolypin as deeply as it had rejoiced in the like fate of
+ Bobrikoff. The upshot of it all is that western civilization is at present busy
+ committing suicide by machinery, and importing hordes of Asiatics and Africans to
+ help in the throat cutting, not for the benefit of the silly capitalists, who are
+ being ruined wholesale, but to break up the Austrian Empire for the benefit of Russia
+ and the Slavs of eastern Europe, which may be a very desirable thing, but which could
+ and should be done by the eastern Powers among themselves, without tearing Belgium
+ and Germany and France and England to pieces in the process.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Red Flag and the Black.</b></p>
+ <p>Will you now at last believe, O stupid British, German, and French patriots, what
+ the Socialists have been telling you for so many years: that your Union Jacks and
+ tricolours and Imperial Eagles ("where the carcase is, there will the eagles be
+ gathered") are only toys to keep you amused, and that there are only two real flags
+ in the world henceforth: the red flag of Democratic Socialism and the black flag of
+ Capitalism, the flag of God and the flag of Mammon? What earthly or heavenly good is
+ done when Tom Fool shoots Hans Narr? The plain fact is that if we leave our capital
+ to be dealt with according to the selfishness of the private man he will send it
+ where wages are low and workers enslaved and docile: that is, as many thousand miles
+ as possible from the Trade Unions and Trade Union rates and parliamentary Labour
+ Parties of civilization; and Germany, at his sordid behest, will plunge the world
+ into war for the sake of disgracing herself with a few rubber plantations, poetically
+ described by her orators and journalists as "a place in the sun." When you do what
+ the Socialists tell you by keeping your capital jealously under national control and
+ reserving your shrapnel for the wasters who not only shirk their share of the
+ industrial service of their country, but intend that their <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page47" id="page47"></a>{47}</span>children and children's children shall be
+ idle wasters like themselves, you will find that not a farthing of our capital will
+ go abroad as long as there is a British slum to be cleared and rebuilt, or a hungry,
+ ragged, and ignorant British child to be fed, clothed, and educated.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A League of Peace</b>.</p>
+ <p>But in the west I see no insuperable obstacle to a Treaty of Peace in the largest
+ sense. This war has smoothed the way to it, if I may use the word smoothing to
+ describe a process conduced with so little courtesy and so much shrapnel. Germany has
+ now learned&mdash;and the lesson was apparently needed, obvious as it would have been
+ to a sanely governed nation&mdash;that when it comes to shoving and shooting, Germany
+ instantly loses all the advantages of her high civilization, because France and
+ England, cultured or uncultured, can shove and shoot as well or beter than she,
+ whilst as to slashing and stabbing, their half barbarous Turco and Ghoorka slaves can
+ cut the Prussian Guard to bits, in spite of the unquestionable superiority of
+ Wagner's music to theirs. Then take France. She does not dream that she could fight
+ Germany and England single-handed. And England could not fight France and Germany
+ without a sacrifice as ruinous as it would be senseless. We therefore have the
+ necessary primary conditions for a League of Peace between the three countries; for
+ if one of them break it, the other two can make her sorry, under which circumstances
+ she will probably not break it. The present war, if it end in the reconquest of
+ Alsace and Lorraine by the French, will make such a League much more stable; not that
+ France can acquire by mere conquest any right to hold either province against its
+ will (which could be ascertained by plebiscite), but because the honors of war as
+ between France and Germany would then be easy, France having regained her laurels and
+ taught Germany to respect her, without obliterating the record of Germany's triumph
+ in 1870. And if the war should further result in the political reconstruction of the
+ German Empire as a democratic Commonwealth, and the conquest by the English people of
+ democratic control of English foreign policy, the combination would be immensely
+ eased and strengthened, besides being brought into harmony with American public
+ feeling, which is important to the security and prestige of the League.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Case of the Smaller States.</b></p>
+ <p>Already the war has greatly added to the value of one of the factors upon which
+ the League of Peace will depend. The smaller States: Holland, Belgium, Switzerland,
+ and the Scandinavian Powers, would have joined it any time these 40 years, had it
+ existed, for the sake of its protection, and thereby made the Protestant north of Mr.
+ Houston Chamberlain's dream as much a reality as any such dream is ever likely to be.
+ But after the fight put up by Belgium the other day, the small States will be able to
+ come in with the certainty of being treated with considerable respect as military
+ factors; for Belgium can now claim to have saved Europe single-handed. Germany has
+ been very unpleasantly reminded of the fact that though a big man may be able to beat
+ a little one, yet if the little one fights for all he is worth he may leave the
+ victor very sorry he broke the peace. Even as between the big Powers, victory has
+ not, as far as the fighting has yet gone, been always with the biggest battalions.
+ With a couple of millions less men, the Kaiser might have taken more care of them and
+ made a better job of it.</p>
+ <p>At the same time I hold no brief for small States as such, and most vehemently
+ deny that we are in any way bound to knight errantry on their behalf as against big
+ ones. They are mostly either incorrigibly bellicose themselves, like Montenegro, or
+ standing temptations to the big Powers, like Bosnia and Herzegovina. They multiply
+ frontiers, which are nuisances, and languages, which have made confusion since the
+ building of Babel. The striking contrast between the United States of North America
+ and the disunited States of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page48"
+ id="page48"></a>{48}</span>South America in this respect is, from the Pacifist point
+ of view, very much in favor of the northern unity. The only objection to large
+ political units is that they make extremely dangerous autocracies. But as groups of
+ federated democracies they are the best neighbours in the world. A federal democratic
+ Russia would be as safe a colleague as America: a federal democratic Germany would be
+ as pleasant company as Switzerland. Let us, I beg, hear no more of little States as
+ British Dulcineas.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Claims of Belgium.</b></p>
+ <p>As to the special case of Belgium, its claims in the settlement are simple and
+ indeed single. If we conclude a peace without clearing the Germans completely out of
+ Belgium, we shall be either beaten or dishonoured. And such indemnity as a money
+ payment can effect for Belgium is due not only by Germany, but by Britain, France,
+ and Russia as well. Belgium has been crushed between the Alliance and the Entente: it
+ was these two menaces to the peace of Europe that produced Armageddon; and as
+ Belgium's heroic resistance served the Entente against the Alliance, the obligation
+ to make good the remediable damage is even more binding on the Entente.</p>
+ <p>But there is another and more pressing matter arising out of the conquest of
+ Belgium.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Belgian Refugees and the Problem of Unemployment.</b></p>
+ <p>As I write these lines the descent on our shores of an army of refugees from
+ captured Antwerp and threatened Ostend has forced the President of the Local
+ Government Board to make a desperate appeal to all and sundry to form representative
+ committees to deal with the prevention and relief of distress: in other words to save
+ the refugees from starving to death. Now the Board of Trade has already drawn
+ attention to a memorandum of the Local Government Board as to the propriety of
+ providing employment for refugees. And instantly and inevitably the condition had to
+ be laid down that if the Committees find employment for anyone, they shall refer the
+ case to the local Labour Exchange in order that "any steps taken to assist refugees
+ to find employment shall not be such as to endanger the employment of British
+ workpeople." In other words, the starving Belgians have fled from the Germans only to
+ compete for crust with starving Englishmen. As long as there is an unemployed
+ Englishman in the country&mdash;and there are a good many, especially in the cotton
+ industry&mdash;how is it possible to give a job to a Belgian without depriving an
+ Englishman of it? Why, instead of making impossible conditions, and helplessly asking
+ private citizens to do something for pity's sake, will not the Government face the
+ fact that the refugee question is simply an intensification of the normal unemployed
+ question, the only difference being that we are accustomed to leave our own people to
+ starve when they are common persons with whom the governing classes do not associate,
+ whereas the Belgians have rendered us such a tremendous service in the war, and our
+ statesmen have so loudly protested that the integrity of Belgium is dearer to England
+ than her own heart's blood, that we cannot with any decency treat the destitute
+ Belgians as if they were mere British riffraff. Yet when we attempt to provide for
+ the Belgians by finding work for them the Board of Trade has to point out that by
+ doing so we are taking the bread out of the mouths of our own people. Hence we arrive
+ at the remarkable situation of starving Britons and Belgians looking hungrily through
+ barbed wire fences at flourishing communities of jolly and well fed German prisoners
+ of war (whose friendly hat wavings to me and my fellow passengers as I rush through
+ Newbury Racecourse Station in the Great Western Express I hereby acknowledge publicly
+ with all possible good feeling). I therefore for the present strongly recommend all
+ Belgians who have made up their minds to flee to England, to pick up German uniforms
+ on the battle fields and surrender to the British in the character of Uhlans. Their
+ subsistence will then be secure until the war is over, as <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page49" id="page49"></a>{49}</span>we dare not illtreat our prisoners lest the
+ Germans should retaliate upon the British soldiers in their hands, even if we were
+ all spiteful enough to desire to do it, as some of our baser sort have not been
+ ashamed to propose.</p>
+ <p>But the women and children, and the too young and the too old, cannot resort to
+ this expedient. And though theoretically our own unemployed could be dressed in
+ British uniforms and sent abroad with instructions to take refuge in neutral
+ territory and be "interned" or to surrender to the first Uhlan patrol they met, yet
+ it would be difficult to reduce this theory to practice, though the possibility is
+ worth mentioning as a reduction to absurdity of the situation. As a matter of common
+ sense "we should at once place all destitute Belgian refugees on the footing of
+ prisoners of war, except that we need not post sentries to shoot them if they try to
+ escape, nor surround them with barbed wire. Indeed these precautions are necessary in
+ the case of the Germans rather to save their sense of honour whilst remaining here
+ than to defeat any very strong longing on their part to return to the trenches.</p>
+ <p>In a reasonable state of society there would be another difference. The Belgians
+ would offer to work so as not to be a burden to us; whilst the German prisoner would
+ say&mdash;as he actually does, by the way&mdash;"No: I am not here by my own will: if
+ you open the door I shall go home and take myself off your hands; so I am in no way
+ bound to work for you." As it is, our Trade Unions are up in arms at the slightest
+ hint of either Belgian or German labour being employed when there is no shortage of
+ English labour!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Minority Report</b>.</p>
+ <p>All this exasperating anomaly and deadlock and breakdown would disappear if we had
+ a proper system of provision for our own unemployed civilians (there are no
+ unemployed soldiers: we do not discharge them between the battles). The Belgians
+ would have found an organization of unemployment ready for them, and would have been
+ provided for with our own unemployed, not as refugees, but simply as unemployed. How
+ to do that need not be explained here. The problem was worked out by one of the
+ hardest bits of thinking yet done in the Socialist movement, and set forth in the
+ Minority Report of the Royal Commission on the Poor Laws and the Relief of Distress,
+ 1909. Our helplessness in the present emergency shews how very unwise we were to
+ shelve that report. Unluckily, what with the wounded vanity of the majority of the
+ Commission, who had been played off the stage by Mrs. Sidney Webb; the folly of the
+ younger journalists of the advanced guard, who had just then rediscovered Herbert
+ Spencer's mare's nest of "the servile State," and revolted with all the petulant
+ anarchism of the literary profession against the ideal Interfering Female as typified
+ in their heated imaginations by poor Mrs. Sidney Webb, who became the Aunt Sally of
+ our young artists in stale anti-bureaucratic invective; and, above all, the mulishly
+ silent refusal of our governing classes to see why the unemployed should not be
+ simply left to starve, as they had always been (the Poor Law being worse than useless
+ for so large a purpose), nothing was done; and there is consequently no machinery
+ ready for dealing with the refugees. That is why we must treat them for the moment
+ simply as unguarded prisoners of war.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The General Strike Against War.</b></p>
+ <p>But if the problem of unemployment among our own people becomes acute, we shall
+ have to fall back on the Minority Report proposals or else run the risk of a revolt
+ against the war. We have already counted on the chances of that revolt hampering
+ Germany, just as Germany counted on the chances of its hampering Russia, The notion
+ that the working classes can stop a war by a general international strike is never
+ mentioned during the first rally to the national flag at the outbreak of a war; but
+ it is there all the time, ready to break out again if the supplies of food and glory
+ run short. Its gravity lies in its impracticability. If it were practicable, every
+ sane man <span class="pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>{50}</span>would
+ advocate it. As it is, it might easily mean that British troops would be coercing
+ British strikers at home when they should be fighting Potsdam abroad, thus producing
+ a disastrous and detestable division of popular feeling in the face of the enemy.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Disarmament Delusion.</b></p>
+ <p>Objections to the Western Pacifist settlement will come from several quarters,
+ including the Pacifist quarters. Some of the best disposed parties will stumble over
+ the old delusion of disarmament. They think it is the gun that matters. They are
+ wrong: the gun matters very much when war breaks out; but what makes both war and the
+ gun is the man behind them. And if that man really means the peace of the world to be
+ kept, he will take care to have a gun to keep it with. The League of Peace must have
+ a first-rate armament, or the League of War will very soon make mincemeat of it. The
+ notion that the men of evil intent are to have all the weapons will not work.
+ Theoretically, all our armaments should be pooled. But as we, the British Empire,
+ will most certainly not pool our defenses with anyone, and as we have not the very
+ smallest intention of disarming, and will go on building gun for gun and ship for
+ ship in step with even our dearest friends if we see the least risk of our being left
+ in a position of inferiority, we cannot with any countenance demand that other Powers
+ shall do what we will not do ourselves. Our business is not to disable ourselves or
+ anyone else, but to organize a balance of military power against war, whether made by
+ ourselves or any other Power; and this can be done only by a combination of armed and
+ fanatical Pacifists of all nations, not by a crowd of non-combatants wielding
+ deprecations, remonstrances, and Christmas cards.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>America's Example: War at a Year's Notice.</b></p>
+ <p>How far it will be possible to take these national armaments out of national
+ control remains to be seen. Already America, who is as deeply demoralized by
+ Capitalism as we are, though much less tainted with Militarism now that Colonel
+ Roosevelt has lost his front seat, has pledged herself to several European States not
+ to go to war with them until the matter under dispute has been in the hands of an
+ international tribunal for a year. Now there is no military force on earth, nor
+ likely to be, strong enough to prevent America from treating these agreements as
+ Germany has just treated the 1839 Treaty guaranteeing the neutrality of Belgium.
+ Therefore the Militarists declare that the agreements are not worth the scraps of
+ paper they are written on. They always will footle in this way. They might as well
+ say that because there are crimes which men can commit with legal impunity in spite
+ of our haphazard criminal codes, men always do commit them. No doubt nations will do
+ what it is to their interest to do. But because there is in every nation a set of
+ noisy moral imbeciles who cannot see that nations have an overwhelming interest in
+ creating and maintaining a tradition of international good faith, and honouring their
+ promissory notes as scrupulously as the moral imbeciles pay their silly gambling
+ debts and fight their foolish duels, we are not, I presume, going to discard every
+ international guarantee except the howitzer. Why, the very Prussian Militarists
+ themselves are reviling us for doing what their own Militarist preachers assumed as a
+ matter of course that we should do: that is, attack Prussia without regard to the
+ interests of European civilization when we caught her at a disadvantage between
+ France and Russia. But we should have been ashamed to do that if she had not, by
+ assuming that there was no such thing as shame (<i>alias</i> conscience), terrified
+ herself into attacking France and Belgium, when, of course, we were immediately
+ ashamed not to defend them. This idiotic ignoring of the highest energies of the
+ human soul, without the strenuous pressure of which the fabric of
+ civilization&mdash;German civilization perhaps most of all&mdash;could not hold
+ together for a single day, should really be treated in the asylums of Europe, not on
+ battlefields.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page51" id="page51"></a>{51}</span>I conclude that
+ we might all very well make a beginning by pledging ourselves as America has done to
+ The Hague tribunal not to take up arms in any cause that has been less than a year
+ under arbitration, and to treat any western Power refusing this pledge as an
+ unpopular and suspicious member of the European club. To break such a pledge would be
+ an act of brigandage; and the need for suppressing brigandage cannot be regarded as
+ an open question.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Security Will o' the Wisp.</b></p>
+ <p>It will be observed that I propose no guarantee of absolute security. Not being a
+ sufferer from <i>delirium tremens</i> I can live without it. Security is no doubt the
+ Militarists' most seductive bait to catch the coward's vote. But their method makes
+ security impossible, They undertook to secure the English in Egypt from an imaginary
+ Islam rising by the Denshawai Horror, as a result of which nobody has ventured to
+ suggest that we should trust the Egyptian army in this conflict, though India, having
+ learnt from Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay Macdonald that there are really
+ anti-Militarists in England who regard Indians as fellow creatures, is actually
+ rallying to us against the Prussian Junkers, who are, in Indian eyes,
+ indistinguishable from the Anglo-Indians who call Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay
+ Macdonald traitors, and whose panicstricken denial of even a decent pretence of
+ justice in the sedition trials is particularly unfortunate just now. We must always
+ take risks; and we should never trade on the terror of death, nor forget that this
+ wretchedest of all the trades is none the less craven because it can so easily be
+ gilt with romance and heroism and solemn national duty and patriotism and the like by
+ persons whose superficial literary and oratorical talent covers an abyss of
+ Godforsaken folly.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Only Real World Danger.</b></p>
+ <p>The one danger before us that nothing can avert but a general raising of human
+ character through the deliberate cultivation and endowment of democratic virtue
+ without consideration of property and class, is the danger created by inventing
+ weapons capable of destroying civilization faster than we produce men who can be
+ trusted to use them wisely. At present we are handling them like children. Now
+ children are very pretty, very lovable, very affectionate creatures (sometimes); and
+ a child can make nitroglycerine or chloride of nitrogen as well as a man if it is
+ taught to do so. We have sense enough not to teach it; but we do teach the grown-up
+ children. We actually accompany that dangerous technical training with solemn moral
+ lessons in which the most destructive use of these forces at the command of kings and
+ capitalists is inculcated as heroism, patriotism, glory and all the rest of it. It is
+ all very well to fire cannons at the Kaiser for doing this; but we do it ourselves.
+ It is therefore undeniably possible that a diabolical rhythm may be set up in which
+ civilization will rise periodically to the point at which explosives powerful enough
+ to destroy it are discovered, and will then be shattered and thrown back to a fresh
+ start with a few starving and ruined survivors. H.G. Wells and Anatole France have
+ pre-figured that result in fiction; and I cannot deny the strength of its
+ probability; for if England and Germany can find no better way of celebrating their
+ arrival at the highest point of civilization yet attained than setting out to blow
+ one another to fragments with fulminates, it would seem that the peace of the neutral
+ States is the result, not of their being more civilized, but less heavily armed. And
+ when we see that the effect of the enterprise is not to redouble civil vigilance and
+ stimulate the most alert and jealous political criticism, but on the contrary to
+ produce an assumption that every constitutional safeguard must be suspended until the
+ war is over, and that every silly tyrannical expedient such as censorship of the
+ press, martial law, and the like, will begin to work good instead of evil the moment
+ men take to murdering one another, it must be admitted that the prospect is not too
+ hopeful. Our only consolation is that civilization has survived very destructive wars
+ before, mostly because they have produced ef<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52"
+ id="page52"></a>{52}</span>fects not only unintended but violently objected to by the
+ people who made them. In 1870, for instance, Napoleon III. can hardly have intended
+ his own overthrow and return to exile in England; nor did Bismarck aim at the
+ restoration of French Republicanism and the formation of an Anglo-Franco-Russian
+ alliance against Prussia. Several good things may come out of the present war if it
+ leaves anybody alive to enjoy them.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Church and the War.</b></p>
+ <p>And now, where in our society is the organ whose function it should be to keep us
+ constantly in mind that, as Lassalle said, "the sword is never right," and to shudder
+ with him at the fact that "the Lie is a European Power"? In no previous war have we
+ struck that top note of keen irony, the closing of the Stock Exchange and not of the
+ Church. The pagans were more logical: they closed the Temple of Peace when they drew
+ the sword. We turn our Temples of Peace promptly into temples of war, and exhibit our
+ parsons as the most pugnacious characters in the community. I venture to affirm that
+ the sense of scandal given by this is far deeper and more general than the Church
+ thinks, especially among the working classes, who are apt either to take religion
+ seriously or else to repudiate it and criticize it closely. When a bishop at the
+ first shot abandons the worship of Christ and rallies his flock around the altar of
+ Mars, he may be acting patriotically, necessarily, manfully, rightly; but that does
+ not justify him in pretending that there has been no change, and that Christ is, in
+ effect, Mars. The straightforward course, and the one that would serve the Church
+ best in the long run, would be to close our professedly Christian Churches the moment
+ war is declared by us, and reopen them only on the signing of the treaty of peace. No
+ doubt to many of us the privation thus imposed would be far worse than the privation
+ of small change, of horses and motor cars, of express trains, and all the other
+ prosaic inconveniences of war. But would it be worse than the privation of faith, and
+ the horror of the soul, wrought by the spectacle of nations praying to their common
+ Father to assist them in sabring and bayonetting and blowing one another to pieces
+ with explosives that are also corrosives, and of the Church organizing this monstrous
+ paradox instead of protesting against it? Would it make less atheists or more?
+ Atheism is not a simple homogeneous phenomenon. There is the youthful atheism with
+ which every able modern mind begins: an atheism that clears the soul of superstitions
+ and terrors and servilities and base compliances and hypocrisies, and lets in the
+ light of heaven. And there is the atheism of despair and pessimism: the sullen cry
+ with which so many of us at this moment, looking on blinded deafened maimed wrecks
+ that were once able-bodied admirable lovable men, and on priests blessing war, and
+ newspapers and statesmen and exempt old men hounding young men on to it, are saying
+ "I know now there is no God." What has the Church in its present attitude to set
+ against this crushed acceptance of darkness except the quaint but awful fact that
+ there are cruder people on whom horrifying calamities have just the opposite effect,
+ because they seem the work of some power so overwhelming in its malignity that it
+ must be worshipped because it is mighty? Let the Church beware how it plays to that
+ gallery. If all the Churches of Europe closed their doors until the drums ceased
+ rolling they would act as a most powerful reminder that though the glory of war is a
+ famous and ancient glory, it is not the final glory of God.</p>
+ <p>But as I know quite well that the Churches are not going to do anything of the
+ kind, I must not close on a note which might to some readers imply that I hope, as
+ some highly respected friends of mine do, to build a pacific civilization on the
+ ruins of the vast ecclesiastical organizations which have never yet been able to
+ utter the truth, because they have had to speak to the poor according to their
+ ignorance and credulity, and to the rich according to their power. When I read <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>{53}</span>that the icon of the
+ Russian peasant is a religious force that will prevail over the materialism of
+ Helmholtz and Haeckel, I have to contain myself as best I can in the face of an
+ assumption by a modern educated European which implies that the Irish peasants who
+ tied scraps of rag to the trees over their holy wells and paid for masses to shorten
+ the stay of their dead relatives in purgatory, were more enlightened than their
+ countryman Tyndall, the Lucretian materialist, and to ask whether the Russian peasant
+ may not find his religious opinions somewhat neutralized by his alliance with the
+ countries of Paul Bert and Combes, of Darwin and Almroth Wright. If we are to keep up
+ any decent show of talking sense on this point we must begin by recognizing that the
+ lines of battle in this war cut right across all the political and sectarian lines in
+ Europe, except the line between our Socialist future and our Commercialist past.
+ Materialist France, metaphysical Germany, muddle-headed English, Byzantine Russia may
+ form what military combinations they please: the one thing they cannot form is a
+ Crusade; and all attempts to represent this war as anything higher or more
+ significant philosophically or politically or religiously for our Junkers and our
+ Tommies than a quite simple primitive contest of the pugnacity that bullies and the
+ pugnacity that will not be bullied are foredoomed to the derision of history. However
+ far-reaching the consequences of the war may be, we in England are fighting to shew
+ the Prussians that they shall not trample on us nor on our neighbors if we can help
+ it, and that if they are fools enough to make their fighting efficiency the test of
+ civilization, we can play that game as destructively as they. That is simple, and the
+ truth, and by far the jolliest and most inspiring ground to recruit on. It stirs the
+ blood and stiffens the back as effectively and quickly as hypocrisy and cant and
+ humbug sour and trouble and discourage. But it will not carry us farther than the end
+ of the fight. We cannot go on fighting forever, or even for very long, whatever Lord
+ Kitchener may think; and win, lose, or tie, the parties, when the fight is over, must
+ fall back on their civil wisdom and political foresight for a settlement of the terms
+ on which we are to live happily together ever after. The practicable conditions of a
+ stable comity of nations cannot be established by the bayonet, which settles nothing
+ but the hash of those who rely on it. They are to found, as I have already explained,
+ in the substitution for our present Militarist kingdoms of a system of democratic
+ units delimited by community of language, religion, and habit; grouped in federations
+ of united States when their extent makes them politically unwieldy; and held against
+ war by the bond of international Socialism, the only ground upon which the identity
+ of interest between all workers never becomes obscured.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Death of Jaures.</b></p>
+ <p>By far the greatest calamity wrought by the war has been the death of
+ Jaur&egrave;s, who was worth more to France and to Europe than ten army corps and a
+ hundred Archdukes. I once proposed a press law that might have saved him. It was that
+ every article printed in a newspaper should bear not only the name and address of the
+ writer, but the sum paid him for the contribution. If the wretched dupe who
+ assassinated Jaur&egrave;s had known that the trashy articles on the Three Years Law
+ he had been reading were not the voice of France in peril, but the ignorant
+ scribbling of some poor devil at his wits' end to earn three francs, he would hardly
+ have thrown away his own life to take that of the greatest statesman his country has
+ produced since Mirabeau. It is hardly too much to say that this ghastly murder and
+ the appalling war that almost eclipsed its horror, is the revenge of the sweated
+ journalist on a society so silly that though it will not allow a man to stuff its
+ teeth without ascertained qualifications for the task, it allows anyone, no matter
+ how poor, how ignorant, how untrained, how imbecile, to stuff its brains without even
+ taking the trouble <span class="pagenum"><a name="page54"
+ id="page54"></a>{54}</span>to ask his name. When we interfere with him and his
+ sweaters at all, we interfere by way of appointing a censorship to prevent him from
+ telling, not lies, however mischievous and dangerous to our own people abroad, but
+ the truth. To be a liar and a brewer of bad blood is to be a privileged person under
+ our censorship, which, so far, has proceeded by no discoverable rule except that of
+ concealing from us everything that the Germans must know lest the Germans should find
+ it out.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Socialism Alone Keeps Its Head.</b></p>
+ <p>Socialism has lost its leader on the Continent; but it is solid and representative
+ on the main point; it loathes war; and it sees clearly that war is always waged by
+ working men who have no quarrel, but on the contrary a supreme common interest. It
+ steadily resists the dangerous export of capital by pressing the need for
+ uncommercial employment of capital at home: the only practicable alternative. It
+ knows that war, on its romantic side, is "the sport of kings": and it concludes that
+ we had better get rid of kings unless they can kill their tedium with more democratic
+ amusements. It notes the fact that though the newspapers shout at us that these
+ battles on fronts a hundred miles long, where the slain outnumber the total forces
+ engaged in older campaigns, are the greatest battles known to history, such
+ machine-carnages bore us so horribly that we are ashamed of our ingratitude to our
+ soldiers in not being able to feel about them as about comparatively trumpery scraps
+ like Waterloo or even Inkerman and Balaclava. It never forgets that as long as higher
+ education, culture, foreign travel, knowledge of the world: in short, the
+ qualification for comprehension of foreign affairs and intelligent voting, is
+ confined to one small class, leaving the masses in poverty, narrowness, and
+ ignorance, and being itself artificially cut off at their expense from the salutary
+ pressure of the common burden which alone keeps men unspoilt and sane, so long will
+ that small class be forced to obtain the support of the masses for its wars by
+ flattering proclamations of the national virtues and indignant denunciations of the
+ villanies of the enemy, with, if necessary, a stiffening of deliberate falsehood and
+ a strenuous persecution of any attempt at inconvenient truthtelling. Here there is no
+ question of the Junker being a monster. You must rule ignoramuses according to their
+ ignorance. The priest must work bogus miracles for them; the man of science must
+ offer them magical cures and prophylactics; the barrister must win their verdict by
+ sophistries, false pathos, and appeals to their prejudices; the army and navy must
+ dazzle them with pageants and bands and thundering salvos and romantic tales; the
+ king must cut himself off from humanity and become an idol. There is no escape whilst
+ such classes exist. Mahomet, the boldest prophet that ever threw down the gage of the
+ singleness and supremacy of God to a fierce tribe of warriors who worshipped stones
+ as devotedly as we worship dukes and millionaires, could not govern them by religious
+ truth, and was forced to fall back on revolting descriptions of hell and the day of
+ judgment, invented by him for the purpose. What else could he do if his people were
+ not to be abandoned to their own destruction? If it is an axiom of diplomacy that the
+ people must not be told the truth, that is not in the least because, for example, Sir
+ Edward Grey has a personal taste for mendacity; it is a necessity imposed by the fact
+ that the people are incapable of the truth. In the end, lying becomes a reflex action
+ with diplomatists; and we cannot even issue a penny bluebook without beginning it
+ with the quite unprovoked statement that "no crime has ever aroused deeper or more
+ general horror throughout Europe" than the assassination of the Archduke. The real
+ tragedy was that the violent death of a fellow creature should have aroused so
+ little.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Divided Against Ourselves</b>.</p>
+ <p>This state of things would be bad enough if the governing classes really sought
+ the welfare of the governed, and were deceiving them for their own good. <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>{55}</span>But they are doing
+ nothing of the sort. They are using their power secondarily, no doubt, to uphold the
+ country in which they have so powerful and comfortable a position; but primarily
+ their object is to maintain that position by the organized legal robbery of the poor;
+ and to that end they would join hands with the German Junkers as against the working
+ class in Germany and England as readily as Bismarck joined hands with Thiers to
+ suppress the Commune of Paris. And even if this were not so, nothing would persuade
+ the working classes that those who sweat them ruthlessly in commercial enterprise are
+ any more considerate in public affairs, especially when there is any question of war,
+ by which much money can be made for rich people who deal in the things most wanted
+ and most highly paid for in war time: to wit, armaments and money. The direct
+ interest of our military caste in war accounts for a good deal; but at least it
+ involves personal risk and hardship and bereavement to the members of that caste. But
+ the capitalist who has shares in explosives and cannons and soldiers' boots runs no
+ risk and suffers no hardship; whilst as to the investor pure and simple, all that
+ happens to him is that he finds the unearned income obtainable on Government security
+ larger than ever. Victory to the capitalists of Europe means that they can not only
+ impose on the enemy a huge indemnity, but lend him the money to pay it with whilst
+ the working classes produce and pay both principal and interest.</p>
+ <p>As long as we have that state of things, we shall have wars and secret and
+ mendacious diplomacy. And this is one of many overwhelming reasons for building the
+ State on equality of income, because without it equality of status and general
+ culture is impossible. Democracy without equality is a delusion more dangerous than
+ frank oligarchy and autocracy. And without Democracy there is no hope of peace, no
+ chance of persuading ourselves that the sacredness of civilization will protect it
+ any more than the sacredness of the cathedral of Rheims has protected it, not against
+ Huns and Vandals, but against educated German gentlemen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Rheims.</b></p>
+ <p>Commercial wage-slaves can never reproduce that wonderful company of sculptured
+ figures that made Rheims unlike any other place in the world; and if they are now
+ destroyed, or shortly about to be, it does not console me that we still
+ have&mdash;perhaps for a few days longer only&mdash;the magical stained glass of
+ Chartres and the choir of Beauvais. We tell ourselves that the poor French people
+ must feel as we should feel if we had lost Westminster Abbey. Rheims was worth ten
+ Westminster Abbeys; and where it has gone the others may just as easily go too. Let
+ us not sneer at the German pretension to culture: let us face the fact that the
+ Germans are just as cultured as we are (to say the least) and that war has
+ nevertheless driven them to do these things as irresistibly as it will drive us to do
+ similar things tomorrow if we find ourselves attacking a town in which the highest
+ point from which our positions can be spotted by an observer with a field glass in
+ one hand and a telephone in the other is the towering roof of the cathedral. Also let
+ us be careful how we boast of our love of medieval art to people who well know, from
+ the protests of Ruskin and Morris, that in times of peace we have done things no less
+ mischievous and irreparable for no better reason than that the Mayor's brother or the
+ Dean's uncle-in-law was a builder in search of a "restoration" job. If Rheims
+ cathedral were taken from the Church to-morrow and given to an English or French
+ joint stock company, everything transportable in it would presently be sold to
+ American collectors, and the site cleared and let out in building sites. That is the
+ way to make it "pay" commercially.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Fate of The Glory Drunkard.</b></p>
+ <p>But our problem is how to make Commercialism itself bankrupt. We must beat
+ Germany, not because the Militarist hallucination and our irresolution forced Germany
+ to make this war, so desperate for her, at a moment so unfavourable to herself, but
+ because she has made her<span class="pagenum"><a name="page56"
+ id="page56"></a>{56}</span>self the exponent and champion in the modern world of the
+ doctrine that military force is the basis and foundation of national greatness, and
+ military conquest the method by which the nation of the highest culture can impose
+ that culture on its neighbors. Now the reason I have permitted myself to call General
+ Von Bernhardi a madman is that he lays down quite accurately the conditions of this
+ military supremacy without perceiving that what he is achieving is a <i>reductio ad
+ absurdum</i>. For he declares as a theorist what Napoleon found in practice, that you
+ can maintain the Militarist hold over the imaginations of the people only by feeding
+ them with continual glory. You must go from success to success; the moment you fail
+ you are lost; for you have staked everything on your power to conquer, for the sake
+ of which the people have submitted to your tyranny and endured the sufferings and
+ paid the cost your military operations entailed. Napoleon conquered and conquered and
+ conquered; and yet, when he had won more battles than the maddest Prussian can ever
+ hope for, he had to go on fighting just as if he had never won anything at all. After
+ exhausting the possible he had to attempt the impossible and go to Moscow. He failed;
+ and from that moment he had better have been a Philadelphia Quaker than a victor of
+ Marengo, Austerlitz, Jena and Wagrarn. Within a short breathing time after that
+ morning when he stood outside Leipsic, whistling <i>Malbrook s'en va-t-en guerre</i>
+ whilst his flying army gasped its last in the river or fled under a hail of bullets
+ from enemies commanded by generals without a tenth of his ability or prestige, we
+ find him disguised as a postillion, cowering abjectly behind the door of a carriage
+ whilst the French people whom he had crammed with glory for a quarter of a century
+ were seeking to tear him limb from limb. His success had made him the enemy of every
+ country except France: his failure made him the enemy of the human race. And that was
+ why Europe rose up finally and smashed him, although the English Government which
+ profited by that operation oppressed the English people for thirty years afterwards
+ more sordidly than Napoleon would have oppressed them, and its Allies replaced him on
+ the throne of France by an effete tyrant not worthy to unlace his shoe latchet.
+ Nothing can finally redeem Militarism. When even genius itself takes that path its
+ end is still destruction. When mere uppishness takes it the end is not changed,
+ though it may be reached more precipitately and disastrously.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Kaiser.</b></p>
+ <p>Prussia has talked of that path for many years as the one down which its destiny
+ leads it. Its ruler, with the kid gloves he called mailed fists and the high class
+ tailoring he called shining armour, did much of the talking, though he is in practice
+ a most peaceful teetotaller, as many men with their imaginations full of the romance
+ of war are. He had a hereditary craze for playing at soldiers; and he was and is a
+ na&iuml;ve suburban snob, as the son of The Englishwoman would naturally be, talking
+ about "the Hohenzollerns" exactly as my father's people in Dublin used to talk about
+ "the Shaws." His stage walk, familiar through the cinematograph, is the delight of
+ romantic boys, and betrays his own boyish love of the <i>Paradeschritt</i>. It is
+ frightful to think of the powers which Europe, in its own snobbery, left in the hands
+ of this Peter Pan; and appalling as the results of that criminal levity have been,
+ yet, being by no means free from his romantic follies myself, I do not feel harshly
+ toward Peter, who, after all, kept the peace for over twenty-six years. In the end
+ his talk and his games of soldiers in preparation for a toy conquest of the world
+ frightened his neighbours into a league against him; and that league has now caught
+ him in just such a trap as his strategists were laying for his neighbours. We please
+ ourselves by pretending that he did not try to extricate himself, and forced the war
+ on us; but that is not true. When he realized his peril he tried hard enough; but
+ when he saw that it was no use he accepted the situation and dashed at his enemies
+ with <span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>{57}</span>an infatuate
+ courage not unworthy of the Hohenzollern tradition. Blinded as he was by the false
+ ideals of his class, it was the best he could do; for there is always a chance for a
+ brave and resolute warrior, even when his back is not to the wall but to the
+ Russians.</p>
+ <p>That means that we have to conquer him and not to revile him and strike moral
+ attitudes. His victory over British and French Democracy would be a victory of
+ Militarism over civilization; it would literally shut the gates of mercy on mankind.
+ Leave it to our official fools and governesses to lecture the Kaiser, and to let
+ loose Turcos and Ghoorkas on him: a dangerous precedent. Let Thomas Atkins, Patrick
+ Murphy, Sandy McAlister, and Pitou Dupont fight him under what leadership they can
+ get, until honour is satisfied, simply because if St. George does not slay the dragon
+ the world will be, as a friend of mine said of Europe the other day, "no place for a
+ gentleman."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Recapitulation.</b></p>
+ <p>1. The war should be pushed vigorously, not with a view to a final crushing of the
+ German army between the Anglo-French combination and the Russian millions, but to the
+ establishment of a decisive military superiority by the Anglo-French combination
+ alone. A victory unattainable without Russian aid would be a defeat for Western
+ European Liberalism; Germany would be beaten not by us, but by a Militarist autocracy
+ worse than her own. By sacrificing Prussian Poland and the Slav portions of the
+ Austrian Empire Germany and Austria could satisfy Russia, and merge Austria and
+ Germany into a single German State, which would then dominate France and England,
+ having ascertained that they could not conquer her without Russia's aid. We may
+ fairly allow Russia to conquer Austria if she can; that is her natural part of the
+ job. But if we two cannot without Russian help beat Potsdam, or at least hold her up
+ in such a stalemate as will make it clear that it is impossible for her to subjugate
+ us, then we shall simply have to "give Germany best" and depend on an alliance with
+ America for our place in the sun.</p>
+ <p>2. We cannot smash or disable Germany, however completely we may defeat her,
+ because we can do that only by killing her women; and it is trifling to pretend that
+ we are capable of any such villainy. Even to embarrass her financially by looting her
+ would recoil on ourselves, as she is one of our commercial customers and one of our
+ most frequently visited neighbors. We must, if we can, drive her from Belgium without
+ compromise. France may drive her from Alsace and Lorraine. Russia may drive her from
+ Poland. She knew when she opened fire that these were the stakes in the game; and we
+ are bound to support France and Russia until they are won or lost, unless a stalemate
+ reduces the whole method of warfare to absurdity. Austria, too, knew that the Slav
+ part of her empire was at stake. By winning these stakes the Allies will wake the
+ Kaiser from his dream of a Holy Teuton Empire with Prussia as the Head of its Church,
+ and teach him to respect us; but that once done, we must not allow our camp followers
+ to undo it all again by spiteful humiliations and exactions which could not seriously
+ cripple Germany, and would make bad blood between us for a whole generation, to our
+ own great inconvenience, unhappiness, disgrace, and loss. We and France have to live
+ with Germany after the war; and the sooner we make up our mind to do it generously,
+ the better. The word after the fight must be <i>sans rancune</i>; for without peace
+ between France, Germany, and England, there can be no peace in the world.</p>
+ <p>3. War, as a school of character and a nurse of virtue, must be formally shut up
+ and discharged by all the belligerents when this war is over. It is quite true that
+ ill-bred and swinish nations can be roused to a serious consideration of their
+ position and their destiny only by earthquakes, pestilences, famines, comets' tails,
+ Titanic shipwrecks, and devastating wars, just as it is true that African chiefs
+ cannot make themselves respected unless they bury virgins alive beneath <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id="page58"></a>{58}</span>the doorposts of their
+ hut-palaces, and Tartar Khans find that the exhibition of a pyramid of chopped-off
+ heads is a short way to impress their subjects with a convenient conception of their
+ divine right to rule. Ivan the Terrible did undoubtedly make his subjects feel very
+ serious indeed; and stupid people are apt to believe that this sort of
+ terror-stiffened seriousness is virtue. It is not. Any person who should set-to
+ deliberately to contrive artificial earthquakes, scuttle liners, and start epidemics
+ with a view to the moral elevation of his countrymen, would very soon find himself in
+ the dock. Those who plan wars with the same object should be removed with equal
+ firmness to Hanwell or Bethlehem Hospital. A nation so degraded as to be capable of
+ responding to no higher stimulus than that of horror had better be exterminated, by
+ Prussian war lords or anyone else foolish enough to waste powder on them instead of
+ leaving them to perish of their own worthlessness.</p>
+ <p>4. Neither England nor Germany must claim any moral superiority in the
+ negotiations. Both were engaged for years in a race for armaments. Both indulged and
+ still indulge in literary and oratorical provocation. Both claimed to be "an Imperial
+ race" ruling other races by divine right. Both shewed high social and political
+ consideration to parties and individuals who openly said that the war had to come.
+ Both formed alliances to reinforce them for that war. The case against Germany for
+ violating the neutrality of Belgium is of no moral value to England because
+ (<i>a</i>) England has allowed the violation of the Treaty of Paris by Russia
+ (violation of the neutrality of the Black Sea and closing of the free port of
+ Batoum), and the high-handed and scandalous violation of the Treaty of Berlin by
+ Austria (seizure of Bosnia and Herzegovina), without resorting to arms or remedying
+ the aggression in any other way; (<i>b</i>) because we have fully admitted that we
+ should have gone to war in defence of France in any case, whether the Germans came
+ through Belgium or not, and refused to give the German Ambassador any assurance that
+ we should remain neutral if the Germans sacrificed the military advantage of
+ attacking through Belgium for the sake of avoiding a war with us; (<i>c</i>) that the
+ apparent moral superiority of the pledge given by France and England to respect
+ Belgian neutrality is illusory in face of the facts that France and England stood to
+ gain enormously, and the Germans to lose correspondingly, by confining the attack on
+ France to the heavily fortified Franco-German frontier, and that as France and
+ England knew they would be invited by the Belgians to enter Belgium if the Germans
+ invaded it, the neutrality of Belgium had, as far as they were concerned, no real
+ existence; (<i>d</i>) that as all treaties are valid only <i>rebus sic stantibus</i>,
+ and the state of things which existed at the date of the Treaty of London (1839) had
+ changed so much since then (Belgium is no longer menaced by France, at whom the
+ treaty was aimed, and has acquired important colonies, for instance) that in 1870
+ Gladstone could not depend on it, and resorted to a special temporary treaty not now
+ in force, the technical validity of the 1839 treaty is extremely doubtful; (<i>e</i>)
+ that even if it be valid its breach is not a <i>casus belli</i> unless the parties
+ for reasons of their own choose to make it so; and (<i>f</i>) that the German
+ national peril pleaded by the Imperial Chancellor in his Peer Gynt speech (the
+ <i>durchhauen</i> one), when he rashly but frankly threw away the strong technical
+ case just stated and admitted a breach of international law, was so great according
+ to received Militarist ideas in view of the Russian mobilization, that it is
+ impossible for us or any other Militarist-ridden Power to feel sure ourselves, much
+ less to convince others, that we should have been any more scrupulous in the like
+ extremity. It must be added that nothing can extenuate the enormity of the broad fact
+ that an innocent country has been horribly devastated because her guilty neighbors
+ formed two huge explosive combinations against one another instead of establishing
+ the peace of Eu<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59"
+ id="page59"></a>{59}</span>rope, but that is an offence against a higher law than any
+ recorded on diplomatic scraps of paper, and when it comes to judgment the outraged
+ conscience of humanity will not have much patience with the naughty child's plea of
+ "he began it."</p>
+ <p>5. Militarism must not be treated as a disease peculiar to Prussia. It is rampant
+ in England; and in France it has led to the assassination of her greatest statesman.
+ If the upshot of the war is to be regarded and acted upon simply as a defeat of
+ German Militarism by Anglo-French Militarism, then the war will not only have wrought
+ its own immediate evils of destruction and demoralization, but will extinguish the
+ last hope that we have risen above the "dragons of the prime that tare each other in
+ their slime." We have all been equally guilty in the past. It has been steadily
+ assumed for years that the Militarist party is the gentlemanly party. Its opponents
+ have been ridiculed and prosecuted in England; hanged, flogged or exiled in Russia;
+ and imprisoned in France: they have been called traitors, cads, cranks, and so forth:
+ they have been imprisoned for "bad taste" and for sedition whilst the most virulent
+ sedition against Democracy and the most mutinous military escapades in the
+ commissioned ranks have been tolerated obsequiously, until finally the practical
+ shelving of Liberal Constitutionalism has provoked both in France and England a
+ popular agitation of serious volume for the supersession of parliament by some sort
+ of direct action by the people, called Syndicalism. In short Militarism, which is
+ nothing but State Anarchism, has been carried to such a pitch that it has been
+ imitated and countered by a movement of popular Anarchism, and has exploded in a
+ European war because the Commercialist Governments of Europe had no faith in the
+ effective guidance of any modern State by higher considerations than Lord Roberts's
+ "will to conquer," the weight of the Kaiser's mailed fist, and the interest of the
+ Bourses and Stock Exchanges. Unless we are all prepared to fight Militarism at home
+ as well as abroad, the cessation of hostilities will last only until the belligerents
+ have recovered from their exhaustion.</p>
+ <p>6. It had better be admitted on our side that as to the conduct of the war there
+ is no trustworthy evidence that the Germans have committed any worse or other
+ atrocities than those which are admitted to be inevitable in war or accepted as part
+ of military usage by the Allies. By "making examples" of towns, and seizing
+ irresponsible citizens as hostages and shooting them for the acts of armed civilians
+ over whom they could exert no possible control, the Germans have certainly pushed
+ these usages to a point of Terrorism which is hardly distinguishable from the
+ deliberate murder of non-combatants; but as the Allies have not renounced such
+ usages, nor ceased to employ them ruthlessly in their dealings with the hill tribes
+ and fellaheen and Arabs with whom they themselves have to deal (to say nothing of the
+ notorious domestic Terrorism of the Russian Government), they cannot claim superior
+ humanity. It is therefore waste of time for the pot to call the kettle black. Our
+ outcry against the Germans for sowing the North Sea with mines was followed too
+ closely by the laying of a mine field there by ourselves to be revived without
+ flagrant Pharisaism. The case of Rheims cathedral also fell to the ground as
+ completely as a good deal of the building itself when it was stated that the French
+ had placed a post of observation on the roof. Whether they did or not, all military
+ experts were aware that an officer neglecting to avail himself of the cathedral roof
+ in this way, or an opposing officer hestitating to fire on the cathedral so used,
+ would have been court-martialed in any of the armies engaged. The injury to the
+ cathedral must therefore be suffered as a strong hint from Providence that though we
+ can have glorious wars or glorious cathedrals we cannot have both.</p>
+ <p>7. To sum up, we must remember that if this war does not make an end of war in the
+ west, our allies of to-day may be our enemies of to-morrow, as they are of yesterday,
+ and our enemies of to-day our allies of to-morrow as they are of <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>{60}</span>yesterday; so that if we
+ aim merely at a fresh balance of military power, we are as likely as not to negotiate
+ our own destruction. We must use the war to give the <i>coup de grace</i> to medieval
+ diplomacy, medieval autocracy, and anarchic export of capital, and make its
+ conclusion convince the world that Democracy is invincible, and Militarism a rusty
+ sword that breaks in the hand. We must free our soldiers, and give them homes worth
+ fighting for. And we must, as the old phrase goes, discard the filthy rags of our
+ righteousness, and fight like men with everything, even a good name, to win,
+ inspiring and encouraging ourselves with definite noble purposes (abstract nobility
+ butters no parsnips) to face whatever may be the price of proving that war cannot
+ conquer us, and that he who dares not appeal to our conscience has nothing to hope
+ from our terrors.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>"Shaw's Nonsense About Belgium"</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Arnold Bennett.</h3>
+ <h3>Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Mr. Bernard Shaw's "Common Sense About the War" is the talk of the town, and it
+ deserves to be. One of its greatest values is its courage, for in it Shaw says many
+ things no one else would have dared to say. It therefore, by breaking the unearthly
+ silence on certain aspects of the situation, perhaps inaugurates a new and healthier
+ period of discussion and criticism on such subjects as recruiting, treatment of
+ soldiers and sailors' dependents, secret diplomacy, militarism, Junkerism, churches,
+ Russia, peace terms, and disarmament. It contains the most magnificent, brilliant,
+ and convincing common sense that could possibly be uttered. No citizen, I think,
+ could rise from the perusal of this tract with a mind unilluminated or opinions
+ unmodified. Hence everybody ought to read it, though everybody will not be capable of
+ appreciating the profoundest parts of it.</p>
+ <p>Mixed up with the tremendous common sense, however, is a considerable and unusual
+ percentage of that perverseness, waywardness, and arlequinading which are apparently
+ an essential element of Mr. Shaw's best work. This is a disastrous pity, having
+ regard to the immense influence and vogue of Shaw, not only in Germany, but in
+ America, and the pity is more tragic as Shaw has been most absurd about the very
+ matter which most Englishmen regard as most important, namely, Great Britain's actual
+ justification for going to war.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Shaw's Admitted Prejudice.</b></p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw begins by conceiving the possibility of his being blinded by prejudice or
+ perversity, and admits his capacity for criticising England with a certain slight
+ malicious taste for taking the conceit out of her. Seemingly he belongs to that
+ numerous class who think that to admit a fault is to excuse it. As a highwayman might
+ say before taking your purse, "Now, I admit, I have a certain slight taste for
+ thieving," and expect you to smile forgiveness of his depredation, Shaw's bias is
+ evident wherever he discusses the action and qualities of Great Britain. Thus he
+ contrasts Bernhardi's brilliant with our own very dull militarists' facts, the result
+ being that the intense mediocrity of Bernhardi leaps to the eye on every page, and
+ that events have thoroughly discredited all his political and many of his military
+ ideas, whereas we possess militarists of first-class quality.</p>
+ <p>Naturally, Shaw calls England muddle-headed. Yet of late nothing has been less
+ apparent than muddle-headednes. Of British policy, Shaw says that since <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>{61}</span>the Continent generally
+ regards us as hypocritical, we must be hypocritical. He omits to say that the
+ Continent generally, and Germany in particular, regards our policy and our diplomacy
+ as extremely able and clear-sighted. The unscrupulous cleverness of Britain is one of
+ Germany's main themes.</p>
+ <p>These are minor samples of Mr. Shaw's caprices. In discussing the origin of the
+ war Mr. Shaw's aim is to prove that all the great powers are equally to blame. He
+ goes far back and accuses Great Britain of producing the first page of Bernhardian
+ literature in the anonymous pamphlet "The Battle of Dorking." He admits in another
+ passage that the note of this pamphlet was mainly defensive. He is constantly thus
+ making intrenchments for himself in case of forced retirement, and there is in his
+ article almost nothing unjust against Great Britain that is not ingeniously
+ contradicted or mitigated elsewhere.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Great Britain's War Literature.</b></p>
+ <p>Beginning with "The Battle of Dorking" and ending with H.G. Well's "War in the
+ Air," one of the most disturbing and effective warnings against militarism ever
+ written, he sees simply that Great Britain has produced threatening and provocative
+ militarist literature comparable to Germany's. No grounds exist for such a
+ contention. There are militarists in all countries, but there are infinitely more in
+ Germany than in any other country. The fact is notorious. The fact is also notorious
+ that the most powerful, not the most numerous, party in Germany wanted the war. It
+ would be as futile to try to prove that Ireland did not want home rule as that
+ Germany did not want war. As for a war literature, bibliographical statistics show, I
+ believe, that in the last ten years Germany has published seven thousand books or
+ pamphlets about war. No one but a German or a Shaw, in a particularly mischievous
+ mood, would seek to show that Great Britain is responsible for the war fever. It
+ simply is not so.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw urges that we all armed together. Of course we did. When one nation
+ publicly turns bellicose the rest must copy her preparations. If Great Britain could
+ live this century over again she would do over again what she actually did, because
+ common sense would not permit her to do otherwise. The admitted fact that some
+ Britons are militarists does not in the slightest degree impair the rightness or
+ sagacity of our policy. If one member of a family happens to go to the bad and turn
+ burglar, therein is no reason why the family mansion should not be insured against
+ burglary.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw proceeds to what he calls the diplomatic history of the war. His notion
+ of historical veracity may be judged from his description of the Austrian ultimatum
+ to Servia as an escapade of a dotard. He puts the whole blame of it on Franz Josef,
+ and yet he must know quite well that Germany has admitted even to her own subjects
+ that Austria asked Germany's opinion about her policy and obtained Germany's approval
+ before delivering the ultimatum. [Official German pamphlet "Reasons for the War with
+ Russia," August, 1914.] There is no word in Mr. Shaw's diplomatic history of the
+ repeated efforts toward peace made by Great Britain and scotched by Germany. On the
+ contrary, with astounding audacity and disingenuousness, he tries to make it appear
+ that suggestions for peace were offered by Germany and rejected by Great Britain.
+ Once more it simply was not so.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Defense of Sir Edward Grey.</b></p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's paraphrase of Document 17 in the British diplomatic dispatches is a
+ staggering travesty. So far as I can see it bears no relation to the original.
+ Further, he not only deplores that a liberal government should have an imperialist
+ Foreign Secretary, but he accuses Sir Edward Grey of sacrificing his country's
+ welfare to the interests of his party and committing a political crime in order not
+ to incur the wrath of The Daily News and The Manchester Guardian. This is totally
+ inexcusable. Let me not be misunderstood. I am not a liberal. I am an out-and-out
+ radical. I foresee a cleavage in the Liberal Party, and when that cleavage comes I
+ shall be on the extreme left wing. I entirely <span class="pagenum"><a name="page62"
+ id="page62"></a>{62}</span>agree with Mr. Shaw's denunciation of secret diplomacy and
+ undemocratic control of foreign policy. By every social tradition I should be in
+ opposition to Sir Edward Grey, but I think Grey was the best Foreign Secretary that
+ the Liberal Party could have chosen and that he worked well on the only possible
+ plane, the plane of practicality. I am quite sure he is an honest man, and I strongly
+ resent, as Englishmen of all opinions will resent, any imputation to the
+ contrary.</p>
+ <p>As for the undemocratic control of foreign policy, a strong point about our policy
+ on the eve of the war is that it was dictated by public opinion. [See Grey's dispatch
+ to the British Ambassador at Berlin, No. 123.] Germany could have preserved peace by
+ a single gesture addressed to Franz Josef. She did not want peace. Mr. Shaw said Sir
+ Edward Grey ought to have shouted out at the start that if Germany fought we should
+ fight. Sir Edward Grey had no authority to do so, and it would have been foolish to
+ do so. Mr. Shaw also says Germany ought to have turned her whole army against Russia
+ and left the western frontier to the care of the world's public opinion in spite of
+ the military alliance by which France was bound to Russia. We have here an example of
+ his aptitude for practical politics.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Was Belgium a Mere Excuse?</b></p>
+ <p>Let us now come to Belgium. Mr. Shaw protests needlessly that he holds no brief
+ for small States as such, and he most vehemently denies that we are bound to knight
+ errantry on their behalf. His objection to small States is that they are either
+ incorrigibly bellicose or standing temptations to big powers. Outside the Balkans no
+ small State is bellicose. All are eminently pacific. That they are a standing
+ temptation to thieves is surely no reason for their destruction. If it is a reason
+ Mr. Shaw ought to throw his watch down the drain.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw states that Belgium was a mere excuse for our going to war. That there
+ was a vast deal more in the pre-war diplomacy than appears in the printed dispatches,
+ or in any dispatches, I am as convinced as Mr. Shaw is, but I am equally convinced
+ that so far as we are concerned there was nothing in diplomacy, however secret, to
+ contradict our public attitude. The chief item not superficially apparent is that the
+ diplomats knew all along that Germany wanted war and was doing all she could to
+ obtain war on terms most favorable to herself. That our own interest coincided with
+ our duty to Belgium did not by any means render our duty a mere excuse for action. If
+ a burglar is making his way upward in the house where Mr. Shaw lives and Mr. Shaw
+ comes down and collars him in the flat of a defenseless invalid below and hands him
+ over to the police Mr. Shaw would not expect the police to say, "You are a hypocrite;
+ you only seized the burglar because you feared he would come to you next." I stick to
+ the burglar simile, because a burglar is just what Germany is.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The "Infamous Proposal" Phrase.</b></p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw characterizes Mr. Asquith's phrase, "Germany's infamous proposal," as the
+ "obvious barrister's claptrap." Once more this is totally inexcusable. I do not
+ always see eye to eye with Mr. Asquith, I agree with Mr. Shaw that he has more than
+ once sinned against democratic principles, but what has that to do with the point? My
+ general impression of Mr. Asquith and general impression of this country is that Mr.
+ Asquith, in addition to being a pretty good Liberal, is an honest man. His memorable
+ speech containing the "infamous proposal" phrase was most positively a genuine
+ emotional expression of his conviction and of the conviction of the whole country,
+ and Mr. Shaw, a finished master of barrister's claptrap when he likes, has been
+ merely scurrilous about it. Germany's proposal was infamous. Supposing that we had
+ taken the Belgium point at Mr. Shaw's valuation of it, the "nonsense about Belgium,"
+ as he calls it, and refrained from war, what would have been the result? The result
+ would have been that today we could not have looked one another in the face as we
+ passed down the street.</p>
+ <p>But Mr. Shaw is not content with ar<span class="pagenum"><a name="page63"
+ id="page63"></a>{63}</span>guing that the Belgium point was a mere excuse for us. He
+ goes further and continually implies that there was no Belgium point. Every time he
+ mentions the original treaty that established Belgian neutrality he puts after it in
+ brackets, [date 1839,] an obvious barrister's device, sarcastically to discredit the
+ treaty because of its age. He omits to say that the chief clause in the treaty
+ contains the word "perpetually." What is worse, he infers that by the mere process of
+ years, as Belgium gradually made herself, civilized herself, enriched herself, and
+ increased her stake in the world, her moral right to independence and freedom instead
+ of being strengthened was somehow mysteriously weakened. The theory is monstrous, but
+ if he does not mean that he means nothing.</p>
+ <p>Further, he says that in 1870 Gladstone could not depend on the treaty of 1839 and
+ resorted to a special temporary treaty not now in force, and that, therefore,
+ technically the validity of the 1839 treaty is extremely doubtful. This twisting of
+ facts throws a really sinister light upon the later developments of Mr. Shaw as a
+ controversialist. The treaty of 1870 was, indeed, temporary, except in so far as it
+ confirmed the treaty of 1839. Article 3 of the treaty of 1870 says it shall be
+ binding on the contracting parties during the continuance of the war and for twelve
+ months after, and then proceeds "and on the expiration of that time the independence
+ and neutrality of Belgium will, so far as the high contracting parties are
+ respectively concerned, continue to rest as heretofore on the quintuple treaty of
+ 1839," (textual.)</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's manifesto is lengthy and it will no doubt be reprinted in book form. I
+ repeat what I said in my first paragraph as to the major part of it, but I assert
+ that the objectionable part of the manifesto is so objectionable in its flippancy, in
+ its perversity, in its injustice, and in its downright inexactitude as to amount to a
+ scandal. Mr. Shaw has failed to realize either his own importance or the importance
+ and very grave solemnity of the occasion. The present is no hour for that
+ disingenuous, dialectical bravura which might excusably relieve a domestic
+ altercation. Before reprinting Mr. Shaw should, I suggest; seriously reconsider his
+ position and rewrite.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2>"Bennett States the German Case"</h2>
+ <h3>By George Bernard Shaw.</h3>
+ <h4>Letter to The Daily News of London.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To The Daily News, Sir:</i></p>
+ <p>In justice to the enemy I am bound to admit that Mr. Bennett's case, which is the
+ German case, is a very strong one and that his ironic comment on the case against
+ Germany, "We have here an example of Mr. Shaw's aptitude for practical politics," is
+ a comment that the Kaiser will probably make and that the average "practical man"
+ will make, too.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Bennett, in saying that I am a simpleton to doubt that, if Germany had not
+ attacked France, France would have attacked her, shows a much greater courage than he
+ credits me with. That is Germany's contention, and if valid is her justification for
+ dashing at any enemy who, as Mr. Bennett believes, was lying in wait to spring on her
+ back when Russia had her by the throat. If Mr. Bennett is right, and I am a
+ simpleton, there is nothing more to be said. The Imperial Chancellor's plea of "a
+ state of necessity" is proved up to the hilt.</p>
+ <p>I did not omit to say that Germany regards our policy and our diplomacy as
+ extremely able and clear-sighted. I expressly and elaborately pointed that out. <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id="page64"></a>{64}</span>Mr. Bennett, being an
+ Englishman, is so flattered by the apparent compliment from those clever Germans that
+ he insists it is deserved. I, being an Irishman and, therefore, untouched by
+ flattery, see clearly that what the Germans mean by able and clear-sighted is crafty,
+ ruthless, unscrupulous, and directed to the deliberate and intentional destruction of
+ Germany by a masterly diplomatic combination of Russia, France and Great Britain
+ against her, and I defend the English and Sir Edward Grey in particular on the
+ ground, first, that the British nation at large was wholly innocent of the
+ combination, and, second, that even among diplomatists, guilty as most of them
+ unquestionably were and openly as our Junkers&mdash;like the German
+ ones&mdash;clamored for war with Germany, there was more muddle than Machiavelli
+ about them, and that Sir Edward never completely grasped the situation or found out
+ what he really was doing and even had a democratic horror of war.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Shaw's Excuses Scorned.</b></p>
+ <p>But Mr. Bennett will not have any of my excuses for his unhappy country. He will
+ have it that the Germans are right in admiring Sir Edward as a modern Caesar Bogia,
+ and that our militarist writers are "of first class quality," as contrasted with the
+ "intense mediocrity" of poor Gen. Bernhardi.</p>
+ <p>If Mr. Bennett had stopped there the Kaiser would send him the Iron Cross, but of
+ course, like a true born Englishman, he goes on to deny indignantly that England has
+ produced a militarist literature comparable to Germany and to affirm hotly that Mr.
+ Asquith is an honest man whose bad arguments are "a genuine emotional expression of
+ his convictions and that of the whole country," and that Sir Edward Grey is an honest
+ man, and that he (Mr. Bennett) "strongly resents as Englishmen of all opinions will
+ resent any imputation to the contrary"&mdash;just what I said he would say and that
+ he entirely agrees with my denunciation of secret diplomacy and undemocratic control
+ of foreign policy and that I am a perverse and wayward harlequin, mischievous,
+ unveracious, scurrilous, monstrous, disingenuous, flippant, unjust, inexact,
+ scandalous, and objectionable, and that on all points to which he takes exception and
+ a good many more I am so magnificent, brilliant, and convincing that no citizen could
+ rise from perusing me without being illuminated.</p>
+ <p>That is just a little what I meant by saying that Englishmen are muddle-headed,
+ because they never have been forced by political adversity to mistrust their tempers
+ and depend on a carefully stated case as Irishmen have been.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Showed Germany the Way.</b></p>
+ <p>I did with great pains what nobody else had done. I showed what Germany should
+ have done, knowing that I had no right to reproach her for doing what she did until I
+ was prepared to show that a better way had been open to her.</p>
+ <p>Bennett says, in effect, that nobody but a fool could suppose that my way was
+ practicable and proceeds to call Germany a burglar. That does not get us much
+ further. In fact, to me it seems a step backward. At all events it is now up to Mr.
+ Bennett to show us what practical alternative Germany had except the one I described.
+ If he cannot do that, can he not, at least, fight for his side? We, who are
+ mouthpieces of many inarticulate citizens, who are fighting at home against the
+ general tumult of scare and rancor and silly cinematograph heroics for a sane facing
+ of facts and a stable settlement, are very few. We have to bring the whole continent
+ of war-struck lunatics to reason if we can.</p>
+ <p>What chance is there of our succeeding if we begin by attacking one another
+ because we do not like one another's style or confine ourselves to one another's pet
+ points? I invite Mr. Bennett to pay me some more nice compliments and to reserve his
+ fine old Staffordshire loathing for my intellectual nimbleness until the war is
+ over.&mdash;G. BERNARD SHAW.</p>
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/chesterton.jpg"><img src='images/chesterton_thumb.jpg' width='252'
+ height='400' alt='G.K. CHESTERTON. See Page 108' title='G.K. CHESTERTON.' /></a> <a
+ href="images/conandoyle.jpg"><img src='images/conandoyle_thumb.jpg' width='251'
+ height='400' alt='SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE. (Photo by Arnold Genthe) See Page 132'
+ title='SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>G.K. CHESTERTON. See <a href="#page108">Page 108</a></i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE. (Photo by Arnold Genthe) See <a href="#page132">Page
+ 132</a></i><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>{65}</span>Flaws in Shaw's
+ Logic</h2>
+ <h3>By Cunninghame Graham.</h3>
+ <h4>Letter to The Daily News of London.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The Daily News:</i></p>
+ <p>The controversy between men of peace as to the merits, demerits, causes, and
+ possible results of the great war is becoming almost as dangerous and little less
+ noisy than the real conflict now being waged in and around Ypres. The only difference
+ between the two conflicts is that the combatants in Flanders only strive to kill the
+ body. Those who fire paper bullets aim at the annihilation of the soul.</p>
+ <p>Literature is a nice thing in its way. It both passes and gives us many weary
+ hours. It has its place. But I submit that at present it is mere dancing on a tight
+ rope. Whether the war could have been avoided or not is without interest today. In
+ fact, there is no controversy possible after Maximilian Harden's pronouncement. In it
+ he throws away the scabbard and says boldly that Germany from the first was set on
+ war. Hence it becomes a work of supererogation to find excuses for her, and hence, my
+ old friend, Bernard Shaw, penned his long indictment of his hereditary enemy,
+ England, all in vain.</p>
+ <p>We are a dull-witted race. Although the Continent has dubbed us "Perfidious
+ Albion," it is hard for us to take in general ideas, and no man clearly sees the
+ possibilities of the development of the original sin that lies dormant in him. Thus
+ it becomes hard for us to understand the reason why, if Germany tore up a treaty
+ three months ago we are certain to tear up another in three years' time.</p>
+ <p>All crystal gazing appeals but little to the average man on this side of the St.
+ George's channel. It may be that we shall tear up many treaties, but the broad fact
+ remains that hitherto we have torn up none.</p>
+ <p>The particular treaty that Germany tore up was signed by five powers in 1839,
+ ratified again in 1870 by a special clause respected by King Frederick William in his
+ war against the French, was often referred to in Parliament by Gladstone and by other
+ Ministers, and was considered binding on its signatories. Germany tore it up for her
+ own ends, thus showing that she was a stupid though learned people, for she at once
+ at the same time prejudiced her case to the whole world and made a military
+ mistake.</p>
+ <p>No human motives are without alloy, but at the same time honesty in our case has
+ proved the better policy. Germany, no doubt, would have granted us almost anything
+ for our assent to her march through Belgium. We refused her offers, no doubt from
+ mixed motives, for every Englishman is not an orphan archangel, stupid, or dull or
+ muddle-headed, or what not. The balance of the world is with us, not, perhaps,
+ because they love us greatly, but because they see that we, perhaps by accident, have
+ been forced into the right course and that all smaller nationalities such as
+ Montenegro, Ireland, Poland, and the rest would disappear on our defeat.</p>
+ <p>CUNNINGHAME GRAHAM.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page66" id="page66"></a>{66}</span><b>Editorial
+ Comment on Shaw</b></h2>
+ <h4>From THE NEW YORK TIMES, Nov. 5, 1914.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Mr. G. Bernard Shaw thinks that "the time has now come to pluck up courage and
+ begin to talk and write soberly about the war." Our readers will find in THE TIMES
+ Sunday Magazine this morning some of the fruits of this auto-suggestion. They are
+ very remarkable. While Mr. Shaw can hardly be called a representative of any
+ considerable class, the fact that one prominent writer, always much read, can assume
+ Mr. Shaw's attitude and make public Mr. Shaw's comments throws a strong light on the
+ spirit of British society. It is true that he intimates that he ran the risk of
+ "prompt lynching" at one time, but that was probably the suggestion of a certain
+ timidity and vanity to which he pleads guilty. His safe and prosperous existence is
+ really a striking evidence, on the one hand, of British good nature, and, on the
+ other, of the indifferent estimate the British put on his influence.</p>
+ <p>Like Iago, Mr. Shaw is nothing if not critical, and in this crisis his criticism
+ is for the most part bitter, extreme, and in purpose destructive. He particularly
+ dislikes Sir Edward Grey and the Government of which he is a leading spirit, and the
+ class which the Government represents. He singles out Sir Edward as the chief
+ "Junker" and among the chief "militarists" who brought about this war. Mr. Shaw's
+ attacks on the Foreign Secretary are savage, and, as often happens with savage
+ attacks&mdash;they are far from consistent. For example, Mr. Shaw paraphrases at some
+ length the interview between Sir Edward and the German Ambassador, in which the
+ latter made four different propositions to secure the neutrality of Great Britain if
+ Germany waged war on France, all of which Sir Edward refused. Mr. Shaw sees in this
+ only evidence of determination to take arms against Germany in any case, carrying out
+ a long-cherished plan formed by the Government of which Sir Edward Grey was, for this
+ matter, the responsible member. He does not see&mdash;- though it is so plain that a
+ wayfaring man though a professional satirist should not err therein&mdash;that what
+ the Secretary intended to do&mdash;what, in fact, he did do&mdash;was to refuse to
+ put a price on British perfidy, to accept any "bargain" offered to that end.</p>
+ <p>On the other hand, Mr. Shaw paraphrases at still greater length the report of the
+ interview in which the Russian Foreign Minister and the French Ambassador at St.
+ Petersburg tried to induce the British Government to commit itself in advance to war
+ against Germany. Mr. Shaw thinks that thus the German "bluff" would have been called
+ and war would have been prevented, and he is confident that Mr. Winston Churchill
+ would have taken the Bismarck tone and dictated the result. He cannot see&mdash;what
+ is really the essential fact in both cases&mdash;that Sir Edward Grey was striving in
+ every honorable way to preserve peace, that his Government refused to stand idle and
+ see France crushed in the same spirit that it refused to menace Germany until a
+ definite and undeniable cause of war arose.</p>
+ <p>That cause came with Germany's violation of its pledge to observe the neutrality
+ of Belgium, and England's response excites Mr. Shaw's most furious contempt. He
+ adopts with zest the judgment of the German Chancellor. The pledge for all who signed
+ it was but a scrap of paper, of no more binding force than others that had gone their
+ way to dusty death in the diplomatic waste baskets. To observe the obligation it
+ imposed was hypocrisy. To fight in order to compel Germany to observe it was crass
+ militarism. Plainly, Mr. Shaw is a little difficult. <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page67" id="page67"></a>{67}</span>The Government under which he lives is
+ either too bellicose or not bellicose enough; too ready to help France if France is
+ attacked or not ready enough to bully Germany, and especially it is all wrong about
+ Belgium and its treaty, since treaties have several times been broken, and so on
+ through a bewildering circle of contradictory statements and notions.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw finds little to choose between the groups of combatants. He distinctly
+ prides himself on his impartiality, not to say indifference. On account of his Irish
+ birth he claims something of the detachment of a foreigner, but admits a touch of
+ Irish malice in taking the conceit out of the English. Add to this his professed
+ many-sidedness as a dramatist and playwright and we get as good an explanation as can
+ be given of this noted writer's attitude toward the tremendous struggle now waging.
+ But Mr. Shaw's assumption of even-handed scorn for every one concerned, of "six of
+ one and a half dozen of the other," does not hold out. He feels profoundly that such
+ fighting as Germany does, for such a purpose as inspires Germany, must be met by
+ force, and that England could not in the long run, no matter by whom guided or
+ governed, have shirked the task laid upon her. That being the case, one wonders a
+ little why it was worth while to cover every one with ridicule and to present a
+ picture of Great Britain so essentially grotesque and distorted.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Bernard Shaw on the End of the War.</b></p>
+ <p><i>From The New York Sun, Nov</i>. 15, 1914.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>In the midst of a good deal of untimely gibing, George Bernard Shaw, as reported
+ in a London dispatch to The Sun of yesterday, says one or two very wise and
+ appropriate things about the end of the war and the times to come after it. His
+ warnings are a useful check to the current loose talk of the fire-eaters and
+ preachers of the gospel of vengeance.</p>
+ <p>"We and France have to live with Germany after the war," Mr. Shaw points out. Even
+ to embarrass her financially would be a blow to England herself, Germany being one of
+ England's best customers and one of her most frequently visited neighbors. The truth
+ of this is unanswerable. The great object must be to effect a peace with as little
+ rancor as possible.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw does not say it, but there are going to be overwhelming political reasons
+ why the pride of Germany and Austria and still more why their military power shall
+ not be too much impaired in case of their defeat.</p>
+ <p>Perhaps in the final settlement the Western Allies may be found to have more in
+ common with Berlin than with St. Petersburg. Germany has pointed this out with much
+ force.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's position is not admirable when he chooses their days of tribulation for
+ sticking pins into his own people, even though some of the things he says may be
+ unpleasantly true. But it cannot be denied that he has some sane views on the
+ situation. The pity is that he must always impair the force of the useful things he
+ has to say by flippancies, impertinences, and out-of-place girdings at those whose
+ courage he should help to maintain. He reminds one of a man who insists on wrangling
+ over the mistaken construction of a chimney while the house is burning down.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Bernard Shaw as a Patriot.</b></p>
+ <p><i>From The New York World, Nov. 17, 1914.</i></p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Bernard Shaw has written for our neighbor THE TIMES an elaborate three-page thesis
+ to maintain:</p>
+ <p>1. That Great Britain was abundantly justified in making war with Germany.</p>
+ <p>2. That the explanation given by the British Government for making war against
+ Germany was stupid, hypocritical, mendacious, and disgraceful.</p>
+ <p>3. That he alone is capable of interpreting the moral purpose of the British
+ people in undertaking this necessary work of civilization.</p>
+ <p>4. That the reason the British Government's justification of the war is so
+ inadequate is because no British Government is ever so clever as Bernard Shaw.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>{68}</span>5. That even in
+ the midst of the most horrible calamity known to human history it pays to
+ advertise.</p>
+ <p>Various patriots have various ways of serving their country. Some go to the firing
+ line to be shot and others stay at home to be a source of innocent merriment to the
+ survivors.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>"Shaw Empty of Good Sense"</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <h3>By Christabel Pankhurst.</h3>
+ <h4>Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>His reputation for perversity and contrariety is fully maintained by George
+ Bernard Shaw in the ineptly-named article, "Common Sense About the War." At home in
+ Britain we all know that it is Mr. Shaw's habit to oppose where he might be expected
+ to support, and vice versa. For example, should he speak at a prohibition meeting he
+ would most likely extol strong drink, or if asked to defend the sale of liquor
+ declare dramatically for prohibition.</p>
+ <p>He sees himself as the critic of everything and everybody&mdash;the one and only
+ man who knows what to do and how to do it.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw charges his compatriots with intellectual laziness, but they are not so
+ lazy as to leave him to do their thinking for them. That he sometimes&mdash;and
+ oftener in the past than now&mdash;says illuminating things is true, but firm
+ reliance cannot be placed upon his freakish mental processes, exemplified in his
+ writings about the war. He has played with effect the part of jester to the British
+ public, but when, as now, his jests are empty of the kernel of good sense, the matter
+ gets beyond a joke.</p>
+ <p>The truth is that in face of this great and tragic reality of war the men of mere
+ words, the literary theorists, are in danger of missing their way. Certainly women of
+ deeds are more likely to see things aright than are men of words, and it is as a
+ woman of deeds that I, a suffragette, make answer to my irresponsible compatriot, Mr.
+ Bernard Shaw. And yet not a compatriot, for Mr. Shaw disclaims those feelings of
+ loyalty and enthusiasm for the national cause that fill the mass of us who live under
+ the British flag!</p>
+ <p>"Until Home Rule emerges from its present suspended animation," says Mr. Shaw, "I
+ shall retain my Irish capacity for criticising England with something of the
+ detachment of a foreigner." Now, these words are not a little surprising, because Mr.
+ Shaw's interest in the Home Rule cause has hitherto been of a most restrained and
+ well-nigh secret character, and any one who imagines that Mr. Shaw is a strenuous
+ campaigner for Home Rule is greatly mistaken. If in the years preceding the war the
+ Horne Rule cause had depended upon Mr. Shaw's activities, it would have been in a bad
+ way. It is now, when a foreign enemy menaces our nation as a whole, that Mr. Shaw
+ manifests this enhanced interest in Home Rule.</p>
+ <p>The suffragettes, who have fought and suffered for their cause as no living man
+ reformer in the British Isles has fought and suffered for his, have during the
+ present crisis subordinated their claim to the urgent claims of national honor and
+ safety. So Mr. Shaw, whose campaigning is done generally in the armchair, and never
+ in any place more dangerous than the rostrum, ought surely to refrain from his
+ frivolous, inconsistent, destructive, and unprofitable criticism of our country.</p>
+ <p>As for the question of lynching, Mr. Shaw is, the American public may be assured,
+ in no danger whatever of being lynched. He is in far more danger of having the Iron
+ Cross conferred upon <span class="pagenum"><a name="page69"
+ id="page69"></a>{69}</span>him by the Kaiser in recognition of his attempt to
+ supplement the activities of the official German Press Bureau. But if he were a
+ German subject, writing on certain points of German policy as he does upon certain
+ points of British policy, his fate can well be imagined. The only retribution that
+ will come upon this man, who exploits the freedom of speech and pen that England
+ gives him, is that his words lose now and henceforth the weight they used to have.
+ Oh, the conceit of the man, who in this dark hour, when the English are dying on the
+ battlefield, writes of "taking the conceit out of England" by a stroke of his
+ inconsequent pen!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Admits England's Cause Is Just.</b></p>
+ <p>But with all his will to "take the conceit" out of this England, so fiercely
+ menaced, her sons killed, her daughters widowed&mdash;yet needing, so he thinks, his
+ castigation into the bargain&mdash;the critic is constrained to admit that our
+ country is playing the part of "the responsible policeman of the West" and that "for
+ England to have refrained from hurling herself into the fray, horse, foot, and
+ artillery, was impossible from every point of view." Then why preface these
+ statements by a series of attacks upon the country which is admitted to be justly
+ fighting in a just cause?</p>
+ <p>The sole importance of Mr. Shaw's criticism comes from this. He unwarrantably
+ indorses statements made by Germany in her attempt to put the Allies in the wrong.
+ Because he is known to the German people by his dramatic work, extracts from his
+ article will be circulated among them as an expression of the views of a
+ representative British citizen. And how are the Germans to know that this is false,
+ deprived as they are of news of what is happening in the outside world and ignorant
+ as they must be of Mr. Shaw's real lack of influence at this serious time?</p>
+ <p>That their traffic in mere words disables some literary men from comprehending
+ facts is shown by Mr. Shaw's play upon the word "Junkerism." He points to the
+ dictionary definition of the word instead of to the fact it represents, and by this
+ verbal juggling tries to convince his readers that the military autocracy that
+ dominates and misdirects Germany has its counterpart and equal in Great Britain.
+ Whereas, the conditions in the two countries are wholly different, and it is this
+ very difference that Germany has regarded as one of the signs of British
+ inferiority.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's suggestion that the British are posing as "Injured Innocence" and as
+ "Mild Gazelles" is neither funny nor true. We are simply a people defending
+ ourselves, resisting conquest and military despotism, and fighting for the ideal of
+ freedom and self-government. When our country is no longer in danger we suffragettes,
+ if it be still necessary, are prepared to fight on and wage our civil war that we may
+ win freedom and self-government for women as well as men. But, in the meantime, we
+ support the men&mdash;yes, and even the Government do we in a sense support&mdash;in
+ fighting the common enemy who menaces the freedom of men and women alike. Although
+ the Government in the past have erred gravely in their dealing with the woman
+ question, they are for the purpose of this war the instrument of the nation.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Facts Belie Him.</b></p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw would seem to hold Britain responsible for German militarism, but the
+ facts he cites are against him there. "I am old enough," says he, "to remember the
+ beginnings of the anti-German phase of military propaganda in England. The
+ Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left England very much taken aback. Up to that date
+ nobody was much afraid that Prussia&mdash;suddenly Prussia beat France right down in
+ the dust." Precisely! It was this war on France, deliberately engineered by Bismarck,
+ and it was the defeat and despoilment of France that fed Germany's militarism and
+ encouraged Germany to make those plans of military aggression which, after long and
+ deliberate preparation, are being carried into effect in the present war. Germany's
+ plans of military aggression have compelled other countries to prepare, <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id="page70"></a>{70}</span>however inadequately, to
+ defend themselves.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw gives support to the Germans' contention that they are not the aggressors
+ but are menaced by Russia. Yet he does not explain why, if that is so, Germany took
+ French gold and territory in 1870 and has since continued to alienate France; nor why
+ Germany has chosen Britain as her enemy of enemies to be supplanted and surpassed in
+ power.</p>
+ <p>If Germany is simply on the defensive against Russia and has no desire to attack
+ and cripple France and Britain, then why has she antagonized these countries and
+ driven one after the other into a Russian alliance?</p>
+ <p>When he affects to criticise Germany for not having "entrusted the security of her
+ western frontier to the public opinion of Western Europe and to America and fought
+ Russia, if attacked, with her rear not otherwise defended," Mr. Shaw burkes the fact
+ that Germany's object is to seize Belgium and to make it part of the German Empire,
+ also to seize at least the northern coast of France and to make this seizure the
+ means of dominating Britain.</p>
+ <p>Indeed, the point at which German ambition for conquest ceases would be hard to
+ fix. And yet Mr. Shaw pictures for us an injured-innocent, mild-gazelle Germany on
+ the defensive! Quite in this picture is his assertion that "the ultimatum to Servia
+ was the escapade of a dotard," whereas, everybody knows that the ultimatum was
+ dictated at Berlin. It is plain as a pikestaff that in order to bring on the Great
+ War of conquest for which her rulers thought The Day had arrived. Germany dictated
+ the issue and terms of the ultimatum to Servia and then urged Austria to refuse any
+ compromise and arbitration which might have averted war.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw has assumed the impossible task of trying to blind the American public to
+ these and other facts that prove Germany to be the aggressor in this war, but he will
+ fail in his attempt at white-washing German policy because it is one of the
+ characteristics of the American people that they have a strong feeling for reality
+ and that no twisting and combining of words can prevent them from getting at the
+ facts beneath.</p>
+ <p>Bernhardi's writings are generally believed to be an inspiration, and in part a
+ statement of German policy. But Mr. Shaw differs. In trying to prove that Bernhardism
+ has nothing to do with the case, he maintains that Germany has neglected the
+ Bernhardi programme, and says:</p>
+ <p>"He warned Germany to make an alliance with Italy, Austria, Turkey, and America
+ before undertaking the subjugation of France, then of England."</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw then asserts that Germany disregarded this advice and allowed herself to
+ be caught between Russia and a Franco-British combination with no ally save Austria.
+ But here again facts are against him. For Germany has followed with marvelous
+ precision the line drawn by Bernhardi.</p>
+ <p>She is actually fighting in partnership with Austria. She allied herself with
+ Italy&mdash;though Italy has refused to fight with her in this present war of
+ aggression. Germany has also bent Turkey to her purpose, and has dragged the Turks
+ into the war. An alliance with America! Well, to have gained the help of America in
+ crushing France and crippling England, and ravaging and conquering Belgium was quite
+ beyond the power of German diplomacy and intrigue! Still Germany's attempts to win at
+ least America's moral support in this war are vigorous, if unsuccessful.</p>
+ <p>And with what quotable matter Mr. Shaw provides the German rulers for the further
+ deluding of their subjects when he writes of the German people being "stirred to
+ their depths by the apparent treachery and duplicity of the attack made upon them in
+ their extrernest peril from France and Russia," when he writes of the Kaiser doing
+ "all a Kaiser could do without unbearable ignominy to induce the British not to fight
+ him and give him fair play with Russia," and when he writes of "taking the Kaiser at
+ a disadvantage." As though we ought meekly to have agreed to the Kaiser's plan of
+ defeating France <span class="pagenum"><a name="page71"
+ id="page71"></a>{71}</span>and using her defeat as a bridge to England and a means of
+ conquering England! Uncommon nonsense about the war&mdash;so we must rename Mr.
+ Shaw's production!</p>
+ <p>And what is all this that flows from the pen of Mr. Shaw about Belgium and
+ "obsolete treaties," "rights of way," "necessities that know no international law,"
+ "circumstances that alter treaties"? Made in Germany such statements are, and yet
+ even the Imperial German Chancellor is not so contemptuous as Bernard Shaw is of
+ Belgium's charter of existence, the treaty now violated by Germany.</p>
+ <p>That is a treaty that cannot become obsolete until the powers who made it release
+ Belgium from the restrictions and obligations which the treaty imposes. Germany
+ pleads guilty in this matter of the violation of Belgian neutrality, though Mr. Shaw
+ attempts to show her innocent, for the German Chancellor has said: "This is an
+ infraction of international law&mdash;we are compelled to overrule the legitimate
+ protests of the Luxemburg and Belgian Governments. We shall repair the wrong we are
+ doing as soon as our military aims have been achieved." And again the Chancellor said
+ the invasion of Belgium "is contrary to the law of nature." To Mr. Bernard Shaw's
+ peculiar sense of international morality such dealing is not, however, repugnant.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>No "Right of Way" in Belgium.</b></p>
+ <p>In his letter to President Wilson Mr. Shaw, either willfully or ignorantly, seeks
+ to confuse the neutrality of a neutralized State such as Belgium and the neutrality
+ of an ordinary State such as Italy, and he pretends that violation of the first sort
+ of neutrality creates a situation in no way different from that created by the
+ violation of the second and normal sort of neutrality. I would refer Mr. Shaw to "The
+ Case for Belgium" issued by the Belgian delegates to the United States wherein they
+ point out that "the peculiarity about Belgian neutrality is that it has been imposed
+ upon her by the powers as the one condition upon which they recognized her national
+ existence."</p>
+ <p>The consequence of this is that whereas Italy and the United States and other
+ powers having a similar status can, subject to the risk of attack from an affronted
+ belligerent, please themselves whether or not they condone a violation of their
+ neutrality, Belgium and the other neutralized States cannot condone such violation,
+ but must either resist all breaches of their neutrality or surrender their right to
+ existence. And further a neutralized State, putting faith in the treaty that
+ guarantees its existence and its neutrality, refrains naturally from that preparation
+ for war which would be deemed necessary in the absence of such a treaty.</p>
+ <p>There is no such thing as the "right of way" through neutralized Belgium which Mr.
+ Shaw claims on behalf of belligerent Germany. Far from exercising a right of way
+ Germany has violently committed a trespass, offering a German promise, a mere "scrap
+ of paper," as reparation. "A right of way," argues Bernard Shaw, "is not a right of
+ conquest"; but the truth is that in passing through Belgium Germany assumed dominion
+ over Belgium, which dominion she has since formally asserted and is seeking forcibly
+ to maintain.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A New Shavian Theory.</b></p>
+ <p>No comprehension does Mr. Shaw display of the hurt to the Belgians' sense of honor
+ involved in Germany's use of their territory for purposes hostile to their friendly
+ neighbor, France. To be forced into injuring a friend is an outrage, indeed, and Mr.
+ Shaw surely knows too much of matters military to be unaware that to permit a right
+ of way to one combatant amounts to making an attack upon the other, and that Germany,
+ by the very fact of crossing Belgium soil, was forcing Belgium to be the enemy of
+ France. Only by their great heroism were the Belgians able to escape this infamy that
+ had been planned for them.</p>
+ <p>To be conquered does not really matter! There we have another Shavian <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72"></a>{72}</span>theory. How grateful
+ would the would-be world-ruling Kaiser feel to Mr. Shaw were he to succeed in
+ inoculating the peoples of Europe and of America with that theory! So would the task
+ of putting the peoples under the German yoke (otherwise known as German culture) be
+ made easier&mdash;and cheaper. But the spirit of national freedom, which is as
+ precious to humanity as is the spirit of individual freedom, cannot be driven out by
+ words any more than it can be driven out by blows. The most unlettered Belgian
+ soldier, fighting for a truth that is at the very heart and depth of all things true,
+ puts the mere wordmonger to shame.</p>
+ <p>That Great Britain does not fight only for Belgium is certainly a fact, though
+ Belgium's plight alone would have been enough to bring us into the conflict. We fight
+ also for France, because she is wrongfully attacked, and because she is by her
+ civilization and culture one of the world's treasures. We fight for the
+ all-sufficient reason of self-defense.</p>
+ <p>There is the case for Britain, and despite his special pleading for Germany, Mr.
+ Shaw can show no flaw in it. He does say, however, that the British Government,
+ instead of first seeking a mild way of preserving peace, ought to have said point
+ blank to Germany: "If you attack France we shall attack you." I also think that such
+ a declaration would have been the right one. To me and to many others the thought
+ that our country might stand by and watch inactively an attack upon France was
+ intolerable. Great was our relief when this apprehension was removed by the British
+ Government's declaration of war. Why did not the British Government say to Germany
+ before the war cloud burst that Britain would fight to defend France, and why did the
+ Government delay so long in declaring war? Mr. Shaw does not give the reason, but I
+ will give it.</p>
+ <p>It was that the Government feared opposition to our entering into the war would
+ come from a Radico-Socialist literary clique in London, from a section of the Liberal
+ press, and from certain Liberal and Labor politicians who had been deceived by German
+ professors and other missionaries of the Kaiser into thinking the German peril did
+ not exist. When Belgium was invaded most of these misguided ones were unable to cling
+ any longer to their "keep out of it" policy, and then the Government felt free to
+ act. Yet the Government need not have waited, because with the facts before them the
+ people as a whole would perfectly have understood the necessity of fighting even had
+ Belgium not been invaded.</p>
+ <p>Henceforward the general public must be kept informed of what is happening in the
+ international world. Foreign politics must be conducted with greater publicity.
+ There, at least, Bernard Shaw is right, but this is a reform which he and his
+ fellow-men have failed to effect, whereas women, had they been voters, would have
+ demanded and secured it long ago.</p>
+ <p>Now, although undue diplomatic secrecy, always wrong, will be especially wrong
+ when the terms of peace come to be made, sentimentality will certainly be more
+ mischievous still. It is difficult to resist the conclusion that Bernard Shaw's
+ writings on the war are intended as an appeal to sentimentality&mdash;an appeal that
+ Germany at the close of the war shall have treatment which, by being more than just
+ to her, would be less than just to the countries whom she has attacked, and would
+ mean a recurrence of this appalling war in after years.</p>
+ <p>Before the war specious words were used to cloak the German policy of aggression
+ which has plunged the world in horror and is martyrizing peoples. In view of the
+ coming victory of the Allies, the same tactics will be adopted by the German
+ militarists, and it behooves Bernard Shaw to beware lest even without intent he serve
+ as their tool. Men such as he who believe that while they can never be in the wrong,
+ their country can never be in the right, are just the men who are in danger of
+ stumbling at this time.</p>
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/pankhurst.jpg"><img src='images/pankhurst_thumb.jpg' width='256'
+ height='400'
+ alt='CHRISTABEL PANKHURST. Photo (C) by Underwood &amp; Underwood. See Page 68'
+ title='CHRISTABEL PANKHURST' /></a> <a href="images/barrie.jpg"><img
+ src='images/barrie_thumb.jpg' width='252' height='400'
+ alt='JAMES M. BARRIE. See Page 100' title='JAMES M. BARRIE' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>CHRISTABEL PANKHURST. Photo (C) by Underwood &amp; Underwood. See <a
+ href="#page68">Page 68</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>JAMES M. BARRIE. See <a href="#page100">Page 100</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73"></a>{73}</span><b>Comment by
+ Readers of Shaw</b></h2>
+ <p><b>Shaw Has Made Minister von Jagow's Remark on a "Scrap of Paper"
+ Understandable.</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Most hearty thanks for that masterly "common-sense" article of Bernard Shaw. How
+ clearly he expresses the much that many of us have felt way down inside and have not
+ been able to formulate even to ourselves!</p>
+ <p>He has made at least one woman&mdash;and one of German parentage at
+ that&mdash;understand what reams of public and private communications from all over
+ the Fatherland could not make clear: just why the blunt, impetuous, shocked, and
+ astounded Kaiser dared give utterance to that disgraceful "scrap of paper"
+ remark&mdash;inexcusable but also very understandable in the light of his knowledge
+ of and confidence in a more astute miscreant; why France and Germany have always
+ considered England more or less of a Tartuffe and a "Scheinheilige" (one who seems
+ holy); and why every German&mdash;man, woman and child&mdash;so execrates Sir Edward
+ Grey and colleagues.</p>
+ <p>Nothing in all the sickening present conditions, the future long-lasting woe and
+ misery, the barbarous neutrality violations has so made me blush for my mother's
+ country as the "scrap of paper" incident; and it has been most bitter to listen to
+ the extravagant, fantastic eulogies on England, with which we've been so favored
+ without feeling honestly able to make any excuses whatever for Germany.</p>
+ <p>But now&mdash;thanks to that article&mdash;I can understand what I may not
+ condone, and, though abhorring the Kaiser and my mother's compatriots for their share
+ in that horror going on abroad, I can also pity the hot-headed, imperfect mere man
+ going to war under a carefully incited and fostered misapprehension, and need no
+ longer glorify the cool-headed, sapient policy which so cleverly duped ruler and
+ people.</p>
+ <p>Not since the war began have I felt so undepressed, so free to sympathize where I
+ so love, so free from having to commend those for whom I feel no love whatever. For
+ all of which accept the warmest thanks of</p>
+ <p>KATE HUDSON.</p>
+ <p>New York, Nov. 17.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p><b>Shaw Article Work of "Farceur."</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>"Common sense and Shaw!" Shaw begins his article by saying, "I am giving my views
+ for what they are worth, with a malicious bias." Later on he says: "I am writing
+ history." Toward the end, after having obscured with words many things which had
+ hitherto been clear to most people, he says: "Now that we begin to see where we
+ really are, &amp;c." How Shavian!</p>
+ <p>There are at least two sides to all questions, and so long as they are reasonably
+ presented one is glad to hear them even if they fail to convince, but when a farceur
+ is allowed to occupy three whole pages usually filled by serious and interesting
+ writers it seems time to protest. The subject itself is not one for easy paradox or
+ false and flippant epigram.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw says he does not hold his tongue easily. He certainly does not, and when
+ it wags it wags foolishly, and, as he admits, maliciously, albeit sometimes
+ amusingly, and with superficial brilliance. He says the Irish do not consider England
+ their country yet. Of course they do not. Why should the Irish consider themselves
+ English? Neither do the Scots, nor the Welsh, nor the Canadians, nor will they ever
+ so think. But they are all British, and so, despite all Mr. Shaw says to the
+ contrary, Kitchener was right.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page74" id="page74"></a>{74}</span>Mr. Shaw falls
+ into a common and regrettable error when he continually writes England when he really
+ means the British Empire. It is the British Empire that is at war, for which, though
+ a citizen, Mr. Shaw has no authority to speak or to be considered a representative,
+ for, as he unnecessarily admits, he is not a "British patriot"; neither is he a
+ "Junker," for I have looked through all his definitions of the word, and none applies
+ to him.</p>
+ <p>In what way is the "Battle of Dorking" like Bernhardi? The one he says had as a
+ moral: "To arms! or the Germans will besiege London!" The other said: "To arms! so
+ that the Germans may besiege London, or any other country that does not want
+ compulsory culture!" The one was defensive, the other offensive.</p>
+ <p>He says of the war: "We" began it. Since he says he is not English, and that it is
+ an English war, whom does he mean by "We"? If he means the British, then, should a
+ policeman see a small boy being ill-treated by a large man and go to the help of that
+ boy, he, the policeman, must be said to have begun the fight which would probably
+ ensue between him and said man, notwithstanding that the policeman is only fulfilling
+ what he has sworn to do.</p>
+ <p>Monaco, he says, "seems to be, on the whole, the most prosperous and comfortable
+ State in Europe." If this is buffoonery it is singularly out of place. But even
+ Monaco has an "army," has had recently a small revolution, and the Monegasques do not
+ consider themselves ideally comfortable, and they have many "injustices." Does he
+ hold the principality up as a model administration and the source of its prosperity
+ as above reproach?</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw represents no one but himself, and, like all small men, he reviles others
+ greater than he, such as Sir Edward Grey and Mr. Asquith, but it does not become him,
+ looking at his own life's history, to cast cheap sneers at anonymous journalists in
+ cheap newspapers, who, though they may lack his literary style, possess, at least,
+ one virtue which he boasts that he has not&mdash;patriotism! Yours very truly,</p>
+ <p>LAWRENCE GRANT.</p>
+ <p>New York, Nov. 18.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p><b>Antidote to "Long Infliction of Dreary Stuff."</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Hail to Bernard Shaw! Could anything be more refreshing? After the long infliction
+ upon us of the flood of dreary stuff from London and Paris, and all the talk of
+ German militarism, and what is to become of it at the hands of such immaculately
+ unmilitary apostles of peace and international righteousness and treaty observances
+ as Russia, France, and England, and all the maudlin denunciations of the German
+ Nietzsche and Bernhardi, and the terrible Kaiser, could anything be more refreshing
+ than Shaw's advent in the field of current war history?</p>
+ <p>Though an Anglo-Saxon of American birth and long descent, and no believer in
+ militarism of any sort of itself, yet I see in that no reason to distort ancient
+ history by an attempt to make it appear that German militarism is at all the chief
+ sinner, or, for that matter, not a very necessary and desirable thing in order that
+ Germany may have her rightful place in the world, or any place at all.</p>
+ <p>V.A.W. Warwick, N.Y., Nov. 16.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p><b>False Assumptions Basis of Shaw's Attack.</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>The article on the European war by Mr. G.B. Shaw in THE TIMES of Sunday appeals to
+ me as a noteworthy specimen of what an artful literary genius can do in the way of
+ argumentative cantankerousness. His chief grievance is British diplomacy as
+ represented by Sir Edward Grey, upon whose devoted head he empties the vials of his
+ splenetic humor.</p>
+ <p>Underlying his argument are two glaringly false assumptions, and on these the
+ whole fabric rests. The first is that a certain undefined but presumably mul<span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75"></a>{75}</span>titudinous body, which he
+ designates as "Socialist," "Democratic," and "Social Democratic," is better qualified
+ to determine the policy and conduct the correspondence of the Foreign Office than
+ trained and experienced statesmen.</p>
+ <p>The second is that Sir Edward Grey should have followed the suggestion of Sazonof
+ and threatened Germany with war at a certain stage of the correspondence. This can
+ now be only a matter of opinion, but it may be confidently affirmed that of all
+ nations the Germany of this day would be the last to back down in face of a threat.
+ It may be also said generally that an open threat is about the surest way to bring on
+ a war. Austria threatened Servia and war ensued. Germany threatened Russia and war
+ ensued. Germany threatened Belgium&mdash;in the form of a notification that she
+ intended to invade her territory&mdash;and war ensued.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's contentions are grotesque.</p>
+ <p>Flushing, Nov. 16. SAM TEST.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p><b>"Junkers" Controlled Old World Ages Before Shaw.</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times:</i></p>
+ <p>With regard to the article by Mr. Bernard Shaw, the gist of the matter can be
+ compressed in fewer words. The ideas expressed are not the exclusive property of Mr.
+ Shaw. The Old World for indefinite ages has been controlled and directed by what he
+ calls the "Junker" class, the rich and idle aristocrats who want for nothing, and,
+ being born to rule, do not find it worth while to exert themselves mentally, and for
+ whom there is no suitable profession but the army and diplomacy.</p>
+ <p>The mass of the people are to them the great unwashed, and those a little higher
+ in the scale "cads and bounders," or the German equivalent, in fact the canaille of
+ the French who at the time of the Revolution took things into their own hands to the
+ great surprise of everybody. This substratum is not considered in the scheme of the
+ "Junker's" existence, though the lower orders alone are the workers and producers and
+ make ease and luxury possible.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw. I believe, intends to intimate that there might be a use for the
+ intellectual class, the thinkers and writers with the imagination that can put them
+ mentally in the place of the individuals who make up the masses, think the thoughts
+ and live the lives vicariously of the people who are the nation, and if the "Junker"
+ class of England and Germany and kindred nations who govern and dictate its policies
+ were leavened with the brains and broad-mindedness of the thinkers there might be
+ found a better use for men than killing each other and a brighter outlook for the
+ world which is now filled with widows and orphans.</p>
+ <p>Mrs. F.B. WILLIAMSON.</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth, N.J., Nov, 16.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id="page76"></a>{76}</span><b>Open Letter
+ to President Wilson</b><a id="FNanchor_1" name='FNanchor_1'></a><a
+ href='#Footnote_1'><sup>[1]</sup></a></h2>
+ <h3>By George Bernard Shaw.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Sir: I petition you to invite the neutral powers to confer with the United States
+ of America for the purpose of requesting Britain, France, and Germany to withdraw
+ from the soil of Belgium and fight out their quarrel on their own territories.
+ However the sympathies of the neutral States may be divided, and whatever points now
+ at issue between the belligerent powers may be doubtful, there is one point on which
+ there can be neither division nor doubt, and that is that the belligerent armies have
+ no right to be in Belgium, much less to fight in Belgium, and involve the innocent
+ inhabitants of that country in their reciprocal slaughter. You will not question my
+ right to address this petition to you. You are the official head of the nation that
+ is beyond all question or comparison the chief of the neutral powers, marked out from
+ all the rest by commanding magnitude, by modern democratic constitution, and by
+ freedom from the complication of monarchy and its traditions, which have led Europe
+ into the quaint absurdity of a war waged formally between the German Kaiser, the
+ German Czar, the German King of the Belgians, the German King of England, the German
+ Emperor of Austria, and a gentleman who shares with you the distinction of not being
+ related to any of them, and is therefore describable monarchically as one
+ Poincar&eacute;, a Frenchman.</p>
+ <p>I make this petition on its merits, without claiming any representative character
+ except such as attaches to me as a human being. Nobody here has asked me to do it.
+ Except among the large class of constitutional beggars, the normal English feeling is
+ that it is no use asking for a thing if you feel certain that it will be refused, and
+ are not in a position to enforce compliance. Also, that the party whose request is
+ refused<span class="pagenum"><a name="page77" id="page77"></a>{77}</span> and not
+ enforced looks ridiculous. Many Englishmen will say that a request to the
+ belligerents to evacuate Belgium forthwith would be refused; could not be enforced;
+ and would make the asker ridiculous. We are, in short, not a prayerful nation. But to
+ you it will be clear that even the strongest power, or even allied group of powers,
+ can have its position completely changed by an expression of the public opinion of
+ the rest of the world. In your clear western atmosphere and in your peculiarly
+ responsible position as the head centre of western democracy, you, when the European
+ situation became threatening three months ago, must have been acutely aware of the
+ fact to which Europe was so fatally blinded&mdash;namely, that the simple solution of
+ the difficulty in which the menace of the Franco-Russo-British Entente placed Germany
+ was for the German Emperor to leave his western frontier under the safeguard of the
+ neighborliness and good faith of American, British, and French democracy, and then
+ await quite calmly any action that Russia might take against his country on the east.
+ Had he done so, we could not have attacked him from behind; and had France made such
+ an attack&mdash;and it is in the extremest degree improbable that French public
+ opinion would have permitted such a hazardous and unjustifiable adventure&mdash;he
+ would at worst have confronted it with the fullest sympathy of Britain and the United
+ States, and at best with their active assistance. Unhappily, German Kings do not
+ allow democracy to interfere in their foreign policy; do not believe in
+ neighborliness; and do believe in cannon and cannon fodder. The Kaiser never dreamed
+ of confiding his frontier to you and to the humanity of his neighbors. And the
+ diplomatists of Europe never thought of that easy and right policy, and could not
+ suggest any substitute for it, with the hideous result which is before you.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The State of Belgium.</b></p>
+ <p>Now that this mischief has been done, and the two European thunderclouds have met
+ and are discharging their lightnings, it is not for me to meddle with the question
+ whether the United States should take a side in their warfare as far as it concerns
+ themselves alone. But I may plead for a perfectly innocent neutral State, the State
+ of Belgium, which is being ravaged in a horrible manner by the belligerents. Her
+ surviving population is flying into all the neighboring countries to escape from the
+ incessant hail of shrapnel and howitzer shells from British cannon, French cannon,
+ German cannon, and, most tragic of all, Belgian cannon; for the Belgian Army is being
+ forced to devastate its own country in its own defense.</p>
+ <p>For this there can be no excuse; and at such a horror the rest of the world cannot
+ look on in silence without incurring the guilt of the bystander who witnesses a crime
+ without even giving the alarm. I grant that Belgium, in her extreme peril, made one
+ mistake. She called to her aid the powers of the Entente alone instead of calling on
+ the whole world of kindly men. She should have called on America, too; and it is hard
+ to see how you could in honor have disregarded that call. But if Belgium says
+ nothing, but only turns her eyes dumbly toward you while you look at the red ruin in
+ which her villages, her heaps of slain, her monuments and treasures are being hurled
+ by her friends and enemies alike, are you any the less bound to speak out than if
+ Belgium had asked you to send her a million soldiers?</p>
+ <p>Not for a moment do I suggest that your intervention should be an intervention on
+ behalf of either the Allies or the Entente. If you consider both sides equally
+ guilty, we know that you can find reasons for that verdict. But Belgium is innocent;
+ and it is on behalf of Belgium that so much of the world as is still at peace is
+ waiting for a lead from you. No other question need be prejudged. If Germany
+ maintains her claim to a right of way through Belgium on a matter which she believed
+ (however erroneously) to be one of life and death to her as a nation, nobody, not
+ even China, now pretends that such rights of way have not their place among those
+ common human rights which are su<span class="pagenum"><a name="page78"
+ id="page78"></a>{78}</span>perior to the more artificial rights of nationality. I
+ think, for example, that if Russia made a descent on your continent under
+ circumstances which made it essential to the maintenance of your national freedom
+ that you should move an army through Canada, you would ask our leave to do so, and
+ take it by force if we did not grant it. You may reasonably suspect, even if all our
+ statesmen raise a shriek of denial, that we should take a similar liberty under
+ similar circumstances in the teeth of all the scraps of paper in our Foreign Office
+ dustbin. You see, I am frank with you, and fair, I hope, to Germany. But a right of
+ way is not a right of conquest; and even the right of way was not, as the Imperial
+ Chancellor imagined, a matter of life and death at all, but a militarist
+ hallucination, and one that has turned out, so far, a military mistake. In short,
+ there was no such case of overwhelming necessity as would have made the denial of a
+ right of way to the German Army equivalent to a refusal to save German independence
+ from destruction, and therefore to an act of war against her, justifying a German
+ conquest of Belgium. You can therefore leave the abstract question of international
+ rights of way quite unprejudiced by your action. You can leave every question between
+ the belligerents fully open, and yet, in the common interest of the world, ask
+ Germany to clear out of Belgium, into France or across the Channel, if she can, back
+ home if she can force no other passage, but at all events out of Belgium. A like
+ request would, of course, be addressed to Britain and to France at the same time. The
+ technical correctness of our diplomatic position as to Belgium may be unimpeachable;
+ but as the effect of our shells on Belgium is precisely the same as that of the
+ German shells, and as by fighting on Belgian soil we are doing her exactly the same
+ injury that we should have done her if the violation of her neutrality had been
+ initiated by us instead of by Germany, we could not decently refuse to fall in with a
+ general evacuation.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Certain Result of Intervention.</b></p>
+ <p>At all events, your intervention could not fail to produce at least the result
+ that even if the belligerents refused to comply, your request would leave them in an
+ entirely new and very unpleasant relation to public opinion. No matter how powerful a
+ State is, it is not above feeling the vast difference between doing something that
+ nobody condemns and something that everybody condemns except the interested
+ parties.</p>
+ <p>That difference alone would be well worth your pains. But it is by no means a
+ foregone conclusion that a blank refusal would be persisted in. Germany must be aware
+ that the honor of England is now so bound up with the complete redemption of Belgium
+ from the German occupation that to keep Antwerp and Brussels she must take Portsmouth
+ and London. France is no less deeply engaged. You can judge better than I what chance
+ Germany now has, or can persuade herself she has, of exhausting or overwhelming her
+ western enemies without ruining herself in the attempt. Whatever else the war and its
+ horrors may have done or not done, you will agree with me that it has made an end of
+ the dreams of military and naval steam-rollering in which the whole wretched business
+ began. At a cost which the conquest of a whole continent would hardly justify, these
+ terrible armaments and the heroic hosts which wield them push one another a few miles
+ back and forward in a month, and take and retake some miserable village three times
+ over in less than a week. Can you doubt that though we have lost all fear of being
+ beaten, (our darkened towns, and the panics of our papers, with their endless scares
+ and silly inventions, are mere metropolitan hysteria,) we are getting very tired of a
+ war in which, having now re-established our old military reputation, and taught the
+ Germans that there is no future for their empire without our friendship and that of
+ France, we have nothing more to gain? In London and Paris and Berlin nobody at
+ present dares say "Sirs, ye are brethren; why do ye wrong one to an<span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page79" id="page79"></a>{79}</span>other?"; for the
+ slightest disposition toward a Christian view of things is regarded as a shooting
+ matter in these capitals; but Washington is still privileged to talk common humanity
+ to the nations.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>An Advantage of Aloofness.</b></p>
+ <p>Finally, I may remind you of another advantage which your aloofness from the
+ conflict gives you. Here, in England and in France, men are going to the front every
+ day; their women and children are all within earshot; and no man is hard-hearted
+ enough to say the worst that might be said of what is going on in Belgium now. We
+ talk to you of Louvain and Rheims in the hope of enlisting you on our side or
+ prejudicing you against the Germans, forgetting how sorely you must be tempted to say
+ as you look on at what we are doing, "Well, if European literature, as represented by
+ the library of Louvain, and European religion, as represented by the Cathedral of
+ Rheims, have not got us beyond this, in God's name let them perish." I am thinking of
+ other things&mdash;of the honest Belgians, whom I have seen nursing their wounds, and
+ whom I recognize at a glance as plain men, innocent of all warlike intentions,
+ trusting to the wisdom and honesty of the rulers and diplomatists who have betrayed
+ them, taken from their farms and their businesses to destroy and be destroyed for no
+ good purpose that might not have been achieved better and sooner by neighborly means.
+ I am thinking of the authentic news that no papers dare publish, not of the lies that
+ they all publish to divert attention from the truth. In America these things can be
+ said without driving American mothers and wives mad; here, we have to set our teeth
+ and go forward. We cannot be just; we cannot see beyond the range of our guns. The
+ roar of the shrapnel deafens us; the black smoke of the howitzer blinds us; and what
+ these do to our bodily senses our passions do to our imaginations. For justice, we
+ must do as the mediaeval cities did&mdash;call in a stranger. You are not altogether
+ that to us; but you can look at all of us impartially. And you are the spokesman of
+ Western democracy. That is why I appeal to you.</p>
+ <p>G. BERNARD SHAW.</p>
+ <p><b>Note:</b></p>
+ <div class='note'>
+ <a id="Footnote_1" name='Footnote_1'></a> <a href='#FNanchor_1'>[1]</a> The English
+ newspaper, The Nation, in which Mr. Shaw's letter to the President of the United
+ States appeared on Nov. 7, made the following comment thereon:<br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p>We are glad to publish Mr. Shaw's brilliant appeal to the President of the
+ United States, because we believe that when the time for settlement arrives, the
+ influence of America will be a powerful, perhaps a decisive, factor in obtaining
+ it. We agree, too, with him that while she is not likely to respond to an appeal to
+ intervene on the side of the Entente or the Alliance, the case of Belgium, the
+ innocent victim of the war, is bound to find her in a very different mood. The
+ States are already Belgium's almoner; it is only a step further for them to come in
+ as her savior. But on a vital point we disagree with Mr. Shaw. His Irish mind puts
+ the case with an indifference to which we cannot pretend. We have got to save
+ Western Europe from a victory of Prussian militarism, as well as to avenge Belgium
+ and set her on her feet again. We regard the temper and policy revealed in
+ Germany's violation of Belgium soil and her brutalization of the Belgian people as
+ essential to our judgment of this war and its end. And we dare not concede an inch
+ to Mr. Shaw's "right of way" theory. His distinction between "right of way" and a
+ "right of conquest" has no practical effect other than to extinguish the rights of
+ small nationalities as against great ones, who alone have the power to take a
+ "right of way" when it is refused, and afterward to turn it into a right of
+ conquest. Germany's action was not only a breach of her own treaty (only revealed
+ within a few hours of its execution), but of Article I. of The Hague Convention on
+ the rights of neutral powers:</p>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"THE TERRITORY OF NEUTRAL POWERS IS INVIOLABLE."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>It is not therefore a small thing that Germany has ripped clean through the
+ whole fabric of The Hague Conventions of 1907. Could the American Government, aware
+ of that fact, address herself to intervention on the Belgian question without
+ regard to the breaches of international law which were perpetrated, first, through
+ the orignal German invasion of Belgium, and then in the conduct of the campaign in
+ that country?</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>{80}</span><b>A German
+ Letter to G. Bernard Shaw</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Herbert Eulenberg.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>The following letter from the noted German playwright Eulenberg, whose plays
+ of a decided modern tendency have been presented extensively in Germany and in
+ Vienna, was made public by the German Press Bureau of New York in October</i>,
+ 1914.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Bernard Shaw: You have addressed us Germans several times of late without
+ receiving a reply from us. The reason for this was probably the momentary bitterness
+ against your country of our people's intellectual representatives. Indeed, our best
+ scholars and artists, Ernst Haeckel at 81 years, leading the rest, stripped
+ themselves during these past weeks of all the honors which England had apportioned
+ them. Permit me as one who had the opportunity to do much for the propagation of your
+ dramatic works, especially of your finest drama, "Candida," in Western Germany and in
+ Holland, to present as quiet and as moderate a retort as is possible.</p>
+ <p>Your appeal to intellectual Germany we reciprocate with a question to intellectual
+ England. It is as follows: How is it possible for you to witness your country's
+ present unheard of policy (so opposed to culture) without rising as one man against
+ it? Do you believe that we thinking Germans would ever, without saying or doing
+ anything, observe an alliance of our Government, whose goal was the strengthening of
+ imperialism and the subjugation and destruction of a cultured power, such as France
+ or England? Never! Among your people only a very small number of brave scholars
+ protested against this criminal alliance of your Government at the beginning of the
+ war. You others, you poets, painters, and musicians of present-day England were
+ silent and permitted Sir Edward Grey to continue to sin against a people related to
+ you by blood and intellect. You raised your voice a little, Bernard Shaw! But what
+ did you propose to us: "Refrain from your militarism, my dear Germans, and become
+ again the congenial, complacent poets and thinkers, the people of Goethe and
+ Beethoven, whom no one hated! Then we will surely help you against the bad
+ Russians!"</p>
+ <p>Is not this proposal a bit too na&iuml;ve for you, Bernard Shaw? We are situated
+ in the midst of Russians and Frenchmen, who have formed an open alliance against us
+ for more than twenty years. Our neighbors in the East denounce nothing more than us,
+ and our neighbors in the West denounce us and plan against us, who have for nearly
+ half a century evinced nothing but friendliness toward them. When such enemies
+ surround us, does not your friendly counsel, Bernard Shaw, seem as if you said to us:
+ "Just let yourself be massacred, Germans! Afterward your British cousins will
+ vouchsafe you their protection."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germany Not Isolated.</b></p>
+ <p>Do you think that we would carry on our militarism and our expensive drilling if
+ we lived on an island as you do? We would not think of it. We would speedily dispatch
+ a blood-thirsty butcher, like your Lord Kitchener, from our island to our most
+ unhealthy colony. We could not even reconcile our worthy Dr. Karl Peters, who had
+ dealt a little unscrupulously with a few negro women, with our conceptions of
+ culture, and had to pass him over to you! But the thought shall not come to me or to
+ us, as it does to your Prime Ministers, to pose as angels of light, a fact about
+ which you have yourself told your compatriots the bitter truth to our great joy. We
+ admit having injured Belgium's neutrality, but we have only done it because of dire
+ necessity, because we could not otherwise reach France and take up the fight against
+ two sides forced upon us. Belgium's independence and freedom, which is suddenly of
+ the utmost importance to your King and your Ministers, we have not touched. Even
+ after the expeditious capture of Li&eacute;ge we asked Belgium for the second time:
+ "Let us pass quickly through your country. We will make good every damage, and will
+ not take away a square foot of your country! Do destroyers of liberty and Huns and
+ vandals, or whatever other defamatory names your English papers now heap upon us, who
+ at the time of Beethoven and Schopenhauer formed the Areopagus of culture, conduct
+ themselves in such a way? Does not one of your living spirits in England cry aloud at
+ the reprehensible alliance which your Government has made over your heads with Russia
+ and Japan? On the most shameful day in English history, on the day when Mongolian
+ Japan gave the German people her ultimatum at the instigation of your politicians, on
+ this, I repeat it, most shameful day in the entire English history, I believed that
+ the great dead in Westminster Abbey would rise from their graves horrified at the
+ shameful deed which their grandsons and great-grandsons imposed upon old England.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Land of Shakespeare.</b></p>
+ <p>We Germans venerated the old England almost as a fatherland. We have recognized,
+ understood, and studied Shakespeare, whom you, Bernard Shaw, so dislike, more than
+ any other people, even more than the English nation itself. Lord Byron received more
+ benefits from Goethe alone than from all of England put together. Newton, Darwin, and
+ Adam Smith found in Germany their best supporters and interpreters. The dramatic
+ writers of latter-day England, most worthy of mention, from Oscar Wilde to you,
+ Galsworthy and Knoblauch, are recognized by us and their plays performed numberless
+ times. We have always endeavored to understand the English character. "Nowhere did we
+ feel so much at home as in Germany," all your compatriots will tell you who have been
+ guests here.</p>
+ <p>In "gratitude" for this our merchants were persecuted for years by your merchants,
+ because of a wild hatred for Germans, which, by the way, had a most disagreeable
+ effect upon the races of other colors. In "gratitude," with but few exceptions which
+ we will not forget, we are now abused and belittled by your press before all of
+ Europe and America as if we were assassins, vagabonds, enemies of culture and
+ murderers, far worse than the Russians. As thanks for that you have entered upon a
+ war against us, for which even Sir Edward Grey could not at first give a good reason
+ until the injury of Belgium neutrality luckily came to his assistance.</p>
+ <p>Our people are, therefore, now rightly embittered against England because through
+ your groundless participation you have made more difficult the war against Russia and
+ France, for which one alone, the Czar of Russia, bears the blame. But despite this
+ great bitterness they would never approve the demolition of your country and your
+ nation, because of their respect for your great past and your share in the
+ development of culture in Europe. You, however, joined an alliance as a third great
+ power, whose only purpose is our dissolution and destruction. Merely for reasons of
+ justice and of moral courage a Pitt, a Burke, a Disraeli would have withdrawn their
+ participation in such an alliance, which&mdash;Oh, heroic deed&mdash;falls upon the
+ Germans by threes, no, by fours or fives. Your present-day statesmen, wholly unworthy
+ of representing a people with your past and your inheritance, incite the Mongolians
+ and blacks against us, your brother nation. They steal and permit our small and
+ insufficiently protected colonies to be stolen and no not care a jot for all
+ considerations of Europeans' culture and morals.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>An Unnatural Russian Alliance.</b></p>
+ <p>England, once the home and the refuge for all free spirits from the days of the
+ Inquisition, from Rousseau until Freiligrath and Karl Marx, England has allied
+ herself with Russia&mdash;the prison and the horror of all friends of liberty! Hear
+ ye, hear ye illustrious dead, who lived and struggled for the freedom and the
+ greatest possible joy of mankind, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page82"
+ id="page82"></a>{82}</span>shake in your tombs with disgust and with horror! But you
+ living ones, and you, Bernard Shaw, the foremost of all English artists, do
+ everything in your power to break this terrible alliance and make it powerless for
+ England. Much more lies in the balance for her than is understood by your present
+ nearsighted politicians, who have in mind only the momentary advantages. The
+ destruction of the German power is not the only thing in question here; no, it
+ concerns a great part of civilized Europe in regard to the suspension of their
+ hard-won political liberty; and England, the people of the Magna Charta, the first
+ free Constitution, can never be a party to that. That is why we call to you, Bernard
+ Shaw, in the name of Europe, and ask you for your voice in the struggle.</p>
+ <p>It is a splendid thing that this serious time has also aroused the poets, the
+ thinkers and artists as political and diplomatic advisers, and we should not let
+ ourselves be crowded out of this profession, for which, thanks to our minds, we are
+ not less fitted than the high-brow Lords and Counts. Men of our guild from Thucydides
+ and Herodotus to Petrarch and Rubens, and our Humboldt and your Beaconsfield have
+ ever shown themselves to be good intermediaries and peace advocates. And that,
+ believe me, Bernard Shaw, is of more importance to our people, as well as to our
+ Kaiser, who for over twenty-five years has avoided war like a poison, than all other
+ bloody laurels. Here's to a decent, honorable and "eternal" peace.</p>
+ <p>HERBERT EULENBERG.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>British Authors Defend England's War</b></h2>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>One of the most interesting documents brought forth about the war was issued
+ Sept. 17 in London. It was signed by fifty-three of the leading British writers.
+ Herewith are presented the text of their defense of England and their autograph
+ signatures in facsimile.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The undersigned writers, comprising among them men of the most divergent political
+ and social views, some of them having been for years ardent champions of good-will
+ toward Germany, and many of them extreme advocates of peace, are nevertheless agreed
+ that Great Britain could not without dishonor have refused to take part in the
+ present war. No one can read the full diplomatic correspondence published in the
+ "White Paper" without seeing that the British representatives were throughout
+ laboring whole-heartedly to preserve the peace of Europe, and that their conciliatory
+ efforts were cordially received by both France and Russia.</p>
+ <p>When these efforts failed Great Britain had still no direct quarrel with any
+ power. She was eventually compelled to take up arms because, together with France,
+ Germany, and Austria, she had solemnly pledged herself to maintain the neutrality of
+ Belgium. As soon as danger to that neutrality arose she questioned both France and
+ Germany as to their intentions. France immediately renewed her pledge not to violate
+ Belgian neutrality; Germany refused to answer, and soon made all answer needless by
+ her actions. Without even the pretense of a grievance against Belgium she made war on
+ the weak and unoffending country she had undertaken to protect, and has since carried
+ out her invasion with a calculated and ingenious ferocity which has raised questions
+ other and no less grave than that of the willful disregard of treaties.</p>
+ <p>When Belgium in her dire need appealed to Great Britain to carry out her pledge,
+ that country's course was clear. She had either to break faith, letting the <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83"></a>{83}</span>sanctity of treaties and
+ the rights of small nations count for nothing before the threat of naked force, or
+ she had to fight. She did not hesitate, and we trust she will not lay down arms till
+ Belgium's integrity is restored and her wrongs redressed.</p>
+ <p>The treaty with Belgium made our duty clear, but many of us feel that, even if
+ Belgium had not been involved, it would have been impossible for Great Britain to
+ stand aside while France was dragged into war and destroyed. To permit the ruin of
+ France would be a crime against liberty and civilization. Even those of us who
+ question the wisdom of a policy of Continental ententes or alliances refuse to see
+ France struck down by a foul blow dealt in violation of a treaty.</p>
+ <p>We observe that various German apologists, official and semi-official, admit that
+ their country had been false to its pledged word, and dwell almost with pride on the
+ "frightfulness" of the examples by which it has sought to spread terror in Belgium,
+ but they excuse all these proceedings by a strange and novel plea. German culture and
+ civilization are so superior to those of other nations that all steps taken to assert
+ them are more than justified, and the destiny of Germany to be the dominating force
+ in Europe and the world is so manifest that ordinary rules of morality do not hold in
+ her case, but actions are good or bad simply as they help or hinder the
+ accomplishment of that destiny.</p>
+ <p>These views, inculcated upon the present generation of Germans by many celebrated
+ historians and teachers, seem to us both dangerous and insane. Many of us have dear
+ friends in Germany, many of us regard German culture with the highest respect and
+ gratitude; but we cannot admit that any nation has the right by brute force to impose
+ its culture upon other nations, nor that the iron military bureaucracy of Prussia
+ represents a higher form of human society than the free Constitutions of Western
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p>Whatever the world destiny of Germany may be, we in Great Britain are ourselves
+ conscious of a destiny and a duty. That destiny and duty, alike for us and for all
+ the English-speaking race, call upon us to uphold the rule of common justice between
+ civilized peoples, to defend the rights of small nations, and to maintain the free
+ and law-abiding ideals of Western Europe against the rule of "Blood and Iron" and the
+ domination of the whole Continent by a military caste.</p>
+ <p>For these reasons and others the undersigned feel bound to support the cause of
+ the Allies with all their strength, with a full conviction of its righteousness, and
+ with a deep sense of its vital import to the future of the world.</p>
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/signatures1.jpg"><img src='images/signatures1_thumb.jpg'
+ width='362' alt='Signatures' title='Signatures' /><br />
+ </a><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>{84} <a href="images/signatures2.jpg"><img
+ src='images/signatures2_thumb.jpg' width='362' height='400' alt='Signatures'
+ title='Signatures' /></a><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>{85}</span><b>WHO'S WHO
+ AMONG THE SIGNERS.</b></h2>
+ <p>WILLIAM ARCHER, dramatic critic and editor of Ibsen's works, author of "Life of
+ Macready," "Real Conversations," "The Great Analysis," and (with Granville Barker) "A
+ National Theatre."</p>
+ <p>H. GRANVILLE BARKER, actor, dramatist, and manager, shares with his wife
+ management of the Kingsway Theatre, London; author of "The Voysey Inheritance," and
+ (with Laurence Housman) "Prunella."</p>
+ <p>SIR JAMES MATTHEW BARRIE, creator of "Sentimental Tommy" and "Peter Pan," famous
+ for his sympathetic studies of Scotch life and his fantastic comedies.</p>
+ <p>HILAIRE BELLOC, best known as a writer on history, politics, and economics; a
+ recognized authority on the French Revolution.</p>
+ <p>ARNOLD BENNETT, author of many popular realistic studies of English provincial
+ life, including "Clayhanger" and "Hilda Lessways."</p>
+ <p>ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER BENSON, chiefly known for "From a College Window," "Beside
+ Still Waters," and other volumes of essays.</p>
+ <p>EDWARD FREDERIC BENSON, brother of the preceding, author of many novels of modern
+ life, including "Dodo."</p>
+ <p>VERY REV. MONSIGNOR ROBERT HUGH BENSON, the youngest of the three famous Benson
+ brothers. Besides numerous devotional and theological works, Monsignor Benson has
+ written several widely appreciated historical novels.</p>
+ <p>LAWRENCE BINYON, author of many lyrics and poetic dramas, Assistant Keeper in the
+ British Museum, in charge of Oriental Prints and Drawings.</p>
+ <p>ANDREW CECIL BRADLEY, critic, sometime Professor of Poetry at Oxford University,
+ author of a standard work on Shakespeare.</p>
+ <p>ROBERT BRIDGES, Poet-Laureate. Prominent as a physician before his poetry brought
+ him the high honor he now enjoys.</p>
+ <p>HALL CAINE, one of the most popular of contemporary novelists.</p>
+ <p>R.C. CARTON, dramatist, author of "Lord and Lady Algy" and "A White Elephant."</p>
+ <p>CHARLES HADDON CHAMBERS, dramatist, author of "John a Dreams," part author of "The
+ Fatal Card."</p>
+ <p>GILBERT K. CHESTERTON, essayist, novelist, poet; defender of orthodox thought by
+ unorthodox methods.</p>
+ <p>HUBERT HENRY DAVIES, dramatist, author of "The Mollusc" and "A Single Man."</p>
+ <p>SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE, creator of "Sherlock Holmes."</p>
+ <p>HERBERT ALBERT LAURENS FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University, author of
+ "The Mediaeval Empire," "Napoleon Bonaparte," and other historical works.</p>
+ <p>JOHN GALSWORTHY, a novelist and dramatist who has come into great prominence
+ during the last five years, his plays, "Strife" and "Justice," and his novel, "The
+ Dark Flower," being widely known.</p>
+ <p>ANSTEY GUTHRIE, (F. ANSTEY,) author of "The Brass Bottle," "The Talking Horse,"
+ and other fantastic and humorous tales.</p>
+ <p>SIR HENRY RIDER HAGGARD, author of many widely read romances, among them being
+ "She."</p>
+ <p>THOMAS HARDY, generally considered to be the greatest living English novelist.</p>
+ <p>JANE ELLEN HARRISON, sometime Fellow and Lecturer at Newnham College, Cambridge
+ University; writer of many standard works on classical religion, literature, and
+ life.</p>
+ <p>ANTHONY HOPE HAWKINS, (ANTHONY HOPE,) author of popular historical romance and
+ sketches of modern society, including "The Prisoner of Zenda."</p>
+ <p>MAURICE HEWLETT, poet and romantic novelist, author of "Earthworks Out of Tuscany"
+ and other mediaeval tales.</p>
+ <p>ROBERT HICHENS, novelist, author of "The Garden of Allah," "Bella Donna," and
+ other stories.</p>
+ <p>JEROME K. JEROME, humorist, famous for "Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow" and the
+ "Three Men" series, and for his play "The Passing of the Third Floor Back."</p>
+ <p>HENRY ARTHUR JONES, dramatist, author of "The Silver King," "The Hypocrites," and
+ other plays.</p>
+ <p>RUDYARD KIPLING needs no introduction to people who read the English language.</p>
+ <p>WILLIAM J. LOCKE, author of "The Morals of Marcus," "Septimus," and "The Beloved
+ Vagabond," which have been made into successful plays.</p>
+ <p>EDWARD VERRAL LUCAS, associate editor of Punch and editor of several popular
+ anthologies, author of "A Wanderer in Holland."</p>
+ <p>JOHN WILLIAM MACKAIL, Professor of Poetry at Oxford University, author and editor
+ of many volumes dealing with ancient Greek and Roman literature.</p>
+ <p>JOHN MASEFIELD, known chiefly for his long poems of life among the British
+ poor.</p>
+ <p>ALFRED EDWARD WOODLEY MASON, writer of romantic novels, of which "The Four
+ Feathers" and "The Turnstile" are perhaps the best known, and of several popular
+ dramas.</p>
+ <p>GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek at Oxford University since 1908, editor
+ and translator of Greek classics, perhaps the greatest Greek scholar now living.</p>
+ <p>HENRY NEWBOLT, "laureate of the British Navy," author of "Drake's Drum" and many
+ other songs.</p>
+ <p>BARRY PAIN, author of "Eliza" and other novels and short stories of adventure, of
+ many well-known parodies and poems.</p>
+ <p>SIR GILBERT PARKER, of Canadian birth, poet and author of romantic novels,
+ including "The Judgment House," and "The Right of Way."</p>
+ <p>EDEN PHILLPOTTS, realistic novelist, noted for his exact portraits of the English
+ rustic, author of "Down Dartmoor Way."</p>
+ <p>SIR ARTHUR WING PINERO, one of the most popular of living dramatists. His plays
+ include "Sweet Lavender" and "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray."</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86"></a>{86}</span>SIR ARTHUR
+ QUILLER-COUCH, Professor of English Literature at Cambridge University, poet,
+ novelist, and writer of short stories.</p>
+ <p>SIR OWEN SEAMAN, since 1906 editor of Punch, writer of parodies and light
+ verse.</p>
+ <p>GEORGE R. SIMS, journalist, poet, and author of many popular dramas, including
+ "The Lights of London," "Two Little Vagabonds," and "Harbour Lights."</p>
+ <p>MAY SINCLAIR, writer of novels dealing with modern moral problems, "The Divine
+ Fire" and "The Combined Maze" being best known.</p>
+ <p>FLORA ANNIE STEEL, author of "Tales from the Punjab," "On the Face of the Waters,"
+ "A Prince of Dreamers," and other novels and short stories, most of which deal with
+ life in India.</p>
+ <p>ALFRED SUTRO, dramatist, author of "The Walls of Jericho," "The Barrier," and
+ other plays of modern society."</p>
+ <p>GEORGE MACAULAY TREVELYAN, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge; author of
+ "England Under the Stuarts," and other historical and biographical works.</p>
+ <p>RT. HON. GEORGE OTTO TREVELYAN, historian, biographer of Macaulay, and author of a
+ four-volume work on the American Revolution.</p>
+ <p>HUMPHRY WARD, journalist and author, sometime Fellow of Brasenose College, editor
+ of several biographical and historical works.</p>
+ <p>MARY A. WARD, (Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD,) best known of contemporary women novelists; her
+ first success was "Robert Elsmere."</p>
+ <p>H.G. WELLS, novelist, author of "Tono Bungay" and "Ann Veronica."</p>
+ <p>MARGARET L. WOODS, poet; her "Wild Justice" and "The Invader" have placed her in
+ the front rank.</p>
+ <p>ISRAEL ZANGWILL, novelist, poet, dramatist, interpreter of the modern Jewish
+ spirit.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>{87}</span><b>The Fourth
+ of August&mdash;Europe at War</b></h2>
+ <h3>By H.G. Wells.</h3>
+ <h4><i>Copyright</i>, 1914, <i>by The New York Times Company</i>.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Europe is at war!</p>
+ <p>The monstrous vanity that was begotten by the easy victories of '70 and '71 has
+ challenged the world, and Germany prepares to reap the harvest Bismarck sowed. That
+ trampling, drilling foolery in the heart of Europe, that has arrested civilization
+ and darkened the hopes of mankind for forty years. German imperialism, German
+ militarism, has struck its inevitable blow. The victory of Germany will mean the
+ permanent enthronement of the War God over all human affairs. The defeat of Germany
+ may open the way to disarmament and peace throughout the earth.</p>
+ <p>To those who love peace there can be no other hope in the present conflict than
+ the defeat, the utter discrediting of the German legend, the ending for good and all
+ of the blood and iron superstition, of Krupp, flag-wagging Teutonic Kiplingism, and
+ all that criminal, sham efficiency that centres in Berlin. Never was war so righteous
+ as war against Germany now. Never has any State in the world so clamored for
+ punishment.</p>
+ <p>But be it remembered that Europe's quarrel is with the German State, not with the
+ German people; with a system, and not with a race. The older tradition of Germany is
+ a pacific and civilizing tradition. The temperament of the mass of German people is
+ kindly, sane, and amiable. Disaster to the German Army, if it is unaccompanied by any
+ such memorable wrong as dismemberment or intolerable indignity, will mean the
+ restoration of the greatest people in Europe to the fellowship of Western nations.
+ The role of England in this huge struggle is plain as daylight. We have to fight. If
+ only on account of the Luxemburg outrage, we have to fight. If we do not fight,
+ England will cease to be a country to be proud of; it will be a dirt-bath to escape
+ from. But it is inconceivable that we should not fight. And having fought, then in
+ the hour of victory it will be for us to save the liberated Germans from vindictive
+ treatment, to secure for this great people their right, as one united German-speaking
+ State, to a place in the sun.</p>
+ <p>First we have to save ourselves and Europe, and then we have to stand between
+ German on the one hand and the Cossack and revenge on the other.</p>
+ <p>For my own part, I do not doubt that Germany and Austria are doomed to defeat in
+ this war. It may not be catastrophic defeat, though even that is possible, but it is
+ defeat. There is no destiny in the stars and every sign is false if this is not
+ so.</p>
+ <p>They have provoked an overwhelming combination of enemies. They have underrated
+ France. They are hampered by a bad social and military tradition. The German is not
+ naturally a good soldier; he is orderly and obedient, but he is not nimble nor
+ quick-witted; since his sole considerable military achievement, his not very lengthy
+ march to Paris in '70 and '71, the conditions of modern warfare have been almost
+ completely revolutionized and in a direction that subordinates the massed fighting of
+ unintelligent men to the rapid initiative of individualized soldiers. And, on the
+ other hand, since those years of disaster, the Frenchman has learned the lesson of
+ humility; he is prepared now sombrely for a sombre struggle; his is the gravity that
+ precedes astonishing victories. In the air, in the open field, with guns and
+ machines, it is doubtful if any one fully realizes the superiority of his <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>{88}</span>quality to the German.
+ This sudden attack may take him aback for a week or so, though I doubt even that, but
+ in the end I think he will hold his own; even without us he will hold his own, and
+ with us then I venture to prophesy that within three months from now his tricolor
+ will be over the Rhine. And even suppose his line gets broken by the first rush. Even
+ then I do not see how the Germans are to get to Paris or anywhere near Paris. I do
+ not see how against the strength of the modern defensive and the stinging power of an
+ intelligent enemy in retreat, of which we had a little foretaste in South Africa, the
+ exploit of Sedan can be repeated. A retiring German army, on the other hand, will be
+ far less formidable than a retiring French army, because it has less "devil" in it,
+ because it is made up of men taught to obey in masses, because its intelligence is
+ concentrated in its aristocratic officers, because it is dismayed when it breaks
+ ranks. The German Army is everything the conscriptionists dreamed of making our
+ people; it is, in fact, an army about twenty years behind the requirements of
+ contemporary conditions.</p>
+ <p>On the eastern frontier the issue is more doubtful because of the uncertainty of
+ Russian things. The peculiar military strength of Russia, a strength it was not able
+ to display in Manchuria, lies in its vast resources of mounted men. A set invasion of
+ Prussia may be a matter of many weeks, but the raiding possibilities in Eastern
+ Germany are enormous. It is difficult to guess how far the Russian attack will be
+ guided by intelligence, and how far Russia will blunder, but Russia will have to
+ blunder very disastrously indeed before she can be put upon the defensive. A Russian
+ raid is far more likely to threaten Berlin than a German to reach Paris.</p>
+ <p>Meanwhile there is the struggle on the sea. In that I am prepared for some rude
+ shocks. The Germans have devoted an amount of energy to the creation of an aggressive
+ navy that would have been spent more wisely in consolidating their European position.
+ It is probably a thoroughly good navy and ship for ship the equal of our own. But the
+ same lack of invention, the same relative uncreativeness that has kept the German
+ behind the Frenchman in things aerial has made him, regardless of his shallow seas,
+ follow our lead in naval matters, and if we have erred, and I believe we have erred,
+ in overrating the importance of the big battleship, the German has at least very
+ obligingly fallen in with our error. The safest, most effective place for the German
+ fleet at the present time is the Baltic Sea. On this side of the Kiel Canal, unless I
+ overrate the powers of the waterplane, there is no safe harbor for it. If it goes
+ into port anywhere that port can be ruined, and the bottled-up ships can be destroyed
+ at leisure by aerial bombs. So that if they are on this side of the Kiel Canal they
+ must keep the sea and fight, if we let them, before their coal runs short. Battle in
+ the open sea in this case is their only chance. They will fight against odds, and
+ with every prospect of a smashing, albeit we shall certainly have to pay for that
+ victory in ships and men. In the Baltic we shall not be able to get at them without
+ the participation of Denmark, and they may have a considerable use against Russia.
+ But in the end even there mine and aeroplane and destroyer should do their work.</p>
+ <p>So I reckon that Germany will be held east and west, and that she will get her
+ fleet practically destroyed. We ought also to be able to sweep her shipping off the
+ seas, and lower her flag forever in Africa and Asia and the Pacific. All the
+ probabilities, it seems to me, point to that. There is no reason why Italy should not
+ stick to her present neutrality, and there is considerable inducement close at hand
+ for both Denmark and Japan to join in, directly they are convinced of the failure of
+ the first big rush on the part of Germany. All these issues will be more or less
+ definitely decided within the next two or three months. By that time I believe German
+ imperialism will be shattered, and it may be possible to anticipate the <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>{89}</span>end of the armaments
+ phase of European history. France, Italy, England, and all the smaller powers of
+ Europe are now pacific countries; Russia, after this huge war, will be too exhausted
+ for further adventure; a shattered Germany will be a revolutionary Germany, as sick
+ of uniforms and the imperialist idea as France was in 1871, as disillusioned about
+ predominance as Bulgaria is today. The way will be open at last for all these western
+ powers to organize peace. That is why I, with my declared horror of war, have not
+ signed any of these "stop-the-war" appeals and declarations that have appeared in the
+ last few days. Every sword that is drawn against Germany now is a sword drawn for
+ peace.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>If the Germans Raid England</b></h2>
+ <h3>By H.G. Wells.</h3>
+ <h4>From The Times of London, Oct. 31, 1914.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The [London] Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: At the outset of the war I made a suggestion in your columns for the
+ enrollment of all that surplus of manhood and patriotic feeling which remains after
+ every man available for systematic military operations has been taken. My idea was
+ that comparatively undrilled boys and older men, not sound enough for campaigning,
+ armed with rifles, able to shoot straight with them, and using local means of
+ transport, bicycles, cars, and so forth, would be a quite effective check upon an
+ enemy's scouting, a danger to his supplies, and even a force capable of holding up a
+ raiding advance&mdash;more particularly if that advance was poor in horses and
+ artillery, as an overseas raid was likely to be. I suggested, too, that the mere
+ enrollment and arming of the population would have a powerful educational effect in
+ steadying and unifying the spirit of our people. My proposals were received with what
+ seemed even a forced amusement by the "experts." I was told that I knew nothing about
+ warfare, and that the Germans would not permit us to do anything of the sort. The
+ Germans, it seems, are the authorities in these matters, a point I had overlooked.
+ They would refuse to recognize men with only improvised uniforms, they would shoot
+ their prisoners&mdash;not that I had proposed that my irregulars should become
+ prisoners&mdash;and burn the adjacent villages. This seemed to be an entirely
+ adequate reply from the point of view of the expert mind, and I gathered that the
+ proper r&ocirc;le for such an able-bodied civilian as myself was to keep indoors
+ while the invader was about and supply him as haughtily as possible with light
+ refreshments and anything else he chose to requisition. I was also reminded that if
+ only men like myself had obeyed their expert advice and worked in the past for
+ national service and the general submission of everything to expert military
+ direction, these troubles would not have arisen. There would have been no surplus of
+ manhood and everything would have gone as smoothly and as well for England
+ as&mdash;the Press Censorship.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>An Improbable Invasion.</b></p>
+ <p>For a time I was silenced. Under war conditions it is always a difficult question
+ to determine how far it is better to obey poor, or even bad, directions or to
+ criticise them in the hope of getting better. But the course of the war since <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page90" id="page90"></a>{90}</span>that correspondence and
+ the revival of the idea of a raid by your military correspondent provoke me to return
+ to this discussion. Frankly, I do not believe in that raid, and I think we play the
+ German game in letting our minds dwell upon it. I am supposed to be a person of
+ feverish imagination, but even by lashing my imagination to its ruddiest I cannot, in
+ these days of wireless telegraphy, see a properly equipped German force, not even so
+ trivial a handful as 20,000 of them, getting itself with guns, motors, ammunition,
+ and provisions upon British soil. I cannot even see a mere landing of infantrymen. I
+ believe in that raid even less than I do in the suggested raid of navigables that has
+ darkened London. I admit the risk of a few aeroplane bombs in London, but I do not
+ see why people should be subjected to danger, darkness, and inconvenience on account
+ of that one-in-a-million risk. Still, as the trained mind does insist upon treating
+ all unenlisted civilians as panicstricken imbeciles and upon frightening old ladies
+ and influential people with these remote possibilities, and as it is likely that
+ these alarms may even lead to the retention of troops in England when their point of
+ maximum effectiveness is manifestly in France, it becomes necessary to insist upon
+ the ability of our civilian population, if only the authorities will permit the small
+ amount of organization and preparation needed, to deal quite successfully with any
+ raid that in an extremity of German "boldness" may be attempted.</p>
+ <p>And, in the first place, let the expert have no illusions as to what we ordinary
+ people are going to do if we find German soldiers in England one morning. We are
+ going to fight. If we cannot fight with rifles, we shall fight with shotguns, and if
+ we cannot fight according to rules of war apparently made by Germans for the
+ restraint of British military experts, we will fight according to our inner light.
+ Many men, and not a few women, will turn out to shoot Germans. There will be no
+ preventing them after the Belgian stories. If the experts attempt any pedantic
+ interference, we will shoot the experts. I know that in this matter I speak for so
+ sufficient a number of people that it will be quite useless and hopelessly dangerous
+ and foolish for any expert-instructed minority to remain "tame." They will get shot,
+ and their houses will be burned according to the established German rules and methods
+ on our account, so they may just as well turn out in the first place, and get some
+ shooting as a consolation in advance for their inevitable troubles. And if the
+ raiders, cut off by the sea from their supports, ill-equipped as they will certainly
+ be, and against odds, are so badly advised as to try terror-striking reprisals on the
+ Belgian pattern, we irregulars will, of course, massacre every German straggler we
+ can put a gun to. Naturally. Such a procedure may be sanguinary, but it is just the
+ common sense of the situation. We shall hang the officers and shoot the men. A German
+ raid to England will in fact not be fought&mdash;it will be lynched. War is war, and
+ reprisals and striking terror are games that two can play at. This is the latent
+ temper of the British countryside, and the sooner the authorities take it in hand and
+ regularize it the better will be the outlook in the remote event of that hypothetical
+ raid getting home to us. Levity is a national characteristic, but submissiveness is
+ not. Under sufficient provocation the English are capable of very dangerous bad
+ temper, and the expert is dreaming who thinks of a German expedition moving through
+ an apathetic Essex, for example, resisted only by the official forces trained and in
+ training.</p>
+ <p>And whatever one may think of the possibility of raids, I venture to suggest that
+ the time has come when the present exclusive specialization of our combatant energy
+ upon the production of regulation armies should cease. The gathering of these will go
+ on anyhow; there are unlimited men ready for intelligent direction. Now that the
+ shortage of supplies and accommodation has been remedied the enlistment sluices need
+ only be opened again. The rank and file of this country is its strength; there is no
+ need, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>{91}</span>and there
+ never has been any need, for press hysterics about recruiting. But there is wanted a
+ far more vigorous stimulation of the manufacture of material&mdash;if only experts
+ and rich people would turn their minds to that. It is the trading and manufacturing
+ class that needs goading at the present time. It is very satisfactory to send troops
+ to France, but in France there are still great numbers of able-bodied, trained
+ Frenchmen not fully equipped. It is our national duty and privilege to be the
+ storehouse and arsenal of the Allies. Our factories for clothing and material of all
+ sorts should be working day and night. There is the point to which enthusiasm should
+ be turned. It is just as heroic and just as useful to the country to kill yourself
+ making belts and boots as it is to die in a trench. But our organization for the
+ enrollment and utilization of people not in the firing line is still amazingly
+ unsatisfactory. The one convenient alternative to enlistment as a combatant at
+ present is hospital work. But it is really far more urgent to direct enthusiasm and
+ energy now to the production of war material. If this war does not end, as all the
+ civilized world hopes it will end, in the complete victory of the Allies, our failure
+ will not be through any shortage of men, but through a shortage of gear and
+ organizing ability. It will not be through a default of the people, but through the
+ slackness of the governing class.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Arms and Equipment Needed.</b></p>
+ <p>Now so far as the enrollment of us goes, of the surplus people who are willing to
+ be armed and to be used for quasi-military work at home, but who are not of an age or
+ not of a physique or who are already in shop or office serving some quite useful
+ purpose at home, we want certain very simple things from the authorities. We want the
+ military status that is conferred by a specific enrollment and some sort of uniform.
+ We want accessible arms. They need not be modern service weapons; the rifles of ten
+ years ago are quite good enough for the possible need we shall have for them. And we
+ want to be sure that in the possible event of an invasion the Government will have
+ the decision to give every man in the country a military status by at once resorting
+ to the lev&eacute;e en masse. Given a recognized local organization and some
+ advice&mdash;it would not take a week of Gen. Baden-Powell's time, for example, to
+ produce a special training book for us&mdash;we could set to work upon our own local
+ drill, rifle practice, and exercises, in such hours and ways as best suited our
+ locality. We could also organize the local transport, list local supplies, and
+ arrange for their removal or destruction if threatened. Finally, we could set to work
+ to convert a number of ordinary cars into fighting cars by reconstructing and
+ armoring them and exercising crews. And having developed a discipline and
+ self-respect as a fighting force, we should be available not only for fighting work
+ at home, in the extremely improbable event of a raid, but also for all kinds of
+ supplementary purposes, as a reserve of motor drivers, as a supply of physically
+ exercised and half-trained recruits in the events of an extended standard, and as a
+ guarantee of national discipline under any unexpected stress. Above all, we should be
+ relieving the real fighting forces of the country for the decisive area, which is in
+ France and Belgium now and will, I hope, be in Westphalia before the Spring.</p>
+ <p>At present we non-army people are doing only a fraction of what we would like to
+ do for our country. We are not being used. We are made to feel out of it, and we
+ watch the not always very able proceedings of the military authorities and the
+ international mischief-making of the Censorship with a bitter resentment that is
+ restrained only by the supreme gravity of the crisis. For my own part I entertain
+ three Belgians and make a young officer possible by supplementing his expenses, and
+ my wife knits things. A neighbor, an able-bodied man of 42 and an excellent shot, is
+ occasionally permitted to carry a recruit to Chelmsford. If I try to use my pen on
+ behalf of my country abroad, where I have a few friends and readers, what I <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92"></a>{92}</span>write is exposed to the
+ clumsy editing and delays of anonymous and apparently irresponsible officials. So
+ practically I am doing nothing, and a great number of people are doing very little
+ more. The authorities are concentrated upon the creation of an army numerically vast,
+ and for the rest they seem to think that the chief function of government is
+ inhibition. Their available energy and ability is taxed to the utmost in maintaining
+ the fighting line, and it is sheer greed for direction that has led to their
+ systematic thwarting of civilian co-operation. Let me warn them of the boredom and
+ irritation they are causing. This is a people's war, a war against militarism; it is
+ not a war for the greater glory of British diplomatists, officials, and people in
+ uniforms. It is our war, not their war, and the last thing we intend to result from
+ it is a permanently increased importance for the military caste.</p>
+ <p>Yours very sincerely,</p>
+ <p>H.G. WELLS.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Sir Oliver Lodge's Comment</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The [London] Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: In a strikingly vigorous letter Mr. H.G. Wells claims that a nation of which
+ every individual prefers death to submission is unconquerable and cannot be
+ successfully invaded. Ways of hampering an army are too numerous, if people are
+ willing to run every risk, not only for themselves but for those dependent on
+ them.</p>
+ <p>This may be admitted. And we may also agree that the British race would be likely
+ to risk everything if the consequences of carefully engendered hate were loosed upon
+ us. But here comes a point worthy of consideration. An invasion of England is, to say
+ the least, unlikely; an invasion of Germany may soon have to be undertaken. May it
+ not add to the difficulties of our troops if a policy of "arming every woman, child,
+ and cat and dog" is favorably regarded by us? Is not such a policy a sort of
+ left-handed outcome of the Prussian contention that even their own unarmed civilian
+ populace is contemptible and may be slaughtered without mercy if military procedure
+ is resisted, or even if supplies are not forthcoming?</p>
+ <p>It will be difficult, and I hope impossible, for the Allies to act in accordance
+ with this latter view; though the German peasantry may have been so fed with lies
+ that it will be unable to believe that our soldiers can be trusted to behave like
+ civilized beings when the time has come for a forward march. It is clear that riotous
+ license is subversive of discipline, and conduces to defeat&mdash;as it probably has
+ in recent Continental experience. For, although ancient warriors used to ravage a
+ country, and although women have occasionally intervened in order to stop a battle,
+ surely never before in the history of the world have women and children been forced
+ forward in defense of a fighting line! Yet undoubtedly war can be so conducted that
+ foes mutually respect each other; indeed, save for the cowardly abomination of
+ floating mines, this present war has been so conducted at sea. I suggest that the
+ fair procedure in case of invasion is for each civilian to choose whether to be a
+ combatant or not, and to incur the danger of an affirmative choice in a sufficiently
+ conspicuous and permanent manner. I am, Sir, faithfully yours,</p>
+ <p><b>OLIVER LODGE,</b> The University, Birmingham, Oct. 31.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>{93}</span><b>What the
+ German Conscript Thinks</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Arnold Bennett.</h3>
+ <h4><i>Copyright</i>, 1914, <i>by The New York Times Company</i>.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Some hold that this is a war of Prussian militarism, and not a war of the German
+ people. This view has the merits of kindliness and convenience. Others warn us not to
+ be misled by such sentimentalists, and assert that the heart of the German people is
+ in the war. The point is of importance to us, because the work of the conscript in
+ the field must be influenced by his private feelings. Notwithstanding all drill and
+ sergeantry, the German Army remains a collection of human beings&mdash;and human
+ beings more learned, if not better educated, than our own race! It is not a mere
+ fighting machine, despite the efforts of its leaders to make it into one.</p>
+ <p>Among those who assert that the heart of the German people is in the war are
+ impartial and experienced observers who have carefully studied Germany for many
+ years. For myself, I give little value to their evidence. To come at the truth by
+ observation about a foreign country is immensely, overpoweringly difficult. I am a
+ professional observer: I have lived in Paris and in the French provinces for nine
+ years; I am fairly familiar with French literature and very familiar with the French
+ language&mdash;and I honestly would not trust myself to write even a shilling
+ handbook about French character and life. Nearly all newspapers are conservative;
+ nearly all foreign correspondents adopt the official or conventional point of view;
+ and the pictures of foreign life which get into the press are, as a rule&mdash;shall
+ I say incomplete?</p>
+ <p>Even when the honest observer says, "These things I saw with my own eyes and will
+ vouch for," I am not convinced that he saw enough. An intelligent foreigner with
+ first-class introductions might go through England and see with his own eyes that
+ England was longing for protection, the death of home rule, and the repeal of the
+ Insurance act. The unfortunate Prince Lichnowsky, after an exhaustive inquiry and
+ access to the most secret sources of exclusive information telegraphed to the Kaiser
+ less than a month ago that civil war was an immediate certainty throughout Ireland.
+ Astounding fatuity? Not at all. English observers of England have made, and
+ constantly do make, mistakes equally prodigious. See Hansard every month. So that
+ when I read demonstrations of the thesis that the heart of the German people is in
+ the war, I am not greatly affected by them.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>German Heart Is In the War.</b></p>
+ <p>Still, I do myself believe that the heart of the German people is in the war, and
+ that that heart is governed by two motives&mdash;the motive of self-defense against
+ Russia and the motive of overbearing self-aggrandizement. I do not base my opinion on
+ phenomena which I have observed. Beyond an automobile journey through
+ Schleswig-Holstein, which was formidably tedious, and a yacht journey through the
+ Kiel Canal and Kiel Bay, which was somewhat impressive, I have never traveled in
+ Germany at all. I base my opinion on general principles. In a highly educated and
+ civilized country such as Germany (the word "civilized" must soon take on a new
+ significance!) it is impossible that an autocracy, even a military autocracy, could
+ exist unrooted in the people. "Prussian militarism" may annoy many Germans, but it
+ pleases more than it annoys, and there can be few Germans who are not flattered by
+ it. That the lower classes have an even more tremendous grievance against the upper
+ classes in Germany than in England or France is a certitude. But the existence and
+ power of the army are their reward, their sole reward, for all that they have
+ suffered in hardship and humiliation at the hands of the autocracy. It is the
+ autocracy's bribe and sweetmeat to them.</p>
+ <p>The Germans are a great nation; they have admirable qualities, but they have also
+ defects, and among their defects is a clumsy arrogance, which may be noticed in any
+ international hotel frequented by Germans. It is a racial defect, and to try to limit
+ it to the military autocracy is absurd. An educated and civilized nation has roughly
+ the Government that it wants and deserves. And it has in the end ways of imposing
+ itself on its apparent rulers that are more effective than the ballot box or the
+ barricade, and just as sure. No election was needed to prove to the Italian
+ Government that Italy did not want to fight for the Triple Alliance, and would not
+ fight for it. The fact was known; it was immanent in the air, beyond all arguments
+ and persuasions. Italy breathed a negative, and war was not. So in Germany the mass
+ of Germans have for years breathed war, and war is. The war may be autocratic,
+ dynastic, what you will; but it is also national, and it symbolizes the national
+ defect.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>How About the Leaders?</b></p>
+ <p>Does the German conscript believe in the efficacy of his leaders? I mean when he
+ is lying awake and fatigued at night, not when he is shouting "Hoch!" or watching the
+ demeanor of women in front of him. Does no doubt ever lancinate him? Again I would
+ answer the question from general principles and not from observation. The German
+ conscript must know what everybody knows&mdash;that in almost every bully there is a
+ coward. And he must know that he is led by bullies. He learned that in the barrack
+ yard. An enormous number of conscripts must also know that there is something
+ seriously wrong with a system that for the sake of its own existence has killed
+ freedom of the press. And the million little things that are wrong in the system he
+ also knows out of his own daily life as a conscript. Further, he must be aware <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>{94}</span>that there is a dearth of
+ really great men in his system. In the past there were in Germany men great enough to
+ mesmerize Europe&mdash;Bismarck and von Moltke. There is none today that appeals to
+ the popular imagination as Kitchener does in England or Joffre in France. Alone, in
+ Germany, the Kaiser has been able to achieve a Continental renown. The Kaiser has
+ good qualities. But twenty-four years ago he committed an act of folly and (one may
+ say) "bad form" which nothing but results could justify, and which results have not
+ justified. Whatever his good qualities may be it is an absolute certainty that common
+ sense, foresight, and mental balance are not among them. The conscript feels that, if
+ he does not state it clearly to himself. And as for the military organization of
+ which the Kaiser is the figurehead, it has shown for many years past precisely those
+ signs which history teaches us are signs of decay. It has not withstood the fearful
+ ordeal of success. Just lately, if not earlier, the conscript must have felt that,
+ too.</p>
+ <p>What is the conclusion? Take the average conscript, the member of the lower middle
+ class. He is accustomed to think politically, because at least fifty out of every
+ hundred of him are professed Socialists with a definite and bitter political
+ programme against certain manifestations of the autocracy. (It is calculated that
+ two-fifths of the entire army is Socialist.) He may not argue very closely while in
+ the act of war; indeed, he could not. But enormous experience is accumulated in his
+ subconsciousness&mdash;experience of bullying and cowardice, of humiliation, of
+ injustice, of lying, and of his own most secret shortcomings&mdash;for he, too, is
+ somewhat of the bully, out for self-aggrandisement as well as for self-defense, and
+ his conscience privately tells him so. The organization is still colossal,
+ magnificent, terrific. In the general fever of activity he persuades himself that
+ nothing can withstand the organization; but at the height of some hand-to-hand
+ crisis, when one-hundredth of a dogged grain of obstinacy will turn the scale, he may
+ re<span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>{95}</span>member an insult
+ from an incompetent officer, or the protectionism at home which puts meat beyond his
+ purse in order to enrich the landowner, or even the quite penal legislation of the
+ autocracy against the co-operative societies of the poor, and the memory (in spite of
+ him) may decide a battle. Men think of odd matters in a battle, and it is a
+ scientific certainty that, at the supreme pinch, the subconscious must react.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Felix Adler's Comment</b></h2>
+ <h4>From The Standard, Oct. 14, 1914.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Apropos of a recent article by Mr. Arnold Bennett, wherein he speaks of the
+ resentment which the German soldiers&mdash;two-fifths of them Socialists&mdash;must
+ feel against the bullying discipline to which they have been subjected, the following
+ reflections are jotted down. The reader who is interested in pursuing the subject
+ further may profitably consult a book entitled "Imperial Germany," by Prince von
+ B&uuml;low, which contains some penetrating observations on the workings of the
+ German mind, as well as the chapter on Germany in Alfred Fouill&eacute;e's notable
+ work, "Esquisse Psychologique des Peuples Europ&eacute;ens."</p>
+ <p>The precision which characterizes the operations of the German military machine is
+ due to the German notion of discipline. Discipline in Germany is based on the
+ peculiar place assigned to the expert. Military experts exercise in their branch an
+ authority different in degree but not in kind from that belonging to experts in other
+ departments&mdash;strategy, tactics, improvements of armament, methods of
+ mobilization. The inexpert soldier submits to the military expert as a person about
+ to undergo a necessary operation would submit to a surgeon. It is a mistake to
+ suppose that the Germans, a highly intelligent and educated people, are being cowed
+ into submission by brutal non-commissioned officers. Brutality, when it occurs, is
+ looked upon as exceptional and incidental to a system on the whole approved. The
+ Germans would never tolerate the severe discipline to which they are subjected did
+ they not willingly submit to it. They regard a highly efficient army as necessary to
+ the safety of the Fatherland, and they are willing to leave the responsibility for
+ the means of securing efficiency to the experts. During the Franco-German war, when a
+ student in the University of Berlin, I talked with some of the brightest of the
+ younger men about their military obligations, and I found that they took precisely
+ the view just stated. The Pomeranian peasant may submit to military dictation in a
+ dull, half-instinctive fashion. The flower and &eacute;lite of German intelligence
+ submit to it no less&mdash;from conviction.</p>
+ <p>How shall we account for the unique predominance of the expert in German life? The
+ explanation would seem to lie in the phrase invented by a brilliant writer of the
+ last century, "Deutschland ist Hamlet" (Germany is Hamlet). The Germans are a
+ resolute people&mdash;not at all, as has been erroneously supposed, a nation of
+ dreamers&mdash;just as Hamlet, according to recent criticism, was essentially of a
+ resolute character. In the days of the Hansa and of the Hohenstaufen the Germans cut
+ a great figure in oversea commerce and in war. They were great doers of deeds. The
+ Germans are intensely volitional, but also intensely intellectual. Hence the native
+ hue of resolution has sometimes been sicklied o'er by too much thinking. The
+ intellect of the German refuses to sanction action until the successive steps to be
+ taken have been worked out with logical accuracy, and a scientific groove, so to
+ speak, has been hollowed out along which action can proceed. As soon as <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id="page96"></a>{96}</span>this is accomplished, the
+ flood of volitional impulse enters gladly into the channel prepared for it and moves
+ on in it with irresistible force. Bismarck represents the active side, as the eminent
+ philosophers of the German people represent the side of logical construction. The two
+ sides must be taken together to understand German history and the tendencies
+ prevailing in Germany today.</p>
+ <p>Underneath it all, of course, is German sentiment, but of this we need take no
+ account in discussing German discipline, except in so far as love for the Fatherland
+ enters in to sustain the patience of the people under the burden of their military
+ establishment.</p>
+ <p>Discipline, or the subordination of the inexpert to the expert, likewise accounts
+ for certain peculiarities of the German political parties. Prince von B&uuml;low
+ mentions three examples of supremely efficient organization&mdash;the Prussian Army,
+ the Roman Catholic hierarchy, and the German Social Democracy. There are some 4,200
+ Socialist associations, subject to the orders of forty-two district associations,
+ these in turn being ruled by the Central Committee. The working of the Social
+ Democratic machine is almost flawless. The discipline, it is said, is iron.</p>
+ <p>Again, the conception of Government in Germany, unlike that which prevails in
+ England, France, or America, is determined by the idea of expertness. The Government
+ is the political expert par excellence. Its business is to study the interests of the
+ State as a whole. In all matters of economic theory, of finance, of administration,
+ of social reform, it invokes the advice of specialists. But it is itself the supreme
+ political specialist. It stands high above all the political parties. It does not
+ depend for its existence on majorities in Parliament. It seeks the co-operation of
+ Parliament, but reserves to itself the right of initiative and leadership.</p>
+ <p>The object of the above remarks is to explain, not to justify, and in the face of
+ much uninstructed criticism to point out the deep sources in the nature of the German
+ people from which spring the influences that have molded their life. The chief
+ objections to their system may be summarized in the statements, that it takes too
+ little account of the value of the inexpert; that it tends to suppress latent
+ spontaneity; and, especially in the sphere of government, that it ascribes to the
+ expert a knowledge of the needs of the people such as no ruling class can ever
+ possess. And it overlooks the highest aim of political life and activity, which is
+ the education of the inexpert to such a point that they may become more or less
+ expert in understanding and promoting the public weal.</p>
+ <p>FELIX ADLER.</p>
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/maeterlinck.jpg"><img src='images/maeterlinck_thumb.jpg'
+ width='252' height='400' alt='MAURICE MAETERLINCK. See Page 144'
+ title='MAURICE MAETERLINCK' /></a> <a href="images/boutroux.jpg"><img
+ src='images/boutroux_thumb.jpg' width='251' height='400'
+ alt='EMILE BOUTROUX. (Photo from Bain News Service.) See Page 160'
+ title='EMILE BOUTROUX.' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>MAURICE MAETERLINCK. See <a href="#page144">Page 144</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>EMILE BOUTROUX. (Photo from Bain News Service.) See Page <a
+ href="#page160">160</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" id="page97"></a>{97}</span><b>When Peace
+ Is Seriously Desired</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Arnold Bennett.</h3>
+ <h4>From The Daily News of London.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>When peace is seriously desired in any quarter, the questions to be discussed by
+ the plenipotentaries will fall into three groups:</p>
+ <p>1. Those which affect all Europe.</p>
+ <p>2. Those which chiefly affect Western Europe.</p>
+ <p>3. Those which chiefly affect Eastern Europe.</p>
+ <p>The first group is, of course, the most important, both practically and
+ sentimentally. And the main question in it is the question of Belgium. The original
+ cause of the war was Germany's deliberate and advertised bellicosity, and it might be
+ thought that the first aim of peace would be by some means to extinguish that
+ bellicosity. But relative values may change during the progress of a war, and the
+ question of Belgium&mdash;which means the question of the sanction of international
+ pledges&mdash;now stands higher in the general view than the question of disarmament.
+ Germany has outraged the public law of Europe, and she has followed up her outrage
+ with a series of the most cowardly and wanton crimes. She ought to pay, and she ought
+ to apologize. Only by German payment and German apology can international law be
+ vindicated. Germany should pay a sum large enough to do everything that money can do
+ toward the re-establishment of Belgium's well-being. I have no competence to suggest
+ the amount of the indemnity. A hundred million pounds does not appear to me too
+ large.</p>
+ <p>Then the apology. It may be asked: Why an apology? Would not an apology be implied
+ in the payment of an indemnity?</p>
+ <p>It is undeniable that Germany is now directed by hysteric stupidity wielding a
+ bludgeon. Granted, if you will, that half the nation is at heart against the
+ stupidity and the bludgeon. So much the worse for the half. Citizens who have not had
+ the wit to get rid of the Prussian franchise law must accept all the consequences of
+ their political ineffectiveness. The peacemakers will not be able to divide Germany
+ into two halves.</p>
+ <p>For Potsdam a first-rate spectacular effect is needed, and that effect would best
+ be produced by a German national apology carried by a diplomatic mission with
+ ceremony to Brussels and published in all German official papers, and emphasized by a
+ procession of Belgian troops down Unter den Linden. This visible abasement of German
+ arms in front of the Socialists of Berlin would be an invaluable aid to the breaking
+ of military tyranny in Prussia.</p>
+ <p>So much for the Belgium question and the sanction of international pledges. The
+ other question affecting the whole of Europe is the hope of a universal limitation of
+ armaments. But there is a particular question, touching France, which in practice
+ would come before that. I mean Alsace-Lorraine. Unless Germany conquers Europe,
+ Alsace-Lorraine should be restored to France. A profound national sentiment, to which
+ all conceivable considerations of expediency or ultimate advantage are unimportant,
+ demands imperatively the return of the plunder. And in the councils of the Allies,
+ either alone or with German representatives, the attitude of French diplomacy would
+ be: "Is it clear about Alsace-Lorraine? If so, we may proceed. If not, it's no use
+ going any further."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Question of Armaments.</b></p>
+ <p>We now come to armaments. I have seen it suggested that the destruction of Essen,
+ Wilhelmshaven, and Heligoland ought to be a condition of peace with Germany.
+ Certainly the disappearance of these phenomena would be a gain <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>{98}</span>to the world. So would
+ the disappearance of Rosyth and Toulon. It seems to me, however, very improbable that
+ their destruction or dismantling by international command would occur after
+ hostilities have ceased, or could usefully so occur. If the French Army on its way to
+ Berlin can treat the Krupp factory as the German Army on its way to Paris treated
+ Rheims Cathedral, well and good! In fact, most excellent! And if the British Navy can
+ somehow emasculate Wilhelmshaven and Heligoland I shall not complain that its
+ behavior has been purely doctrinaire. But otherwise I see nothing practical in the
+ Essen-Wilhelmshaven-Heligoland suggestion. Nor in the project for dethroning the
+ Kaiser and sending him and his eldest son to settle their differences in St. Helena!
+ The Kaiser&mdash;happily&mdash;is not a Napoleon, nor has he yet himself accomplished
+ anything big enough or base enough to merit Napoleon's fate. Any dethroning that may
+ enliven the gray monotony of the post-bellum era at Potsdam should and will be done
+ by the German soldiers themselves. Even in international politics it is futile to try
+ to meddle in other people's private affairs.</p>
+ <p>Disarmament in Germany can be achieved by the exercise of one principle, and one
+ principle only. That principle is the principle of mutuality. A scheme in which every
+ nation will proportionately share should be presented to Germany, and she should be
+ respectfully but quite firmly asked to participate in it. There would be no sense in
+ saying to Germany: "You must disarm." The magic words would be: "We are going to
+ disarm, and so are you, whether you want to or not." As to the procedure of
+ disarmament&mdash;whether it shall be slow or fast, whether it shall include
+ destruction or be content with mere omission to renew, how the proportions shall be
+ decided, who shall give the signal to begin&mdash;here are matters which I am without
+ skill or desire to discuss. All I know about them is that they are horribly
+ complicated, unprecedentedly difficult, and bursting with danger; and that they will
+ strain the wisdom, patience, and ingenuity of the negotiators to the very utmost.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Three Vital Points.</b></p>
+ <p>Compared to disarmament, all remaining questions whatsoever affecting peace are
+ simple and secondary. Indemnities for France or Russia, or both, a Polish Kingdom, a
+ Balkan United States, the precise number of nations into which Austria-Hungary is to
+ be shattered, the ownership of the east coast of the Adriatic, even the reparation of
+ the infamy by which Denmark was robbed of Schleswig-Holstein&mdash;what are these but
+ favorable ground for the art of compromise? The vital points, at any rate for us
+ Westerners, are only three: Belgium, Alsace-Lorraine, and disarmament. * * * Stay,
+ there is another. It is vital to Great Britain's reputation that she should accept
+ nothing&mdash;neither indemnity, nor colonies; not a single pound, not a single
+ square mile.</p>
+ <p>Many persons, I gather, find it hard to believe that Prussia will ever admit that
+ she is beaten or consent to her own humiliation. Naturally her conduct will depend
+ upon the degree to which she is beaten. She has admitted defeat and swallowed the
+ leek before, though it is a long time ago. Meanwhile she has forgotten, and her
+ opponents seem to have forgotten also, that though her name is Prussia she is subject
+ to the limitations of the human race. Out of her prodigious score off little Denmark,
+ her thrashing of Austria&mdash;a country which never wins a war&mdash;and her victory
+ over France, there grew a legend that Prussia, and therefore Germany, was not as
+ other nations. This legend is contrary to fact. Every nation must yield to
+ force&mdash;here, indeed, is Germany's contribution to our common knowledge.</p>
+ <p>If in July, 1870, it had been prophesied that France would give up Alsace-Lorraine
+ and pay two hundred millions to get rid of a foreign army of occupation, France would
+ have protested that she would fight to the last man and to the last franc first. But
+ nations don't do these things. If Germany won <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99"
+ id="page99"></a>{99}</span>the present war and fulfilled her dream of establishing an
+ army in this island, we should yield, and we should submit to her terms, we who have
+ never been beaten save by our own colonies&mdash;that is a scientific certainty. And
+ Germany's terms would not be amusing; in their terribleness they would outrun our
+ poor Anglo-Saxon imagination. Similarly, if Germany is beaten, she will bow the head,
+ and to precisely the extent to which she is walloped. We need not worry about that.
+ Were she recalcitrant we need not even murmur in her ear: "What would you have
+ extorted if you'd won?" A gesture of the still uplifted sword would suffice to
+ convince her that facts are facts.</p>
+ <p>Assuming that the tide turns not again, the chances of a thorough, workmanlike
+ common sense peace can only be imperiled by one thing&mdash;the deep desire of France
+ and of Belgium for repose and recuperation. We in England do not know what war is. We
+ have not lived in hell. Our plains have not been devastated, nor our women and
+ children shot, nor our ears deafened by the boom of cannon, nor our cathedrals
+ shelled, nor our land turned into a vast and bloody hospital; and we have not
+ experienced the appalling terror and shame of the foe's absolute dominion in our
+ streets and lanes. We have suffered; we shall suffer; but our suffering is nought and
+ less than nought weighed against the suffering on the Continent. Why, in the midst of
+ a war of unparalleled horror, we grumble if a train is late! We can talk calmly of
+ fighting Germany to a stand-still, even if the job takes two years, and it behooves
+ us to talk so, and to prepare for the task; and for myself I am convinced that we
+ could make good the word. But France and Belgium will not use that tone, if Russia
+ does. Once the German armies are across the frontiers, the instinctive pressure in
+ favor of peace would be enormous, and considerations of the distant future, of the
+ welfare of our descendants and the progress of mankind, would count little in the
+ scale. In that moment, if it happily comes, our part and Russia's would be to sustain
+ and encourage and salve the supreme victims of fate. A tremendous factor in our favor
+ would be the exhaustion of Germany; and the measure of our power and of the fear we
+ inspire is the furious intensity of Germany's anger against our inconvenient selves.
+ Without us the war could not last beyond the end of this year, and the peace would be
+ unsatisfactory.</p>
+ <p>And even with us, insisting on our own terms of reconciliation, I do not see how
+ it can last over six months more on anything like the present scale, for the Kaiser,
+ despite his kinship with Deity, can neither create men nor extract gold coins out of
+ an empty hat. Military arguments, in Germany as elsewhere, hold good only for a
+ certain period.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>{100}</span><b>Barrie at
+ Bay: Which Was Brown?</b></h2>
+ <h3>An Interview on the War.</h3>
+ <h3>From The New York Times, Oct. 1, 1914.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>As our reporter entered Sir James Barrie's hotel room by one door, the next door
+ softly closed. "I was alone," writes our reporter. "I sprang into the corridor and
+ had just time to see him fling himself down the elevator. Then I understood what he
+ had meant when he said on the telephone that he would be ready for me at 10:30.</p>
+ <p>I returned thoughtfully to the room, where I found myself no longer alone. Sir
+ James Barrie's "man" was there; a stolid Londoner, name of Brown, who told me he was
+ visiting America for the first time.</p>
+ <p>"Sir James is very sorry, but has been called away," he assured me without moving
+ a muscle. Then he added: "But this is the pipe," and he placed a pipe of the largest
+ size on the table.</p>
+ <p>"The pipe he smokes?" I asked.</p>
+ <p>Brown is evidently a very truthful man, for he hesitated. "That is the interview
+ pipe," he explained. "When we decided to come to America, Sir James said he would
+ have to be interviewed, and that it would be wise to bring something with us for the
+ interviewers to take notice of. So he told me to buy the biggest pipe I could find,
+ and he practiced holding it in his mouth in his cabin on the way across. He is very
+ pleased with the way the gentlemen of the press have taken notice of it."</p>
+ <p>"So that is not the pipe he really smokes?" I said, perceiving I was on the verge
+ of a grand discovery. "I suppose he actually smokes an ordinary small pipe."</p>
+ <p>Again Brown hesitated, but again truth prevailed.</p>
+ <p>"He does not smoke any pipe," he said, "nor cigars, nor cigarettes; he never
+ smokes at all; he just puts that one in his mouth to help the interviewers."</p>
+ <p>"It has the appearance of having been smoked," I pointed out.</p>
+ <p>"I blackened it for him," the faithful fellow replied.</p>
+ <p>"But he has written a book in praise of My Lady Nicotine."</p>
+ <p>"So I have heard," Brown said guardedly. "I think that was when he was hard up and
+ had to write what people wanted; but he never could abide smoking himself. Years
+ after he wrote the book he read it; he had quite forgotten it, and he was so
+ attracted by what it said about the delights of tobacco that he tried a cigarette.
+ But it was no good; the mere smell disgusted him."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Strange Forgetfulness.</b></p>
+ <p>"Odd that he should forget his own book," I said.</p>
+ <p>"He forgets them all," said Brown. "There is this Peter Pan foolishness, for
+ instance. I have heard people talking to him about that play and mentioning parts in
+ it they liked, and he tried to edge them off the subject; they think it is his
+ shyness, but I know it is because he has forgotten the bits they are speaking about.
+ Before strangers call on him I have seen him reading one of his own books hurriedly,
+ so as to be able to talk about it if that is their wish. But he gets mixed up, and
+ thinks that the little minister was married to Wendy."</p>
+ <p>"Almost looks as if he hadn't written his own works," I said.</p>
+ <p>"Almost," Brown admitted uncomfortably.</p>
+ <p>I asked a leading question. "You don't suppose," I said, "that any one writes them
+ for him? Such things have been. You don't write them for him by any chance, just as
+ you blackened the pipe, you know?"</p>
+ <p>Brown assured me stolidly that he did not. Suddenly, whether to get away <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>{101}</span>from a troublesome
+ subject I cannot say, he vouchsafed me a startling piece of information. "The German
+ Kaiser was on our boat coming across," he said.</p>
+ <p>"Sure?" I asked, wetting my pencil.</p>
+ <p>He told me he had Sir James's word for it. There was on board, it seems, a very
+ small, shrunken gentleman with a pronounced waist and tiny, turned-up mustache, who
+ strutted along the deck trying to look fierce and got in the other passengers' way to
+ their annoyance until Sir James discovered that he was the Kaiser Reduced to Life
+ Size. After that Sir James liked to sit with him and talk to him.</p>
+ <p>Sir James is a great admirer of the Kaiser, though he has not, like Mr. Carnegie,
+ had the pleasure of meeting him in society. When he read in the papers on arriving
+ here that the Kaiser had wept over the destruction of Louvain, he told Brown a story.
+ It was of a friend who had gone to an oculist to be cured of some disease in one eye.
+ Years afterward he heard that the oculist's son had been killed in some Indian war,
+ and he called on the oculist to commiserate with him.</p>
+ <p>"You cured my eye," he said to him, "and when I read of your loss I wept for you,
+ Sir; I wept for you with that eye."</p>
+ <p>"Sir James," Brown explained, "is of a very sympathetic nature, and he wondered
+ which eye it was that the Kaiser wept with."</p>
+ <p>I asked Brown what his own views were about the war, and before replying he pulled
+ a paper from his pocket and scanned it. "We are strictly neutral," he then
+ replied.</p>
+ <p>"Is that what is written on the paper?" I asked. He admitted that Sir James had
+ written out for him the correct replies to possible questions. "Why was he neutral?"
+ I asked, and he again found the reply on the piece of paper: "Because it is the
+ President's wish."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Brown Must Be Neutral.</b></p>
+ <p>So anxious, I discovered, is Sir James to follow the President's bidding that he
+ has enjoined Brown to be neutral on all other subjects besides the war; to express no
+ preference on matters of food, for instance, and always to eat oysters and clams
+ alternately, so that there can be no ill-feeling. Also to walk in the middle of the
+ streets lest he should seem to be favoring either sidewalk, and to be very cautious
+ about admitting that one building in New York is higher than another. I assured him
+ that the Woolworth Building was the highest, but he replied politely, "that he was
+ sure the President would prefer him to remain neutral." I naturally asked if Sir
+ James had given him any further instructions as to proper behavior in America, and it
+ seems that he had done so. They amount, I gather, to this, that Americans have a
+ sense of humor which they employ, when they can, to the visitor's undoing.</p>
+ <p>"When we reach New York," Sir James seems to have told Brown in effect, "we shall
+ be met by reporters who will pretend that America is eager to be instructed by us as
+ to the causes and progress of the war; then, if we are fools enough to think that
+ America cannot make up its mind for itself, we shall fall into the trap and preach to
+ them, and all the time they are taking down our observations they will be saying to
+ themselves, 'Pompous asses.'</p>
+ <p>"It is a sort of game between us and the reporters. Our aim is to make them think
+ we are bigger than we are, and theirs is to make us smaller than we are; and any
+ chance we have of succeeding is to hold our tongues, while they will probably succeed
+ if they make us jabber. Above all, oh, Brown, if you write to the papers giving your
+ views of why we are at war&mdash;and if you don't you will be the only person who
+ hasn't&mdash;don't be lured into slinging vulgar abuse at our opponents, lest America
+ takes you for another university professor."</p>
+ <p>There is, I learned, only one person in America about whom it is impossible, even
+ in Sir James's opinion, to preserve a neutral attitude. This is the German
+ Ambassador, whose splendid work for England day by day and in every paper and to all
+ reporters cannot, Sir James thinks, be too cordially recognized. Brown has been told
+ to look upon the German Ambasador as England's great<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page102" id="page102"></a>{102}</span>est asset in America just now, and to
+ hope heartily that he will be long spared to carry on his admirable work.</p>
+ <p>Lastly, it was pleasant to find that Brown has not a spark of sympathy with those
+ who say that, because Germany has destroyed art treasures in Belgium and France, the
+ Allies should retaliate with similar rudeness if they reach Berlin. He holds that if
+ for any reason best known to themselves (such as the wish for a sunnier location) the
+ Hohenzollerns should by and by vacate their present residence, a nice villa should be
+ provided for them, and that all the ancestral statues in the Sieges-Allee should be
+ conveyed to it intact, and perhaps put up in the back garden. There the Junkers could
+ drop in of an evening, on their way home from their offices, and chat pleasantly of
+ old times. Brown thinks they should be allowed to retain all their iron crosses, and
+ even given some more, with which, after smart use of their pocket combs, they would
+ cut no end of a dash among the nursemaids.</p>
+ <p>As for the pipe, I was informed that it had now done its work, and I could take it
+ away as a keepsake. I took it, but wondered afterward at Brown's thinking he had the
+ right to give it me.</p>
+ <p>A disquieting feeling has since come over me that perhaps it was Sir James I had
+ been interviewing all the time, and Brown who had escaped down the elevator.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>A "Credo" for Keeping Faith</b></h2>
+ <h3>By John Galsworthy.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>I believe in peace with all my heart. I believe that war is outrage&mdash;a black
+ stain on the humanity and the fame of man. I hate militarism and the god of force. I
+ would go any length to avoid war for material interests, war that involved no
+ principles, distrusting profoundly the common meaning of the phrase "national
+ honor."</p>
+ <p>But I believe there is a national honor charged with the future happiness of man,
+ that loyalty is due from those living to those that will come after; that
+ civilization can only wax and flourish in a world where faith is kept; that for
+ nations, as for individuals, there are laws of duty, whose violation harms the whole
+ human race; in sum, that stars of conduct shine for peoples, as for private men.</p>
+ <p>And so I hold that without tarnishing true honor, endangering civilization present
+ and to come, and ruining all hope of future tranquillity, my country could not have
+ refused to take up arms for the defense of Belgium's outraged neutrality, solemnly
+ guaranteed by herself and France.</p>
+ <p>I believe, and claim in proof, the trend of events and of national character
+ during the last century, that in democracy alone lies any coherent hope of
+ progressive civilization or any chance of lasting peace in Europe, or the world.</p>
+ <p>I believe that this democratic principle, however imperfectly developed, has so
+ worked in France, in England, in the United States, that these countries are already
+ nearly safe from inclination to aggress, or to subdue other nationalities.</p>
+ <p>And I believe that while there remain autocratic Governments basing themselves on
+ militarism, bitterly hostile to the democratic principle, Europe will never be free
+ of the surcharge of swollen armaments, the nightmare menace of wars like
+ this&mdash;the paralysis that creeps on civilizations which adore the god of
+ force.</p>
+ <p>And so I hold that, without betrayal of trusteeship, without shirking the
+ elementary defense of beliefs coiled within its <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page103" id="page103"></a>{103}</span>fibre, or beliefs vital to the future
+ welfare of all men, my country could not stand by and see the triumph of autocratic
+ militarism over France, that very cradle of democracy.</p>
+ <p>I believe that democratic culture spreads from west to east, that only by
+ maintenance of consolidate democracy in Western Europe can democracy ever hope to
+ push on and prevail till the Eastern powers have also that ideal under which alone
+ humanity can flourish.</p>
+ <p>And so I hold that my country is justified at this juncture in its alliance with
+ the autocratic power of Russia, whose people will never know freedom till her borders
+ are joined to the borders of democracy.</p>
+ <p>I do not believe that jealous, frightened jingoism has ever been more than the
+ dirty fringe of England's peace-loving temper, and I profess my sacred faith that my
+ country has gone to war at last, not from fear, not from hope of aggrandizement, but
+ because she must&mdash;for honor, for democracy, and for the future of mankind.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Hard Blows, Not Hard Words</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Jerome K. Jerome.</h3>
+ <h4>From The London Daily News.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>In one of Shaw's plays&mdash;I think it is "Superman"&mdash;one of the characters
+ hints, toward the end of the last act, that the hero is a gentleman somewhat prone to
+ talking. The hero admits it, but excuses himself on the ground that it is the only
+ way he knows of explaining his opinions.</p>
+ <p>Times of stress and struggle, whether individual or national, afford men and women
+ other methods of expressing their views, and a large number of our citizens are, very
+ creditably, taking the present opportunity to act instead of shout. There are the
+ young fellows who in their thousands are pressing around the door of the recruiting
+ offices. They are throwing up, many of them, good jobs for the privilege of drilling
+ for the next six months for eight hours a day. Their reward will be certain hardship,
+ their share of sickness and wounds, the probability of lying ten deep in a forgotten
+ grave, their chance of glory a name printed in small type among a thousand others on
+ a War Office report.</p>
+ <p>There are the mothers and wives and children who are encouraging them to go; to
+ whom their going means semi-starvation. The old, bent crones whose feeble hands will
+ have to grasp again the hoe and the scrubbing brush. The young women who know only
+ too well what is before them&mdash;the selling of the home just got together; first
+ the easy chair and the mirror, and then the bed and the mattress; the weary tramping
+ of the streets, looking for work. The children awestruck and wondering.</p>
+ <p>There are the men who are quietly going on with their work, doing their best with
+ straitened means to keep their business going; giving employment; getting ready to
+ meet the income tax collector, who next year one is inclined to expect will be
+ demanding anything from half a crown to five shillings in the pound. There are
+ others. But there is a certain noisy and, to me, particularly offensive man (and with
+ him, I am sorry to say, one or two women) very much to the fore just now with whose
+ services the country could very well dispense. He is the man who does his fighting
+ with his mouth. Unable for reasons of his own to get at the foe in the field, he
+ thirsts for the blood of the unfortunate unarmed and helpless Germans that the
+ fortunes of war have left stranded in England. He writes to the paper thoughtfully
+ suggesting plans that have occurred to him <span class="pagenum"><a name="page104"
+ id="page104"></a>{104}</span>for making their existence more miserable than it must
+ be. He generally concludes his letter with a short homily directed against the
+ Prussian Military Staff for their lack of the higher Christian principles.</p>
+ <p>He has spies on the brain. Two quite harmless English citizens have already been
+ shot in consequence of the funk this spy mania has created among us. The vast
+ majority of Germans in England have come to live in England because they dislike
+ Germany. That a certain number of spies are among us I take to be highly probable. I
+ take it that if the Allies know their business a certain number of English spies are
+ doing what they can for us at great personal risk to themselves in Germany. Until the
+ German Army has landed on our shores German spies can do little or no harm to us. The
+ police can be trusted to know something about them, and if any are caught red-handed
+ the rules of war are not likely to be strained for their benefit.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Story from the South.</b></p>
+ <p>From a small town in the South of England comes a story I can vouch for. A couple
+ of Boy Scouts had been set to guard the local reservoir. About noon one sunny day
+ they remarked the approach, somewhat ostentatious, of a desperate-looking character.
+ Undoubtedly a German spy! What can he be up to! The boys approached him and he fled,
+ leaving behind him the damning evidence&mdash;a tin suggestive of sardines and
+ labeled "Poison!" That the gentleman should have chosen broad daylight for his
+ nefarious design, should have been careful to label his tin, seemed to the good
+ townsfolk under present scare conditions proof that they had at last discovered the
+ real German spy, full of his devilish cunning. The tin was taken possession of by the
+ police. And then the Sergeant's little daughter, who happened to have had a few
+ lessons in French, suggested that the word on the tin was "Poisson," and the town now
+ breathes again.</p>
+ <p>So long as the war continues the spy will be among us. I suggest that we face the
+ problem of his activities without blue funk and hysteria. The men and women who are
+ shrieking for vicarious vengeance upon all the Germans remaining in our midst must
+ remember that there are thousands of English families at the present moment residing
+ in Germany and Austria. The majority of them, comparatively poor people, with all
+ their belongings around them, were unable to get away. I shall, until I receive
+ convincing proof to the contrary, continue to believe that they are living among
+ their German neighbors unmolested. Even were it not so, I would suggest our setting
+ the example of humanity rather than our slavishly following an example of
+ barbarity.</p>
+ <p>We are fighting for an idea&mdash;an idea of some importance to the generations
+ that will come after us. We are fighting to teach the Prussian Military Staff that
+ other laws have come to stay&mdash;laws superseding those of Attila the Hun. We are
+ fighting to teach the German people that, free men with brains to think with, they
+ have no right to hand themselves over body and soul to their rulers to be used as
+ mere devil's instruments; that if they do so they shall pay the penalty, and the
+ punishment shall go hard. We are fighting to teach the German Nation respect for God!
+ Our weapons have got to be hard blows, not hard words. We are tearing at each other's
+ throats; it has got to be done. It is not a time for yelping.</p>
+ <p>Jack Johnson as a boxer I respect. The thing I do not like about him is his habit
+ of gibing and jeering at his opponent while he is fighting him. It isn't gentlemanly,
+ and it isn't sporting. The soldiers are fighting in grim silence. When one of them
+ does talk, it is generally to express admiration of German bravery. It is our valiant
+ stay-at-homes, our valiant clamorers for everybody else to enlist but themselves, who
+ would have us fight like some drunken fish hag, shrieking and spitting while she
+ claws.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Incredible Reports of Atrocities.</b></p>
+ <p>Half of these stories of atrocities I do not believe. I remember when I was living
+ in Germany at the time of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page105"
+ id="page105"></a>{105}</span>Boer war the German papers were full of accounts of
+ Tommy Atkins's brutality. He spent his leisure time in tossing babies on bayonets.
+ There were photographs of him doing it. Detailed accounts certified by most
+ creditable witnesses. Such lies are the stock in trade of every tenth-rate
+ journalist, who, careful not to expose himself to danger, slinks about the byways
+ collecting hearsay. In every war each side, according to the other, is supposed to
+ take a fiendish pleasure in firing upon hospitals&mdash;containing always a
+ proportion of their own wounded. An account comes to us from a correspondent with the
+ Belgian Army. He tells us that toward the end of the day a regrettable incident
+ occurred. The Germans were taking off their wounded in motor cars. The Belgian
+ sharpshooters, not noticing the red flag in the dusk, kept up a running fire, and a
+ large number of the wounded were killed. Had the incident been the other way about it
+ would have been cited as a deliberate piece of villainy on the part of the Germans.
+ According to other accounts, the Germans always go into action with screens of women
+ and children before them. The explanation, of course, is that a few poor terrified
+ creatures are rushing along the road. They get between the approaching forces, and I
+ expect the bullets that put them out of their misery come pretty even from both
+ sides.</p>
+ <p>The men are mad. Mad with fear, mad with hate, blinded by excitement. Take a mere
+ dog fight. If you interfere you have got to be prepared for your own dog turning upon
+ you. In war half the time the men do not know what they are doing. They are little
+ else than wild beasts. There was great indignation at the dropping of bombs into
+ Antwerp. One now hears that a French dirigible has been dropping bombs into
+ Luxembourg&mdash;a much more dignified retort. War is a grim game. Able editors and
+ club-chair politicians have been clamoring for it for years past. They thought it was
+ all goose-step and bands.</p>
+ <p>The truth is bad enough, God knows. There is no sense in making things out worse
+ than they are. When this war is over we have got to forget it. To build up barriers
+ of hatred that shall stand between our children and our foemen's children is a crime
+ against the future.</p>
+ <p>These stories of German naval officers firing on their wounded sailors in the
+ water! They are an insult to our intelligence. At Louvain fifty of the inhabitants
+ were taken out and shot. On Monday the fifty had grown to five hundred; both numbers
+ vouched for by eye-witnesses, "Dutchmen who would have had no interest," &amp;c. That
+ the beautiful old town has been laid in ashes is undoubted. Some criminal lunatic
+ strutting in pipeclay and mustachios was given his hour of authority and took the
+ chance of his life. If I know anything of the German people it will go hard with him
+ when the war is over, if he has not had the sense to get killed. But that won't rear
+ again the grand old stones or wipe from Germany's honor the stain of that long line
+ of murdered men and women&mdash;whatever its actual length may have been. War puts a
+ premium on brutality and senselessness. Men with the intelligence and instincts of an
+ ape suddenly find themselves possessed of the powers of a god. And we are astonished
+ that they do not display the wisdom of a god!</p>
+ <p>There are other stories that have filtered through to us. There was a dying Uhlan
+ who caught a child to his arms and kissed him. One would like to be able to kiss
+ one's own child before one dies, but failing that&mdash;well, after all, there is a
+ sort of family likeness between them. The same deep wondering eyes, the
+ same&mdash;and then the mist grows deeper. Perhaps after all it was Baby Fritz that
+ he kissed.</p>
+ <p>And of a Belgian woman. She had seen her two sons killed before her eyes. She
+ tells of that and of other horrors. Among such, of the German lads she had stepped
+ over, their blue eyes quiet in death. The passion and the fear and the hate cleansed
+ out of them. Just boys with their clothes torn&mdash;so like boys.</p>
+ <p>"They, too, have got mothers, poor lads!" is all she says, thinking of them lying
+ side by side with her own.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>{106}</span>When the
+ madness and the folly are over, when the tender green is creeping in and out among
+ the blackened ruins, it will be well for us to think of that dying Uhlan who had to
+ put up with a French baby instead of his own; of that Belgian mother to whom the
+ German youngsters were just "poor lads"&mdash;with their clothes torn.</p>
+ <p>And the savagery and the cruelty and the guiltiness that go to the making of war
+ we will seek to forget.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>"As They Tested Our Fathers"</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Rudyard Kipling.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Following is the text of an address by Mr. Kipling to a mass meeting at
+ Brighton, Sept. 8, 1914:</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Through no fault nor wish of ours we are at war with Germany, the power which owes
+ its existence to three well-thought-out wars; the power which for the last twenty
+ years has devoted itself to organizing and preparing for this war; the power which is
+ now fighting to conquer the civilized world.</p>
+ <p>For the last two generations the Germans in their books, teachers, speeches, and
+ schools have been carefully taught that nothing less than this world conquest was the
+ object of their preparations and their sacrifices. They have prepared carefully and
+ sacrificed greatly.</p>
+ <p>We must have men, and men, and men, if we with our allies are to check the onrush
+ of organized barbarism.</p>
+ <p>Have no illusions. We are dealing with a strong and magnificently equipped enemy,
+ whose avowed aim is our complete destruction.</p>
+ <p>The violation of Belgium, the attack on France, and the defense against Russia are
+ only steps by the way. The Germans' real objective, as she has always told us, is
+ England and England's wealth, trade, and worldwide possessions.</p>
+ <p>If you assume for an instant that that attack will be successful, England will not
+ be reduced, as some people say, to the rank of a second-rate power, but we shall
+ cease to exist as a nation. We shall become an outlying province of Germany, to be
+ administered with what severity German safety and interest require.</p>
+ <p>We arm against such a fate. We enter into a new life in which all the facts of war
+ that we had put behind or forgotten for the past hundred years have returned to the
+ front and test us as they tested our fathers. It will be a long and a hard road,
+ beset with difficulties and discouragements, but we tread it together and we will
+ tread it together to the end.</p>
+ <p>Our petty social divisions and barriers have been swept away at the outset of our
+ mighty struggle. All the interests of our life of six weeks ago are dead. We have but
+ one interest now, and that touches the naked heart of every man in this island and in
+ the empire.</p>
+ <p>If we are to win the right for ourselves and for freedom to exist on earth, every
+ man must offer himself for that service and that sacrifice.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>{107}</span><b>Kipling
+ and "The Truce of the Bear"</b></h2>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>STAUNTON, Va., Sept. 25, 1914.&mdash;On Sept. 5 The Staunton News printed
+ some verses by Dr. Charles Minor Blackford, an associate editor, addressed to
+ Rudyard Kipling, calling attention to the apparent inconsistency of his attitude of
+ distrust of Russia as shown in his well-known poem, "The Truce of the Bear," and
+ his present advocacy of the alliance between Russia and Great Britain. A copy of
+ the verses was sent to Mr. Kipling and the following reply was received from
+ him:</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Bateman's Burwash, Sussex.</p>
+ <p>Dear Sir: I am much obliged for your verses of Sept. 4. "The Truce of the Bear,"
+ to which they refer, was written sixteen years ago, in 1898. It dealt with a
+ situation and a menace which have long since passed away, and with issues that are
+ now quite dead.</p>
+ <p>The present situation, as far as England is concerned, is Germany's deliberate
+ disregard of the neutrality of Belgium, whose integrity Germany as well as England
+ guaranteed. She has filled Belgium with every sort of horror and atrocity, not in the
+ heat of passion, but as a part of settled policy of terrorism. Her avowed object is
+ the conquest of Europe on these lines.</p>
+ <p>As you may prove for yourself if you will consult her literature of the last
+ generation, Germany is the present menace, not to Europe alone, but to the whole
+ civilized world. If Germany, by any means, is victorious you may rest assured that it
+ will be a very short time before she turns her attention to the United States. If you
+ could meet the refugees from Belgium flocking into England and have the opportunity
+ of checking their statements of unimaginable atrocities and barbarities studiously
+ committed, you would, I am sure, think as seriously on these matters as we do, and in
+ your unpreparedness for modern war you would do well to think very seriously indeed.
+ Yours truly,</p>
+ <p>RUDYARD KIPLING.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>On the Impending Crisis</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Norman Angell.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The London Times:</i></p>
+ <p>Sir: A nation's first duty is to its own people. We are asked to intervene in the
+ Continental war because unless we do so we shall be "isolated." The isolation which
+ will result for us if we keep out of this war is that, while other nations are torn
+ and weakened by war, we shall not be, and by that fact might conceivably for a long
+ time be the strongest power in Europe, and, by virtue of our strength and isolation,
+ its arbiter, perhaps, to useful ends.</p>
+ <p>We are told that if we allow Germany to become victorious she would be so powerful
+ as to threaten our existence by the occupation of Belgium, Holland, and possibly the
+ North of France. But, as your article of today's date so well points out, it was the
+ difficulty which Germany found in Alsace-Lorraine which prevented her from acting
+ against us during the South African War. If one province, so largely German in its
+ origin and history, could create this embarrassment, what trouble will not Germany
+ pile up for herself if she should attempt the absorption of a Belgium, a Holland, and
+ a Normandy? She would have created for herself embarrassments compared with which
+ Alsace and Poland would be a trifle; and Russia, with her 160,000,000, would in a
+ year or two be as great a menace to her as ever.</p>
+ <p>The object and effect of our entering into this war would be to insure the
+ vic<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>{108}</span>tory of
+ Russia and her Slavonic allies. Will a dominant Slavonic federation of, say,
+ 200,000,000 autocratically governed people, with a very rudimentary civilization, but
+ heavily equipped for military aggression, be a less dangerous factor in Europe than a
+ dominant Germany of 65,000,000 highly civilized and mainly given to the arts of trade
+ and commerce?</p>
+ <p>The last war we fought on the Continent was for the purpose of preventing the
+ growth of Russia. We are now asked to fight one for the purpose of promoting it. It
+ is now universally admitted that our last Continental war&mdash;the Crimean
+ war&mdash;was a monstrous error and miscalculation. Would this intervention be any
+ wiser or likely to be better in its results?</p>
+ <p>On several occasions Sir Edward Grey has solemnly declared that we are not bound
+ by any agreement to support France, and there is certainly no moral obligation on the
+ part of the English people so to do. We can best serve civilization,
+ Europe&mdash;including France&mdash;and ourselves by remaining the one power in
+ Europe that has not yielded to the war madness.</p>
+ <p>This, I believe, will be found to be the firm conviction of the overwhelming
+ majority of the English people.</p>
+ <p>Yours faithfully,</p>
+ <p>NORMAN ANGELL.</p>
+ <p>4 Kings Bench Walk, Temple, E.C., July 31.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Why England Came To Be In It</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Gilbert K. Chesterton.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>I.</b></p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Unless we are all mad, there is at the back of the most bewildering business a
+ story; and if we are all mad, there is no such thing as madness. If I set a house on
+ fire, it is quite true that I may illuminate many other people's weaknesses as well
+ as my own. It may be that the master of the house was burned because he was drunk; it
+ may be that the mistress of the house was burned because she was stingy, and perished
+ arguing about the expense of the fire-escape. It is, nevertheless, broadly true that
+ they both were burned because I set fire to their house. That is the story of the
+ thing. The mere facts of the story about the present European conflagration are quite
+ as easy to tell.</p>
+ <p>Before we go on to the deeper things which make this war the most sincere war of
+ human history, it is easy to answer the question of why England came to be in it at
+ all; as one asks how a man fell down a coal hole, or failed to keep an appointment.
+ Facts are not the whole truth. But facts are facts, and in this case the facts are
+ few and simple.</p>
+ <p>Prussia, France, and England had all promised not to invade Belgium, because it
+ was the safest way of invading France. But Prussia promised that if she might break
+ in through her own broken promise and ours she would break in and not steal. In other
+ words, we were offered at the same instant a promise of faith in the future and a
+ proposal of perjury in the present.</p>
+ <p>Those interested in human origins may refer to an old Victorian writer of English,
+ who in the last and most restrained of his historical essays wrote of Frederick the
+ Great, the founder of this unchanging Prussian policy. After describing how Frederick
+ broke the guarantee he had signed on behalf of Maria Theresa he then describes how
+ Frederick sought to put things straight by a promise that was an insult. "If she
+ would but let him have Silesia, he would, he said, stand by her against any power
+ which should <span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>{109}</span>try
+ to deprive her of her other dominions; as if he was not already bound to stand by
+ her, or as if his new promise could be of more value than the old one." That passage
+ was written by Macaulay; but so far as the mere contemporary facts are concerned, it
+ might have been written by me.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Diplomacy That Might Have Been.</b></p>
+ <p>Upon the immediate logical and legal origin of the English interest there can be
+ no rational debate. There are some things so simple that one can almost prove them
+ with plans and diagrams, as in Euclid. One could make a kind of comic calendar of
+ what would have happened to the English diplomatist if he had been silenced every
+ time by Prussian diplomacy. Suppose we arrange it in the form of a kind of diary:</p>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>July 24&mdash;Germany invades Belgium.</p>
+ <p>July 25&mdash;England declares war.</p>
+ <p>July 26&mdash;Germany promises not to annex Belgium.</p>
+ <p>July 27&mdash;England withdraws from the war.</p>
+ <p>July 28&mdash;Germany annexes Belgium. England declares war.</p>
+ <p>July 29&mdash;Germany promises not to annex France. England withdraws from the
+ war.</p>
+ <p>July 30&mdash;Germany annexes France. England declares war.</p>
+ <p>July 31&mdash;Germany promises not to annex England.</p>
+ <p>Aug. 1&mdash;England withdraws from the war. Germany invades England.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>How long is anybody expected to go on with that sort of game, or keep peace at
+ that illimitable price? How long must we pursue a road in which promises are all
+ fetiches in front of us and all fragments behind us? No; upon the cold facts of the
+ final negotiations, as told by any of the diplomatists in any of the documents, there
+ is no doubt about the story. And no doubt about the villain of the story.</p>
+ <p>These are the last facts, the facts which involved England. It is equally easy to
+ state the first facts&mdash;the facts which involved Europe. The Prince who
+ practically ruled Austria was shot by certain persons whom the Austrian Government
+ believed to be conspirators from Servia. The. Austrian Government piled up arms and
+ armies, but said not a word either to Servia, their suspect, or Italy, their ally.
+ From the documents it would seem that Austria kept everybody in the dark, except
+ Prussia. It is probably nearer the truth to say that Prussia kept everybody in the
+ dark, including Austria.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Demands on Servia.</b></p>
+ <p>But all that is what is called opinion, belief, conviction, or common sense, and
+ we are not dealing with it here. The objective fact is that Austria told Servia to
+ permit Servian officers to be suspended by the authority of Austrian officers, and
+ told Servia to submit to this within forty-eight hours. In other words, the Sovereign
+ of Servia was practically told to take off not only the laurels of two great
+ campaigns, but his own lawful and national crown, and to do it in a time in which no
+ respectable citizen is expected to discharge a hotel bill. Servia asked for time for
+ arbitration&mdash;in short, for peace. But Russia had already begun to mobilize, and
+ Prussia, presuming that Servia might thus be rescued, declared war.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Between these two ends of fact, the ultimatum to Servia, the ultimatum to Belgium,
+ any one so inclined can, of course, talk as if everything were relative. If any one
+ asks why the Czar should rush to the support of Servia, it is easy to ask why the
+ Kaiser should rush to the support of Austria. If any one say that that the French
+ would attack the Germans, it is sufficient to answer that the Germans did attack the
+ French.</p>
+ <p>There remain, however, two attitudes to consider, even perhaps two arguments to
+ counter, which can best be considered and countered under this general head of facts.
+ First of all, there is a curious, cloudy sort of argument, much affected by the
+ professional rhetoricans of Prussia, who are sent out to instruct and correct the
+ minds of Americans or Scandinavians. It consists of going into convulsions of
+ incredulity and scorn at the mention of Russia's responsibility for Servia or
+ England's responsibility for Belgium; and suggesting that, treaty or <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id="page110"></a>{110}</span>no treaty, frontier or
+ no frontier, Russia would be out to slay Teutons or England to steal colonies.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>England Kept Her Contracts.</b></p>
+ <p>Here, as elsewhere, I think the professors dotted all over the Baltic plain fail
+ in lucidity and in the power of distinguishing ideas. Of course, it is quite true
+ that England has material interests to defend, and will probably use the opportunity
+ to defend them; or, in other words, of course England, like everybody else, would be
+ more comfortable if Prussia were less predominant. The fact remains that we did not
+ do what the Germans did. We did not invade Holland to seize a naval and commercial
+ advantage; and whether they say that we wished to do it in our greed or feared to do
+ it in our cowardice, the fact remains that we did not do it. Unless this common sense
+ principle be kept in view, I cannot conceive how any quarrel can possibly be judged.
+ A contract may be made between two persons solely for material advantages on each
+ side; but the moral advantage is still generally supposed to lie with the person who
+ keeps the contract. Surely, it cannot be dishonest to be honest&mdash;even if honesty
+ is the best policy. Imagine the most complex maze of indirect motives, and still the
+ man who keeps faith for money cannot possibly be worse than the man who breaks faith
+ for money.</p>
+ <p>It will be noted that this ultimate test applies in the same way to Servia as to
+ Belgium and Britain. The Servians may not be a very peaceful people; but on the
+ occasion under discussion it was certainly they who wanted peace. You may choose to
+ think the Serb a sort of a born robber; but on this occasion it was certainly the
+ Austrian who was trying to rob. Similarly, you may call England perfidious as a sort
+ of historical summary, and declare your private belief that Mr. Asquith was vowed
+ from infancy to the ruin of the German Empire &mdash;a Hannibal and hater of the
+ eagles. But when all is said, it is nonsense to call a man perfidious because he
+ keeps his promise. It is absurd to complain of the sudden treachery of a business man
+ in turning up punctually to his appointment, or the unfair shock given to a creditor
+ by the debtor paying his debts. Lastly, there is an attitude not unknown in the
+ crisis against which I should particularly like to protest. I should address my
+ protest especially to those lovers and pursuers of peace who, very shortsightedly,
+ have occasionally adopted it. I mean the attitude which is impatient of these
+ preliminary details about who did this or that and whether it was right or wrong.
+ They are satisfied with saying that an enormous calamity called war has been begun by
+ some or all of us, and should be ended by some or all of us. To these people this
+ preliminary chapter about the precise happenings must appear not only dry (and it
+ must of necessity be the dryest part of the task), but essentially needless and
+ barren. I wish to tell these people that they are wrong; that they are wrong upon all
+ principles of human justice and historic continuity; but that they are especially and
+ supremely wrong upon their own principles of arbitration and international peace.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>As to Certain Peace Lovers.</b></p>
+ <p>These sincere and high-minded peace lovers are always telling us that citizens no
+ longer settle their quarrels by private violence, and that nations should no longer
+ settle theirs by public violence. They are always telling us that we no longer fight
+ duels, and need no longer wage wars. In short, they perpetually base their peace
+ proposals on the fact that an ordinary citizen no longer avenges himself with an
+ axe.</p>
+ <p>But how is he prevented from avenging himself with an axe? If he hits his neighbor
+ on the head with the kitchen chopper what do we do? Do we all join hands, like
+ children playing mulberry bush, and say: "We are all responsible for this, but let us
+ hope it will not spread. Let us hope for the happy, happy day when he shall leave off
+ chopping at the man's head, and when nobody shall ever chop anything forever and
+ ever." Do we say: "Let bygones be bygones. Why go back to all the dull details with
+ which the business began? <span class="pagenum"><a name="page111"
+ id="page111"></a>{111}</span>Who can tell with what sinister motives the man was
+ standing there within reach of the hatchet?"</p>
+ <p>We do not. We keep the peace in private life by asking for the facts of
+ provocation and the proper object of punishment. We do not go into the dull details;
+ we do inquire into the origins; we do emphatically inquire who it was that hit first.
+ In short, we do what I have done very briefly in this place.</p>
+ <p>Given this, it is indeed true that behind these facts there are
+ truths&mdash;truths of a terrible, of a spiritual sort. In mere fact the Germanic
+ power has been wrong about Servia, wrong about Russia, wrong about Belgium, wrong
+ about England, wrong about Italy. But there was a reason for its being wrong
+ everywhere, and of that root reason, which has moved half the world against it, I
+ shall speak later in this series. For that is something too omnipresent to be proved,
+ too indisputable to be helped by detail. It is nothing less than the locating, after
+ more than a hundred years of recriminations and wrong explanations, of the modern
+ European evil&mdash;the finding of the fountain from which poison has flowed upon all
+ the nations of the earth.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h3>II.</h3>
+ <h3>Russian or Prussian Barbarism?</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>It will hardly be denied that there is one lingering doubt in many who recognize
+ unavoidable self-defense in the instant parry of the English sword and who have no
+ great love for the sweeping sabre of Sadowa and Sedan. That doubt is the doubt of
+ whether Russia, as compared with Prussia, is sufficiently decent and democratic to be
+ the ally of liberal and civilized powers. I take first, therefore, this matter of
+ civilization.</p>
+ <p>It is vital in a discussion like this that we should make sure we are going by
+ meanings and not by mere words. It is not necessary in any argument to settle what a
+ word means or ought to mean. But it is necessary in every argument to settle what we
+ propose to mean by the word. So long as our opponent understands what is the thing of
+ which we are talking, it does not matter to the argument whether the word is or is
+ not the one he would have chosen. A soldier does not say, "We were ordered to go to
+ Mechlin, but I would rather go to Malines." He may discuss the etymology and
+ archaeology of the difference on the march, but the point is that he knows where to
+ go. So long as we know what a given word is to mean in a given discussion, it does
+ not even matter if it means something else in some other and quite distinct
+ discussion. We have a perfect right to say that the width of a window comes to four
+ feet, even if we instantly and cheerfully change the subject to the larger mammals
+ and say that an elephant has four feet. The identity of the words does not matter,
+ because there is no doubt at all about the meanings, because nobody is likely to
+ think of an elephant as four feet long, or of a window as having tusks and a curly
+ trunk.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Two Meanings of "Barbarian."</b></p>
+ <p>It is essential to emphasize this consciousness of the thing under discussion in
+ connection with two or three words that are, as it were, the keywords of this war.
+ One of them is the word "barbarian." The Prussians apply it to the Russians, the
+ Russians apply it to the Prussians. Both, I think, really mean something that really
+ exists, name or no name. Both mean different things. And if we ask what these
+ different things are we shall understand why England and France prefer Russia, and
+ consider Prussia the really dangerous barbarian of the two.</p>
+ <p>To begin with, it goes so much deeper even than atrocities; of which, in the past,
+ at least, all the three empires of Central Europe have partaken pretty <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>{112}</span>equally; as they
+ partook of Poland. An English writer, seeking to avert the war by warnings against
+ Russian influence, said that the flogged backs of Polish women stood between us and
+ the Alliance. But not long before the flogging of women by an Austrian General led to
+ that officer being thrashed in the streets of London by Barclay and Perkins draymen.
+ And as for the third power, the Prussians, it seems clear that they have treated
+ Belgian women in a style compared with which flogging might be called an official
+ formality.</p>
+ <p>But, as I say, something much deeper than any such recrimination lies behind the
+ use of the word on either side. When the German Emperor complains of our allying
+ ourselves with a barbaric and half Oriental power, he is not (I assure you) shedding
+ tears over the grave of Kosciusko. And when I say (as I do most heartily) that the
+ German Emperor is a barbarian, I am not merely expressing any prejudices I may have
+ against the profanation of churches or of children. My countrymen and I mean a
+ certain and intelligible thing when we call the Prussians barbarians. It is quite
+ different from the thing attributed to Russians; and it could not possibly be
+ attributed to Russians. It is very important that the neutral world should understand
+ what this thing is.</p>
+ <p>If the German calls the Russian barbarous, he presumably means imperfectly
+ civilized. There is a certain path along which Western nations have proceeded in
+ recent times; and it is tenable that Russia has not proceeded so far as the others;
+ that she has less of the special modern system in science, commerce, machinery,
+ travel, or political constitution. The Russ plows with an old plow; he wears a wild
+ beard; he adores relics; his life is as rude and hard as that of a subject of Alfred
+ the Great. Therefore, he is, in the German sense, a barbarian. Poor fellows, like
+ Gorky and Dostoieffsky, have to form their own reflections on the scenery, without
+ the assistance of large quotations from Schiller on garden seats; or inscriptions
+ directing them to pause and thank the All-Father for the finest view in
+ Hesse-Pumpernickel. The Russians, having nothing but their faith, their fields, their
+ great courage, and their self-governing communes, are quite cut off from what is
+ called (in the fashionable street in Frankfort) the true, the beautiful, and the
+ good. There is a real sense in which one can call such backwardness barbaric, by
+ comparison with the Kaiserstrasse; and in that sense it is true of Russia.</p>
+ <p>Now we, the French and English, do not mean this when we call the Prussians
+ barbarians. If their cities soared higher than their flying ships, if their trains
+ traveled faster than their bullets, we should still call them barbarians. We should
+ know exactly what we meant by it; and we should know that it is true. For we do not
+ mean anything that is an imperfect civilization by accident. We mean something that
+ is the enemy of civilization by design. We mean something that is willfully at war
+ with the principles by which human society has been made possible hitherto. Of
+ course, it must be partly civilized even to destroy civilization. Such ruin could not
+ be wrought by the savages that are merely undeveloped or inert. You could not have
+ even Huns without horses or horses without horsemanship. You could not have even
+ Danish pirates without ships, or ships without seamanship.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The "Positive Barbarian."</b></p>
+ <p>This person, whom I may call the positive barbarian, must be rather more
+ superficially up to date than what I may call the negative barbarian. Alaric was an
+ officer in the Roman legions, but for all that he destroyed Rome. Nobody supposes
+ that Eskimos could have done it at all neatly. But (in our meaning) barbarism is not
+ a matter of methods but of aims. We say that these veneered vandals have the
+ perfectly serious aim of destroying certain ideas which, as they think, the world has
+ outgrown; without which, as we think, the world will die.</p>
+ <p>It is essential that this perilous peculiarity in the Pruss, or positive
+ barbarian, should be seized. He has what he fancies is a new idea, and he is going to
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>{113}</span>apply it to
+ everybody. As a fact, it is simply a false generalization, but he is really trying to
+ make it general. This does not apply to the negative barbarian; it does not apply to
+ the Russian or the Servian, even if they are barbarians. If a Russian peasant does
+ beat his wife, he does it because his fathers did it before him; he is likely to beat
+ less rather than more as the past fades away. He does not think, as the Prussian
+ would, that he has made a new discovery in physiology in finding that a woman is
+ weaker than a man. If a Servian does knife his rival without a word, he does it
+ because other Servians have done it. He may regard it even as piety&mdash;but
+ certainly not as progress. He does not think, as the Prussian does, that he founds a
+ new school of horology by starting before the word "Go." He does not think he is in
+ advance of the world in militarism&mdash;merely because he is behind it in
+ morals.</p>
+ <p>No; the danger of the Pruss is that he is prepared to fight for old errors as if
+ they were new truths. He has somehow heard of certain shallow simplifications, and
+ imagines that we have never heard of them. And, as I have said, his limited but very
+ sincere lunacy concentrates chiefly in a desire to destroy two ideas, the twin root
+ ideas, of national society. The first is the idea of record and promise; the second
+ is the idea of reciprocity.</p>
+ <p>It is plain that the promise, or extension of responsibility through time, is what
+ chiefly distinguishes us, I will not say from savages, but from brutes and reptiles.
+ This was noted by the shrewdness of the Old Testament when it summed up the dark,
+ irresponsible enormity of Leviathan in the words, "Will he make a pact with thee?"
+ The promise, like the wind, is unknown in nature and is the first mark of man.
+ Referring only to human civilization, it may be said with seriousness that in the
+ beginning was the Word. The vow is to the man what the song is to the bird or the
+ bark to the dog; his voice, whereby he is known. Just as a man who cannot keep an
+ appointment is not fit to fight a duel, so the man who cannot keep an appointment
+ with himself is not sane enough even for suicide. It is not easy to mention anything
+ on which the enormous apparatus of human life can be said to depend. But if it
+ depends on anything it is on this frail cord, flung from the forgotten hills of
+ yesterday to the invisible mountains of tomorrow. On that solitary string hangs
+ everything from Armageddon to an almanac, from a successful revolution to a return
+ ticket. On that solitary string the barbarian is hacking heavily with a sabre which
+ is fortunately blunt.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Prussia's Great Discovery.</b></p>
+ <p>Any one can see this well enough merely by reading the last negotiations between
+ London and Berlin. The Prussians had made a new discovery in international
+ politics&mdash;that it may often be convenient to make a promise, and yet curiously
+ inconvenient to keep it. They were charmed, in their simple way, with this scientific
+ discovery and desired to communicate it to the world. They therefore promised England
+ a promise on condition that she broke a promise, and on the implied condition that
+ the new promise might be broken as easily as the old one. To the profound
+ astonishment of Prussia, this reasonable offer was refused. I believe that the
+ astonishment of Prussia was quite sincere. That is what I mean when I say that the
+ barbarian is trying to cut away that cord of honesty and clear record on which hangs
+ all that men have made.</p>
+ <p>The friends of the German cause have complained that Asiatics and Africans upon
+ the very verge of savagery have been brought against them from India and Algiers. And
+ in ordinary circumstances I should sympathize with such a complaint made by a
+ European people. But the circumstances are not ordinary. Here again the quite unique
+ barbarism of Prussia goes deeper than what we call barbarities. About mere
+ barbarities, it is true, the Turco and the Sikh would have very good reply to the
+ superior Teuton. The general and just reason for not using non-European tribes
+ against <span class="pagenum"><a name="page114"
+ id="page114"></a>{114}</span>Europeans is that given by Chatham against the use of
+ the red Indian&mdash;that such allies might do very diabolical things. But the poor
+ Turco might not unreasonably ask, after a week-end in Belgium, what more diabolical
+ things he could do than the highly cultured Germans were doing themselves.</p>
+ <p>Nevertheless, as I say, the justification of any extra-European aid goes deeper
+ than by any such details. It rests upon the fact that even other civilizations, even
+ much lower civilizations, even remote and repulsive civilizations, depend as much as
+ our own on this primary principle on which the supermorality of Potsdam declares open
+ war. Even savages promise things, and respect those who keep their promises. Even
+ Orientals write things down; and though they write them from right to left, they know
+ the importance of a scrap of paper. Many merchants will tell you that the word of the
+ sinister and almost unhuman Chinaman is often as good as his bond; and it was amid
+ palm trees and Syrian pavilions that the great utterance opened the tabernacle to him
+ that sweareth to his hurt and changeth not. There is doubtless a dense labyrinth of
+ duplicity in the East; and perhaps more guile in the individual Asiatic than in the
+ individual German. But we are not talking of the violations of human morality in
+ various parts of the world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Fight Against Anarchy.</b></p>
+ <p>We are talking about a new inhuman morality which denies altogether the day of
+ obligation. The Prussians have been told by their literary men that everything
+ depends upon "mood," and by their politicians that all arrangements dissolve before
+ "necessity." That is the importance of the German Chancellor's phrase. He did not
+ allege some special excuse in the case of Belgium, which might make it seem an
+ exception that proved the rule. He distinctly argued, as on a principle applicable to
+ other cases, that victory was a necessity and honor was a scrap of paper. And it is
+ evident that the half-educated Prussian imagination really cannot get any further
+ than this. It cannot see that if everybody's action were entirely incalculable from
+ hour to hour, it would not only be the end of all promises but the end of all
+ projects.</p>
+ <p>In not being able to see that, the Berlin philosopher is really on a lower mental
+ level than the Arab who respects the salt, or the Brahmin who preserves the caste.
+ And in this quarrel we have a right to come with scimitars as well as sabres, with
+ bows as well as rifles, with assegai and tomahawk and boomerang, because there is in
+ all these at least a seed of civilization that these intellectual anarchists would
+ kill. And if they should find us in our last stand girt with such strange swords and
+ following unfamiliar ensigns and ask us for what we fight in so singular a company,
+ we shall know what to reply: "We fight for the trust and for the tryst; for fixed
+ memories and the possible meeting of men; for all that makes life anything but an
+ uncontrollable nightmare. We fight for the long arm of honor and remembrance; for all
+ that can lift a man above the quicksands of his needs and give him the mastery of
+ time."</p>
+ <h3><span class="pagenum"><a name="page115"
+ id="page115"></a>{115}</span><b>III.</b></h3>
+ <h3>Disposing of Germany's Civilizing Mission</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>In the last summary I suggested that barbarism, as we mean it, is not mere
+ ignorance or even mere cruelty. It has a more precise sense, and means militant
+ hostility to certain necessary human ideas. I took the case of the vow or the
+ contract which Prussian intellectualism would destroy. I urged that the Prussian is a
+ spiritual barbarian, because he is not bound by his own past, any more than a man in
+ a dream. He avows that when he promised to respect a frontier on Monday he did not
+ foresee what he calls "the necessity" of not respecting it on Tuesday. In short, he
+ is like a child who at the end of all reasonable explanations and reminders of
+ admitted arrangements has no answer except "But I want to."</p>
+ <p>There is another idea in human arrangements so fundamental as to be forgotten, but
+ now for the first time denied. It may be called the idea of reciprocity; or, in
+ better English, of give and take. The Prussian appears to be quite intellectually
+ incapable of this thought. He cannot, I think, conceive the idea that is the
+ foundation of all comedy&mdash;that in the eyes of the other man he is only the other
+ man. And if we carry this clue through the institutions of Prussianized Germany we
+ shall find how curiously his mind has been limited in the matter. The German differs
+ from other patriots in the inability to understand patriotism. Other European peoples
+ pity the Poles or the Welsh for their violated borders, but Germans only pity
+ themselves. They might take forcible possession of the Severn or the Danube, of the
+ Thames or the Tiber, of the Garry or the Garonne&mdash;and they would still be
+ singing sadly about how fast and true stands the watch on the Rhine and what a shame
+ it would be if any one took their own little river away from them. That is what I
+ mean by not being reciprocal; and you will find it in all that they do, as in all
+ that is done by savages.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"Laughs When He Hurts You."</b></p>
+ <p>Here again it is very necessary to avoid confusing this soul of the savage with
+ mere savagery in the sense of brutality or butchery, in which the Greeks, the French,
+ and all the most civilized nations have indulged in hours of abnormal panic or
+ revenge. Accusations of cruelty are generally mutual. But it is the point about the
+ Prussian that with him nothing is mutual. The definition of the true savage does not
+ concern itself even with how much more he hurts strangers or captives than do the
+ other tribes of men. The definition of the true savage is that he laughs when he
+ hurts you and howls when you hurt him. This extraordinary inequality in the mind is
+ in every act and word that comes from Berlin.</p>
+ <p>For instance, no man of the world believes all he sees in the newspapers, and no
+ journalist believes a quarter of it. We should therefore be quite ready in the
+ ordinary way to take a great deal off the tales of German atrocities; to doubt this
+ story or deny that. But there is one thing that we cannot doubt or deny&mdash;the
+ seal and authority of the Emperor. In the imperial proclamation the fact that certain
+ "frightful" things have been done is admitted and justified on the ground of their
+ frightfulness. It was a military necessity to terrify the peaceful populations with
+ something that was not civilized, something that was hardly human.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"Howls When You Hurt Him."</b></p>
+ <p>Very well. That is an intelligible policy; and in that sense an intelligible
+ argument. An army endangered by foreigners may do the most frightful things. But then
+ we turn the next page of the Kaiser's public diary, and we find him writing to the
+ President of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page116"
+ id="page116"></a>{116}</span>United States to complain that the English are using
+ dumdum bullets and violating various regulations of The Hague Conference. I pass for
+ the present the question of whether there is a word of truth in these charges. I am
+ content to gaze rapturously at the blinking eyes of the true, or positive, barbarian.
+ I suppose he would be quite puzzled if we said that violating The Hague Conference
+ was "a military necessity" to us; or that the rules of the conference were only a
+ scrap of paper. He would be quite pained if we said that dumdum bullets "by their
+ very frightfulness" would be very useful to keep conquered Germans in order. Do what
+ he will, he cannot get outside the idea that he, because he is he and not you, is
+ free to break the law and also to appeal to the law. It is said that the Prussian
+ officers play at a game called Kriegspiel, or the war game. But in truth they could
+ not play at any game, for the essence of every game is that the rules are the same on
+ both sides.</p>
+ <p>But, taking every German institution in turn, the case is the same; and it is not
+ a case of mere bloodshed or military bravado. The duel, for example, can legitimately
+ be called a barbaric thing, but the word is here used in another sense. There are
+ duels in Germany; but so there are in France, Italy, Belgium, Spain; indeed, there
+ are duels wherever there are dentists, newspapers, Turkish baths, time tables, and
+ all the curses of civilization&mdash;except in England and a corner of America. You
+ may happen to regard the duel as a historic relic of the more barbaric States on
+ which these modern States were built. It might equally well be maintained that the
+ duel is everywhere the sign of high civilization, being the sign of its more delicate
+ sense of honor, its more vulnerable vanity, or its greater dread of social disrepute.
+ But whichever of the two views you take, you must concede that the essence of the
+ duel is an armed equality. I should not, therefore, apply the word barbaric, as I am
+ using it, to the duels of German officers, or even the broadsword combats that are
+ conventional among the German students. I do not see why a young Prussian should not
+ have scars all over his face if he likes them; nay, they are often the redeeming
+ points of interest on an otherwise somewhat unenlightening countenance. The duel may
+ be defended; the sham duel may be defended.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The One-Sided Prussian Duel.</b></p>
+ <p>What cannot be defended is something really peculiar to Prussia, of which we hear
+ numberless stories, some of them certainly true. It might be called the one-sided
+ duel. I mean the idea that there is some sort of dignity in drawing the sword upon a
+ man who has not got a sword&mdash;a waiter, or a shop assistant, or even a schoolboy.
+ One of the officers of the Kaiser in the affair at Zabern was found industriously
+ hacking at a cripple. In all these matters I would avoid sentiment. We must not lose
+ our tempers at the mere cruelty of the thing, but pursue the strict psychological
+ distinction. Others besides German soldiers have slain the defenseless, for loot or
+ lust or private malice, like any other murderer. The point is that nowhere else but
+ in Prussian Germany is any theory of honor mixed up with such things, any more than
+ with poisoning or picking pockets. No French, English, Italian, or American gentleman
+ would think he had in some way cleared his own character by sticking his sabre
+ through some ridiculous greengrocer who had nothing in his hand but a cucumber. It
+ would seem as if the word which is translated from the German as "honor" must really
+ mean something quite different in German. It seems to mean something more like what
+ we should call "prestige."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Absence of the Reciprocal Idea.</b></p>
+ <p>The fundamental fact, however, is the absence of the reciprocal idea. The Prussian
+ is not sufficiently civilized for the duel. Even when he crosses swords with us his
+ thoughts are not as our thoughts; when we both glorify war we are glorifying
+ different things. Our medals are wrought like his, but they do not mean the same
+ thing; our regiments are cheered as his are, but the thought in the heart is not the
+ same; the Iron <span class="pagenum"><a name="page117"
+ id="page117"></a>{117}</span>Cross is on the bosom of his King, but it is not the
+ sign of our God. For we, alas! follow our God with many relapses and
+ self-contradictions, but he follows his very consistently. Through all the things
+ that we have examined, the view of national boundaries, the view of military methods,
+ the view of personal honor and self-defense, there runs in their case something of an
+ atrocious simplicity; something too simple for us to understand; the idea that glory
+ consists in holding the steel, and not in facing it.</p>
+ <p>If further examples were necessary it would be easy to give hundreds of them. Let
+ us leave, for the moment, the relations between man and man in the thing called the
+ duel. Let us take the relation between man and woman, in that immortal duel which we
+ call a marriage. Here again we shall find that other Christian civilizations aim at
+ some kind of equality, even if the balance be irrational or dangerous. Thus, the two
+ extremes of the treatment of women might be represented by what are called the
+ respectable classes in America and in France. In America they choose the risk of
+ comradeship, in France the compensation of courtesy. In America it is practically
+ possible for any young gentleman to take any young lady for what he calls (I deeply
+ regret to say) a joy ride; but at least the man goes with the woman as much as the
+ woman with the man. In France the young woman is protected like a nun while she is
+ unmarried; but when she is a mother she is really a holy woman; and when she is a
+ grandmother she is a holy terror.</p>
+ <p>By both extremes the woman gets something back out of life. There is only one
+ place where she gets little or nothing back, and that is the north of Germany. France
+ and America aim alike at equality; America by similarity, France by dissimilarity.
+ But North Germany does definitely aim at inequality. The woman stands up with no more
+ irritation than a butler; the man sits down with no more embarrassment than a guest.
+ This is the cool affirmation of inferiority, as in the case of the sabre and the
+ tradesmen. "Thou goest with women; forget not thy whip," said Nietzsche. It will be
+ observed that he does not say "poker," which might come more naturally to the mind of
+ a more common or Christian wife-beater. But, then, a poker is a part of domesticity,
+ and might be used by the wife as well as the husband. In fact, it often is. The sword
+ and the whip are the weapons of a privileged caste.</p>
+ <p>Pass from the closest of all differences, that between husband and wife, to the
+ most distant of all differences, that of the remote and unrelated races who have
+ seldom seen each other's faces, and never been tinged with each other's blood. Here
+ we still find the same unvarying Prussian principle. Any European might feel a
+ genuine fear of the Yellow Peril, and many Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Russians have
+ felt and expressed it. Many might say, and have said, that the heathen Chinee is very
+ heathen indeed; that if he ever advances against us he will trample and torture and
+ utterly destroy, in a way that Eastern people do, but Western people do not. Nor do I
+ doubt the German Emperor's sincerity when he sought to point out to us how abnormal
+ and abominable such a nightmare campaign would be, supposing that it could come.</p>
+ <p>But now comes the comic irony, which never fails to follow on the attempt of the
+ Prussian to be philosophic. For the Kaiser, after explaining to his troops how
+ important it was to avoid Eastern barbarism, instantly commanded them to become
+ Eastern barbarians. He told them, in so many words, to be Huns, and leave nothing
+ living or standing behind them. In fact, he frankly offered a new army corps of
+ aboriginal Tartars to the Far East, within such time as it may take a bewildered
+ Hanoverian to turn into a Tartar. Any one who has the painful habit of personal
+ thought will perceive here at once the non-reciprocal principle again. Boiled down to
+ its bones of logic, it means simply this: "I am a German and you are a Chinaman.
+ Therefore, I <span class="pagenum"><a name="page118"
+ id="page118"></a>{118}</span>being a German, have a right to be a Chinaman. But you
+ have no right to be a Chinaman, because you are only a Chinaman." This is probably
+ the highest point to which the German culture has risen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"The Principle of Being Unprincipled."</b></p>
+ <p>The principle here neglected, which may be called mutuality by those who
+ misunderstand and dislike the word equality, does not offer so clear a distinction
+ between the Prussian and the other peoples as did the first Prussian principle of an
+ infinite and destructive opportunism; or, in other words, the principle of being
+ unprincipled. Nor upon this second can one take up so obvious a position touching the
+ other civilizations or semi-civilizations of the world. Some idea of oath and bond
+ there is in the rudest tribes, in the darkest continents. But it might be maintained,
+ of the more delicate and imaginative element of reciprocity, that a cannibal in
+ Borneo understands it almost as little as a professor in Berlin. A narrow and
+ one-sided seriousness is the fault of barbarians all over the world. This may have
+ been the meaning, for aught I know, of the one eye of the Cyclops; that the barbarian
+ cannot see around things or look at them from two points of view, and thus becomes a
+ blind beast and an eater of men. Certainly there can be no better summary of the
+ savage than this, which, as we have seen, unfits him for the duel. He is the man who
+ cannot love&mdash;no, nor even hate&mdash;his neighbor as himself.</p>
+ <p>But this quality in Prussia does have one effect which has reference to the same
+ question of the lower civilizations. It disposes once and for all at least of the
+ civilizing mission of Germany. Evidently the Germans are the last people in the world
+ to be trusted with the task. They are as short-sighted morally as physically. What is
+ their sophism of "necessity" but an inability to imagine tomorrow morning? What is
+ their non-reciprocity but an inability to imagine, not a god or devil, but merely
+ another man? Are these to judge mankind? Men of two tribes in Africa not only know
+ that they are all men but can understand that they are all black men. In this they
+ are quite seriously in advance of the intellectual Prussian, who cannot be got to see
+ that we are all white men. The ordinary eye is unable to perceive in the Northeast
+ Teuton anything that marks him out especially from the more colorless classes of the
+ rest of Aryan mankind. He is simply a white man, with a tendency to the gray or the
+ drab. Yet he will explain in serious official documents that the difference between
+ him and us is a difference between "the master race and the inferior race."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>How to Know "The Master Race."</b></p>
+ <p>The collapse of German philosophy always occurs at the beginning rather than the
+ end of an argument, and the difficulty here is that there is no way of testing which
+ is a master race except by asking which is your own race. If you cannot find out, (as
+ is usually the case,) you fall back on the absurd occupation of writing history about
+ prehistoric times. But I suggest quite seriously that if the Germans can give their
+ philosophy to the Hottentots there is no reason why they should not give their sense
+ of superiority to the Hottentots. If they can see such fine shades between the Goth
+ and the Gaul, there is no reason why similar shades should not lift the savage above
+ other savages; why any Ojibway should not discover that he is one tint redder than
+ the Dakotas, or any nigger in the Kameruns say he is not so black as he is painted.
+ For this principle of a quite unproved racial supremacy is the last and worst of the
+ refusals of reciprocity. The Prussian calls all men to admire the beauty of his large
+ blue eyes. If they do, it is because they have inferior eyes; if they don't, it is
+ because they have no eyes.</p>
+ <p>Wherever the most miserable remnant of our race, astray and dried up in deserts or
+ buried forever under the fall of bad civilization, has some feeble memory that men
+ are men, that bargains are bargains, that there are two sides to a question, or even
+ that it takes two to make a quarrel&mdash;that remnant has the <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>{119}</span>right to assist the
+ New Culture, to the knife and club and the splintered stone. For the Prussian begins
+ all his culture by that act which is the destruction of all creative thought and
+ constructive action. He breaks that mirror in the mind in which a man can see the
+ face of his friend or foe.</p>
+ <h3>IV.</h3>
+ <h3>Russia Less Despotic Than Prussia</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The German Emperor has reproached this country (England) with allying itself with
+ "barbaric and semi-Oriental power." We have already considered in what sense we use
+ the word barbaric; it is in the sense of one who is hostile to civilization, not one
+ who is insufficient in it. But when we pass from the idea of the barbaric to the idea
+ of the Oriental, the case is even more curious. There is nothing particularly Tartar
+ in Russian affairs, except the fact that Russia expelled the Tartars. The Eastern
+ invader occupied and crushed the country for many years; but that is equally true of
+ Greece, of Spain, and even of Austria. If Russia has suffered from the East, she has
+ suffered in order to resist it; and it is rather hard that the very miracle of her
+ escape should make a mystery about her origin. Jonah may or may not have been three
+ days inside a fish; but that does not make him a merman. And in all the other cases
+ of European nations who escaped the monstrous captivity, we do admit the purity and
+ continuity of the European type. We consider the old Eastern rule as a wound, but not
+ as a stain. Copper-colored men out of Africa overruled for centuries the religion and
+ patriotism of Spaniards. Yet I have never heard that "Don Quixote" was an African
+ fable on the lines of "Uncle Remus." I have never heard that the heavy black in the
+ pictures of Velasquez was due to a negro ancestry. In the case of Spain, which is
+ close to us, we can recognize the resurrection of a Christian and cultured nation
+ after its age of bondage. But Russia is rather remote; and those to whom nations are
+ but names in newspapers can really fancy, like Mr. Baring's friend, that all Russian
+ churches are "mosques." Yet the land of Turgenev is not a wilderness of fakirs; and
+ even the fanatical Russian is as proud of being different from the Mongol as the
+ fanatical Spaniard was proud of being different from the Moor.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"Scratch a Russian."</b></p>
+ <p>The town of Reading, as it exists, offers few opportunities for piracy on the high
+ seas; yet it was the camp of the pirates in Alfred's days. I should think it hard to
+ call the people of Berkshire half Danish merely because they drove out the Danes. In
+ short, some temporary submergence under the savage flood was the fate of many of the
+ most civilized States of Christendom, and it is quite ridiculous to argue that
+ Russia, which wrestled hardest, must have recovered least. Everywhere, doubtless, the
+ East spread a sort of enamel over the conquered countries; but everywhere the enamel
+ cracked. Actual history, in fact, is exactly opposite to the cheap proverb invented
+ against the Muscovite. It is not true to say, "Scratch a Russian and you find a
+ Tartar." In the darkest hour of the barbaric dominion it was truer to say, "Scratch a
+ Tartar and you find a Russian." It was the civilization that survived under all the
+ barbarism. This vital romance of Russia, this revolution against Asia, can be proved
+ in pure fact; not only from the almost superhuman activity of Russia during the
+ struggle, but also (which is much rarer as human history goes) by her quite
+ consistent conduct since. She is the only great nation which has really expelled the
+ Mongol from her country and continued to protest against presence of the Mongol in
+ her continent. Knowing what he had been in Russia, she knew what <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>{120}</span>he would be in Europe.
+ In this she pursued a logical line of thought, which was, if anything, too
+ unsympathetic with the energies and religions of the East. Every other country, one
+ may say, has been an ally of the Turk&mdash;that is, of the Mongol and the Moslem.
+ The French played them as pieces against Austria; the English warmly supported them
+ under the Palmerston r&eacute;gime; even the young Italians sent troops to the
+ Crimea; and of Russia and her Austrian vassal it is nowadays needless to speak. For
+ good or evil, it is the fact of history that Russia is the only power in Europe that
+ has never supported the Crescent against the Cross.</p>
+ <p>That doubtless will appear an unimportant matter, but it may become important
+ under certain peculiar conditions. Suppose, for the sake of argument, that there were
+ a powerful Prince in Europe who had gone ostentatiously out of his way to pay
+ reverence to the remains of the Tartar, Mongol, and Moslem left as an outpost in
+ Europe. Suppose there were a Christian Emperor who could not even go to the tomb of
+ the crucified without pausing to congratulate the last and living crucifier. If there
+ were an Emperor who gave guns and guides and maps and drill instructors to defend the
+ remains of the Mongol in Christendom, what would we say to him? I think at least we
+ might ask him what he meant by his impudence when he talked about supporting a
+ semi-Oriental power. That we support a semi-Oriental power we deny. That he has
+ supported an entirely Oriental power cannot be denied, no, not even by the man who
+ did it.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Whom Has Prussia Emancipated?</b></p>
+ <p>But here is to be noted the essential difference between Russia and Prussia;
+ especially by those who use the ordinary liberal arguments against the latter Russia
+ has a policy, which she pursues, if you will, through evil and good; but at least so
+ as to produce good as well as evil. Let it be granted that the policy has made her
+ oppressive to the Finns, the Poles&mdash;though the Russian Poles feel far less
+ oppressed than do the Prussian Poles. But it is a mere historic fact, that if Russia
+ has been a despot to some small nations, she has been a deliverer to others. She did,
+ so far as in her lay, emancipate the Servians or the Montenegrins. But whom did
+ Prussia ever emancipate&mdash;even by accident? It is, indeed, somewhat extraordinary
+ that in the perpetual permutations of international politics the Hohenzollerns have
+ never gone astray into the path of enlightenment. They have been in alliance with
+ almost everybody off and on; with France, with England, with Austria, with Russia.
+ Can any one candidly say that they have left on any one of these people the faintest
+ impress of progress or liberation? Prussia was the enemy of the French monarchy, but
+ a worse enemy of the French Revolution. Prussia had been an enemy of the Czar, but
+ she was a worse enemy of the Duma. Prussia totally disregarded Austrian rights; but
+ she is today quite ready to inflict Austrian wrongs. This is the strong particular
+ difference between the one empire and the other. Russia is pursuing certain
+ intelligible and sincere ends, which to her at least are ideals, and for which,
+ therefore, she will make sacrifices and will protect the weak. But the North German
+ soldier is a sort of abstract tyrant; everywhere and always on the side of
+ materialistic tyranny. This Teuton in uniform has been found in strange places;
+ shooting farmers before Saratoga and flogging soldiers in Surrey, hanging niggers in
+ Africa and raping girls in Wicklow, but never, by some mysterious fatality, lending a
+ hand to the freeing of a single city or the independence of one solitary flag.
+ Wherever scorn and prosperous oppression are, there is the Prussian; unconsciously
+ consistent, instinctively restrictive, innocently evil; "following darkness like a
+ dream."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Disinterested Despotism.</b></p>
+ <p>Suppose we heard of a person (gifted with some longevity) who had helped Alva to
+ persecute Dutch Protestants, then helped Cromwell to persecute Irish Catholics, and
+ then helped Claverhouse to persecute Scotch Puritans&mdash;we should find it rather
+ easier to call him a persecutor than to call him a Protestant or a <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page121" id="page121"></a>{121}</span>Catholic. Curiously
+ enough, this is actually the position in which the Prussian stands in Europe. No
+ arguments can alter the fact that in three converging and conclusive cases he has
+ been on the side of three distinct rulers of different religions, who had nothing
+ whatever in common except that they were ruling oppressively. In these three
+ Governments, taken separately, one can see something excusable, or at least human.
+ When the Kaiser encouraged the Russian rulers to crush the revolution, the Russian
+ rulers undoubtedly believed they were wrestling with an inferno of atheism and
+ anarchy. A Socialist of the ordinary English kind cried out upon me when I spoke of
+ Stolypin and said he was chiefly known by the halter called "Stolypin's Necktie." As
+ a fact, there were many other things interesting about Stolypin besides his
+ necktie&mdash;his policy of peasant proprietorship, his extraordinary personal
+ courage, and certainly none more interesting than that movement in his death agony,
+ when he made the sign of the cross toward the Czar, as the crown and captain of his
+ Christianity. But the Kaiser does not regard the Czar as the captain of Christianity.
+ Far from it. What he supported in Stolypin was the necktie, and nothing but the
+ necktie; the gallows, and not the cross. The Russian ruler did believe that the
+ Orthodox Church was orthodox. The Austrian Archduke did really desire to make the
+ Catholic Church catholic. He did really believe that he was being pro-Catholic in
+ being pro-Austrian. But the Kaiser cannot be pro-Catholic, and, therefore, cannot
+ have been really pro-Austrian; he was simply and solely anti-Servian; nay, even in
+ the cruel and sterile strength of Turkey, any one with imagination can see something
+ of the tragedy, and, therefore, of the tenderness of true belief. The worst that can
+ be said of the Moslems is, as the poet put it, they offered to man the choice of the
+ Koran or the sword. The best that can be said for the German is that he does not care
+ about the Koran, but is satisfied if he can have the sword. And for me, I confess,
+ even the sins of these three other striving empires take on, in comparison, something
+ that is sorrowful and dignified; and I feel they do not deserve that this little
+ Lutheran lounger should patronize all that is evil in them, while ignoring all that
+ is good. He is not Catholic; he is not Orthodox; he is not Mohammedan. He is merely
+ an old gentleman who wishes to share the crime, though he cannot share the creed. He
+ desires to be a persecutor by the pang without the palm. So strongly do all the
+ instincts of the Prussian drive against liberty that he would rather oppress other
+ peoples' subjects than think of anybody going without the benefits of oppression. He
+ is a sort of disinterested despot. He is as disinterested as the devil, who is ready
+ to do any one's dirty work.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Paradox of Prussia.</b></p>
+ <p>This would seem obviously fantastic were it not supported by solid facts which
+ cannot be explained otherwise. Indeed it would be inconceivable if we were thinking
+ of a whole people, consisting of free and varied individuals. But in Prussia the
+ governing class is really a governing class, and a very few people are needed to
+ think along these lines to make all the other people act along them. And the paradox
+ of Prussia is this: That while its princes and nobles have no other aim on this earth
+ but to destroy democracy wherever it shows itself, they have contrived to get
+ themselves trusted, not as wardens of the past, but as forerunners of the future.
+ Even they cannot believe that their theory is popular, but they do believe that it is
+ progressive. Here again we find the spiritual chasm between the two monarchies in
+ question. The Russian institutions are, in many cases, really left in the rear of the
+ Russian people, and many of the Russian people know it. But the Prussian institutions
+ are supposed to be in advance of the Prussian people, and most of the Prussian people
+ believe it. It is thus much easier for the war lords to go everywhere and impose a
+ hopeless slavery upon every one, for they have al<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page122" id="page122"></a>{122}</span>ready imposed a sort of hopeful slavery
+ on their own simple race.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Factory of Thumbscrews.</b></p>
+ <p>And when men shall speak to us of the hoary iniquities of Russia and of how
+ antiquated is the Russian system we shall answer, "Yes; that is the superiority of
+ Russia." Their institutions are part of their history, whether as relics or fossils.
+ Their abuses have really been uses; that is to say, they have been used up. If they
+ have old engines of terror or torment, they may fall to pieces from mere rust, like
+ an old coat of armor. But in the case of the Prussian tyranny, if it be tyranny at
+ all, it is the whole point of its claim that it is not antiquated, but just going to
+ begin, like the showman. Prussia has a whole thriving factory of thumbscrews, a whole
+ humming workshop of wheels and racks, of the newest and neatest pattern, with which
+ to win Europe back to reaction * * * infandum renovare dolorem. And if we wish to
+ test the truth of this, it can be done by the same method which showed us that
+ Russia, if her race or religion could sometimes make her an invader and an oppressor,
+ could also be made an emancipator and a knight errant. In the same way, if the
+ Russian institutions are old-fashioned, they honestly exhibit the good as well as the
+ bad that can be found in old-fashioned things. In their police system they have an
+ inequality which is against our ideas of law. But in their commune system they have
+ an equality that is older than law itself. Even when they flogged each other like
+ barbarians, they called each other by their Christian names like children. At their
+ worst, they retained all the best of a rude society. At their best, they are simply
+ good, like good children or good nuns. But in Prussia, all that is best in the
+ civilized machinery is put at the service of all that is worst in the barbaric mind.
+ Here again the Prussian has no accidental merits, none of those lucky survivals, none
+ of those late repentances, which make the patchwork glory of Russia. Here all is
+ sharpened to a point and pointed to a purpose; and that purpose, if words and acts
+ have any meaning at all, is the destruction of liberty throughout the world.</p>
+ <h3>V.</h3>
+ <h3>The "Bond of Teutonism"</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>In considering the Prussian point of view we have been considering what seems to
+ be mainly a mental limitation&mdash;a kind of knot in the brain. Toward the problem
+ of Slav population, of English colonization, of French armies, and of reinforcements
+ it shows the same strange philosophic sulks. So far as I can follow it, it seems to
+ amount to saying, "It is very wrong that you should be superior to me, because I am
+ superior to you." The spokesman of this system seems to have a curious capacity for
+ concentrating this entanglement or contradiction sometimes into a single paragraph,
+ or even a single sentence. I have already referred to the German Emperor's celebrated
+ suggestion that in order to avert the peril of Hunnishness we should all become Huns.
+ A much stronger instance is his more recent order to his troops touching the war in
+ Northern France. As most people know, his words ran: "It is my royal and imperial
+ command that you concentrate your energies, for the immediate present, upon one
+ single purpose, and that is that you address all your skill and all the valor of my
+ soldiers to exterminate first the treacherous English and to walk over Gen. French's
+ contemptible little army." The rudeness of the remark an Englishman can afford to
+ pass over. What I am interested in is the mentality, the train of thought that can
+ manage to entangle itself even in so brief a space. If French's little army is
+ contemptible it would seem clear that <span class="pagenum"><a name="page123"
+ id="page123"></a>{123}</span>all the skill and valor of the German Army had better
+ not be concentrated on it, but on the larger and less contemptible allies. If all the
+ skill and valor of the German Army are concentrated on it it is not being treated as
+ contemptible. But the Prussian rhetorician had two incompatible sentiments in his
+ mind, and he insisted on saying them both at once. He wanted to think of an English
+ Army as a small thing; but he also wanted to think of an English defeat as a big
+ thing. He wanted to exult, at the same moment, in the utter weakness of the British
+ Nation in their attack and the supreme skill and valor of the Germans in repelling
+ such an attack. Somehow it must be made a common and obvious collapse for England and
+ yet a daring and unexpected triumph for Germany. In trying to express these
+ contradictory conceptions simultaneously he got rather mixed. Therefore he bade
+ Germania fill all her vales and mountains with the dying agonies of this almost
+ invisible earwig, and let the impure blood of this cockroach redden the Rhine down to
+ the sea.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Prof. Harnack's Reproach</b>.</p>
+ <p>But it would be unfair to base the criticism on the utterance of any accidental
+ and hereditary Prince; and it is quite equally clear in the case of the philosophers
+ who have been held up to us, even in England, as the very prophets of progress. And
+ in nothing is it shown more sharply than in the curious, confused talk about race,
+ and especially about the Teutonic race. Prof. Harnack and similar people are
+ reproaching us, I understand, for having broken "the bond of Teutonism"&mdash;a bond
+ which the Prussians have strictly observed, both in breach and observance. We note it
+ in the open annexation of lands wholly inhabited by negroes, such as Denmark. We note
+ it equally in their instant and joyful recognition of the flaxen hair and light blue
+ eyes of the Turks. But it is still the abstract principle of Prof. Harnack which
+ interests me most, and in following it I have the same complexity of inquiry, but the
+ same simplicity of result. Comparing the professor's concern about "Teutonism" with
+ his unconcern about Belgium, I can only reach the following result: "A man need not
+ keep a promise he has made. But a man must keep a promise he has not made." There
+ certainly was a treaty binding Britain to Belgium, if it was only a scrap of paper.
+ If there was any treaty binding Britain with Teutonism it is, to say the least of it,
+ a lost scrap of paper&mdash;almost what one might call a scrap of waste paper. Here
+ again the pedants under consideration exhibit the illogical perversity that makes the
+ brain reel. There is obligation and there is no obligation; sometimes it appears that
+ Germany and England must keep faith with each other; sometimes that Germany need not
+ keep faith with anybody and anything; sometimes that we, alone among European
+ peoples, are almost entitled to be Germans; sometimes that besides us Russians and
+ Frenchmen almost rise to a Germanic loveliness of character. But through all there
+ is, hazy but not hypocritical, this sense of some common Teutonism.</p>
+ <p>Prof. Haeckel, another of the witnesses raised up against us, attained to some
+ celebrity at one time through proving the remarkable resemblance between two
+ different things by printing duplicate pictures of the same thing. Prof. Haeckel's
+ contribution to biology, in this case, was exactly like Prof. Harnack's contribution
+ to ethnology. Prof. Harnack knows what a German is like. When he wants to imagine
+ what an Englishman is like he simply photographs the same German over again. In both
+ cases there is probably sincerity, as well as simplicity. Haeckel was so certain that
+ the species illustrated in embryo really are closely related and linked up that it
+ seemed to him a small thing to simplify it by mere repetition. Harnack is so certain
+ that the German and Englishman are almost alike that he really risks the
+ generalization that they are exactly alike. He photographs, so to speak, the same
+ fair and foolish face twice over, and calls it a remarkable resemblance between
+ cousins. Thus he can prove the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page124"
+ id="page124"></a>{124}</span>existence of Teutonism just about as conclusively as
+ Haeckel has proved the more tenable proposition of the non-existence of God.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germans and English.</b></p>
+ <p>Now, the German and the Englishman are not in the least alike&mdash;except in the
+ sense that neither of them are negroes. They are, in everything good and evil, more
+ unlike than any other two men we can take at random from the great European family.
+ They are opposite from the roots of their history&mdash;nay, of their geography. It
+ is an understatement to call Britain insular. Britain is not only an island, but an
+ island slashed by the sea till it nearly splits into three islands, and even the
+ midlands can almost smell the salt. Germany is a powerful, beautiful, and fertile
+ inland country, which can only find the sea by one or two twisted and narrow paths,
+ as people find a subterranean lake. Thus the British Navy is really national because
+ it is natural. It has cohered out of hundreds of accidental adventures of ships and
+ shipmen before Chaucer's time and after it. But the German Navy is an artificial
+ thing, as artificial as a constructed Alp would be in England. William II. has simply
+ copied the British Navy, as Frederick II. copied the French Army, and this Japanese
+ or antlike assiduity in imitation is one of the hundred qualities which the Germans
+ have and the English markedly have not. There are other German superiorities which
+ are very much superior. The one or two really jolly things that the Germans have got
+ are precisely the things which the English haven't got, notably a real habit of
+ popular music and of the ancient songs of the people; not merely spreading from the
+ towns or caught from the professionals. In this the Germans rather resemble the
+ Welsh, though heaven knows what becomes of Teutonism if they do. But the difference
+ between the Germans and the English goes deeper than all these signs of it. They
+ differ more than any other two Europeans in the normal posture of the mind.</p>
+ <p>Above all, they differ in what is the most English of all English
+ traits&mdash;that shame which the French may be right in calling "the bad shame," for
+ it is certainly mixed up with pride and suspicion, the upshot of which we call
+ shyness. Even an Englishman's rudeness is often rooted in his being embarrassed. But
+ a German's rudeness is rooted in his never being embarrassed. He eats and makes love
+ noisily. He never feels a speech or a song or a sermon or a large meal to be what the
+ English call "out of place" in particular circumstances. When Germans are patriotic
+ and religious they have no reactions against patriotism and religion, as have the
+ English and the French. Nay, the mistake of Germany in the modern disaster largely
+ arose from the facts that she thought England was simple, when England is very
+ subtle. She thought that because our politics have become largely financial they had
+ become wholly financial; that because our aristocrats had become pretty cynical they
+ had become entirely corrupt. They could not seize the subtlety by which a rather
+ used-up English gentleman might sell a coronet when he could not sell a fortress;
+ might lower the public standards and yet refuse to lower the flag. In short, the
+ Germans are quite sure that they understand us entirely because they do not
+ understand us at all. Possibly, if they began to understand us they might hate us
+ even more, but I would rather be hated for some small but real reason than pursued
+ with love on account of all kinds of qualities which I do not possess and which I do
+ not desire. And when the Germans get their first genuine glimpses of what modern
+ England is like they will discover that England has a very broken, belated, and
+ inadequate sense of having an obligation to Europe; but no sort of sense whatever of
+ having any obligation to Teutonism.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Slippery Strength of Stupidity.</b></p>
+ <p>This is the last and strongest of the Prussian qualities we have here considered.
+ There is in stupidity of this sort a strange, slippery strength, because it can be
+ not only outside rules, but outside reason. The man who really cannot see that he is
+ contradicting him<span class="pagenum"><a name="page125"
+ id="page125"></a>{125}</span>self has a great advantage in controversy, though the
+ advantage breaks down when he tries to reduce it to simple addition, to
+ chess&mdash;or to the game called war. It is the same about the stupidity of the
+ one-sided kinship. The drunkard who is quite certain that a total stranger is his
+ long-lost brother has a great advantage until it comes to matters of detail. "We must
+ have chaos within," said Nietzsche, "that we may give birth to a dancing star."</p>
+ <p>In these slight notes I have suggested the principal strong points of the Prussian
+ character&mdash;a failure in honor which almost amounts to a failure in memory; an
+ egomania that is honestly blind to the fact that the other party is an ego, and,
+ above all, an actual itch for tyranny and interference, the devil which everywhere
+ torments the idle and the proud. To these must be added a certain mental
+ shapelessness, which can expand or contract without reference to reason or
+ record&mdash;a potential infinity of excuses. If the English had been on the German
+ side the German professors would have noted what irresistible energies had evolved
+ the Teutons. As the English are on the other side, the German professors will say
+ that these Teutons were not sufficiently evolved; or they will say they were just
+ sufficiently evolved to show that they were not Teutons. Probably they will say both.
+ But the truth is that all that they call evolution should rather be called evasion.
+ They tell us they are opening windows of enlightenment and doors of progress. The
+ truth is that they are breaking up the whole house of the human intellect that they
+ may abscond in any direction. There is an ominous and almost monstrous parallel
+ between the position of their overrated philosophers and of their comparatively
+ underrated soldiers. For what their professors call roads of progress are really
+ routes of escape.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>South Africa's Boers and Britons</b></h2>
+ <h3>By H. Rider Haggard.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The heart of South Africa, Boer and Briton, is with England in this war. Here and
+ there you will find an individual who cherishes bitter and hostile memories, of which
+ there has been an example in Mr. Beyers letter the other day, so effectually answered
+ by Gen. Botha. But such instances, I believe, are so rare that really they are the
+ exceptions which seem to prove the rule. Of course, it goes without saying that every
+ person of English descent is heartily with the mother country, and I do not suppose
+ it would be an overestimate to add that quite 80 per cent, of the Dutch are of the
+ same way of thinking.</p>
+ <p>Still, there is a party among the South African Dutch that sees no necessity for
+ the invasion of German Southwest Africa. This party overlooks the fact that the
+ Germans have for long been preparing to invade them; also that if by any chance
+ Germany should conquer in this war South Africa would be one of the first countries
+ that they would seize.</p>
+ <p>In speaking of this I talk of what I understand, since for the last two and a half
+ years it has been my duty to travel around the British Empire upon the service of his
+ Majesty. In addition to South Africa, I have visited India, Australia, New Zealand,
+ Newfoundland, and Canada. I have recently traveled throughout South Africa as a
+ member of the Dominion's Royal Commission. It was my first visit there after the
+ lapse of a whole generation, and I can only say that everywhere I have found the most
+ intense loyalty and devotion to the old mother land. The empire is one and
+ indivisible; together it will stand or together it will fall.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id="page126"></a>{126}</span>South Africa
+ is united; it has forgotten its recent labor troubles. I answer "absolutely" all such
+ things are past history, blown away and destroyed by this great wind of war. South
+ Africa, down to its lowest Hottentot, has, I believe, but one object, to help England
+ to win in this vast battle of the nations. Why, even the natives, as you may have
+ noticed, are sending subscriptions from their scanty hoards and praying to be allowed
+ "to throw a few stones for the King." Did not Poutsma say as much the other day?</p>
+ <p>In the old days, of course, there were very strained relations between the English
+ and Boers, which had their roots in foolish and inconsistent acts carried out by the
+ Home Government, generally to forward party ends. I need not go into them because
+ they are too long.</p>
+ <p>Then came the Boer war, which, as you know, proved a much bigger enterprise than
+ the Home Government had anticipated. It cost Britain 20,000 lives and
+ &pound;300,000,000 of English money before the Boers were finally subdued. Only about
+ half a score of years have gone by since peace was declared. Within two or three
+ years of that peace the British Government made up its mind to a very bold step and
+ one which was viewed with grave doubts by many people&mdash;namely, to give full
+ self-government to the Transvaal and the Orange River Colonies.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Astonished at Results.</b></p>
+ <p>When I traveled through South Africa the other day this new Constitution had been
+ working for a few years, and I can only say that I was astonished at the results.
+ Here and there in the remoter districts, it is true, some racial feeling still
+ prevailed, but taken as a whole this seems absolutely to have died away. Briton and
+ Boer have come together in a manner for which I believe I am right in saying there is
+ no precedent in the history of the world, so shortly, at any rate, after a prolonged
+ and bitter struggle to the death. I might give many instances, but I will only take
+ one. At Pretoria I was asked to inspect a company of Boy Scouts, and there I found
+ English and Dutch lads serving side by side with the utmost brotherhood. Again I met
+ most of the men who had been leaders of the Boers in the war. One and all professed
+ the greatest loyalty to England. Moreover, I am certain that this was not lip
+ loyalty; it was from the heart. Especially was I impressed by that great man, Gen.
+ Botha, with whom I had several conversations. I am convinced that at this moment the
+ King has no truer or more faithful servant than Gen. Botha. Again and again did I
+ hear from prominent South Africans of Dutch or Huguenot extraction that never more
+ was there any chance of trouble between Boer and Briton.</p>
+ <p>I know it is alleged by some that this is because the Dutch feel that they have on
+ the whole made a good bargain, having won absolute constitutional liberty and the
+ fullest powers of self-government, plus the protection of the British fleet. There
+ may be something in this view, but I am sure that the feeling goes a great deal
+ deeper than self-interest. Mutual respect has arisen between those who ten years ago
+ were enemies fighting each other.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Appeal to People's Imagination.</b></p>
+ <p>Moreover, the Boer now knows a great deal more of the British Empire and what it
+ means than he did then. Lastly, the supreme generosity evinced by Britain in giving
+ their enemy of the day before every right and privilege that is owned by her other
+ oversea dominions with whom she has never had a quarrel appeals deeply to the
+ imagination of the Dutch people. Now, the world sees the results. Germany, which has
+ miscalculated so much in connection with this war and the part that the British
+ Empire would play in it, miscalculated nowhere more than it did in the case of South
+ Africa. The German war lords hoped that India and Egypt would rise, they trusted that
+ Canada and Australia would prove lukewarm, but they were certain that South Africa
+ would seize the opportunity to rebel. How could it be other<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page127" id="page127"></a>{127}</span>wise, they thought, seeing that but
+ yesterday she was at death grips with us. Then came the great surprise. Lo and
+ behold! instead of rebelling, South Africa promptly cabled to England saying that
+ every British soldier might be withdrawn from her shores, and, further, that the
+ burghers of the land would themselves undertake the conquest of the German
+ possessions of Southwest Africa for the Crown. They are doing so at this moment. I
+ believe that today there is no British soldier left at the Cape, and I know that now
+ a great force is moving on Southwest Africa furnished by Boer and Briton alike. Can
+ the history of the world tell us of any parallel case to this&mdash;that a country
+ conquered within a dozen years should not only need no garrison, but by its own free
+ will undertake war against the enemies of its late victor? Surely this is something
+ of which Britain may feel proud.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Deep Distrust of Germany.</b></p>
+ <p>Now, some of your readers may ask: "Why is it? How did this miracle, for it is
+ little less, happen?" My answer is that it has been caused first by a supreme and
+ glorious trust in the justice and generosity of England, which knows how to rule
+ colonies as no other nation has done in the history of the earth, and secondly by a
+ deep distrust of Germany. To my own knowledge, Germany has been intriguing in South
+ Africa for the last quarter of a century. I remember, I suppose it must be almost
+ twenty years ago, sending to the late Mr. Chamberlain, who was then Colonial
+ Secretary, information to this effect which reached me from undoubted sources in
+ South Africa. Again, not long ago, I was shown a document which was found among the
+ papers of the Zulu Prince Dinizulu, son of King Cetewayo, who died the other day. It
+ was concluded between himself and Germans, and under it the poor man had practically
+ sold his country nominally to a German firm, but doubtless to more powerful persons
+ behind. In short, there is no question that for many years Germany has had its eye
+ upon South Africa as a desirable field of settlement for its subjects under the
+ German and not the British flag. Now, the Boers are perfectly well acquainted with
+ this fact and have no wish to exchange the beneficent rule of Britain for that of
+ Potsdam, the King Log of George V. for the King Stork of Kaiser Wilhelm.</p>
+ <p>You ask me if I think that the Boers are likely to succeed in their attack on
+ Southwest Africa, where it must be remembered that the Germans have a very formidable
+ force; indeed, I have been told, I do not know with what accuracy, that they have
+ accumulated there the vast arsenal of war material that was obviously intended to be
+ used on some future occasion in the invasion of the Cape. I answer: "Certainly, they
+ will succeed, though not easily." Remember what stock these Boers come from. They are
+ descendants of the men who withstood and beat Alva in the sixteenth century.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Botha of Huguenot Descent.</b></p>
+ <p>I happen to be well acquainted with that period of history. I wrote a story called
+ "Lysbeth" concerning it, and to do this I found it necessary not only to visit
+ Holland on several occasions, but to read all the contemporary records. In the light
+ of the information which I thus obtained, I state positively that the world has no
+ record of a more glorious and heroic struggle than that made by the Dutch against all
+ the power of Spain. Well, the Boers are descended from these men and women (for both
+ fought). Also, they include a very large dash of some of the best blood of Europe,
+ namely, that of the Huguenots. For instance, Botha himself is of Huguenot descent. It
+ is impossible for a person like myself, who have that same blood in me, to talk with
+ him for five minutes without becoming aware of his origin. Long before he told me so
+ I knew that he was in part a Frenchman. Men so great are not easily conquered, as we
+ know to our cost. Why, it took quite 250,000 soldiers and three years of strenuous
+ guerrilla warfare to enable Britain to defeat 40,000 or 50,000 Dutch farmers.
+ Therefore I have personally not the least fear of the ultimate result of the campaign
+ against Southwest Africa.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>{128}</span>I went as a
+ lad as Secretary to the Governor of Natal. That was in 1875. Subsequently I
+ accompanied Sir Theophilus Shepstone, one of the greatest men that ever lived in
+ South Africa, on his famous mission to the Transvaal. I am now, I believe, the only
+ survivor of that mission, and certainly the only man who knows all the inner
+ political history of that event. Afterward I held office in the Transvaal, and was in
+ the country during all the disastrous period of the first Boer war. For instance, I
+ dined with Gen. Colley the night before he started on his ill-fated expedition. I
+ think there were thirteen of us present at that historical dinner. Within a few weeks
+ six or eight of these were dead, including Colley himself, killed in the fight of
+ Majuba, of which I heard the guns. Of those present at that dinner party there now
+ survive only Lady Colley, my wife, and myself.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Felt Like Rip Van Winkle.</b></p>
+ <p>After this I left Africa, and more than thirty years went by before I returned as
+ a commissioner in the service of the Crown. It was a very extraordinary experience;
+ indeed, I felt like a new Rip Van Winkle, for nearly all my old chiefs and colleagues
+ were dead, and another generation had arisen. I can only say that I was deeply
+ touched by the reception which I received throughout the country. It was with strange
+ feelings that almost on the very spot where I helped to read the proclamation of
+ annexation of the Transvaal, in 1877, and with my own hands hoisted the British flag
+ over the land, I listened to my health being proposed by the Dutch Chief Justice of
+ the Transvaal territory, once more a part of the British Empire. Such was my greeting
+ everywhere. Three and thirty years before I had left the shores of Africa, believing
+ that soon or late the British power was doomed to failure and probably to extinction
+ there. When I left them again, six months ago, it was with the glad knowledge that,
+ by the united wish of the inhabitants of South Africa, it was re-established, never
+ again to pass away. It is a wonderful thing for a man in his own lifetime to see a
+ country pass through so many vicissitudes, and in the end to appear in the face of
+ the world no longer as England's enemy, but as a constituent part of the great
+ British Empire, one of her best friends and supporters, glorying in her flag, which
+ now floats from Cape Agalhas to the Zambesi, and soon will float over those
+ contingent regions that have been seized by the mailed fist of Germany.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Capt. Mark Haggard's Death in Battle</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The [London] Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: In various papers throughout England has appeared a letter, or part of a
+ letter, written by Private C. Derry of the Second Battalion, Welsh Regiment. It
+ concerns the fall of my much-loved nephew, Capt. Mark Haggard, of the same regiment,
+ on Sept. 13 in the battle of the Aisne.</p>
+ <p>Since this letter has been published and, vivid, pathetic, and pride-inspiring as
+ it is, does not tell all the tale, I have been requested, on behalf of Mark's mother,
+ young widow, and other members of our family, to give the rest of it as it was
+ collected by them from the lips of Lieut. Somerset, who lay wounded by him when he
+ died. Therefore I send this supplementary account to you in the hope that the other
+ journals which have printed the first part of the story will copy it from your
+ columns.</p>
+ <p>It seems that after he had given the order to fix bayonets, as told by Private
+ Derry, my nephew charged the German Maxims at the head of his company, he and his
+ soldier servant outrunning the other men. Arrived at the Maxim in front of him, with
+ the rifle which he was using as Derry describes, he shot and killed <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>{129}</span>the three soldiers who
+ were serving it, and then was seen "fighting and laying out" the Germans with the
+ butt end of his empty gun, "laughing" as he did so, until he fell mortally wounded in
+ the body and was carried away by his servant.</p>
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/hauptmann.jpg"><img src='images/hauptmann_thumb.jpg' width='253'
+ height='400' alt='GERHART HAUPTMANN. See Page 175' title='GERHART HAUPTMANN' /></a>
+ <a href="images/fulda.jpg"><img src='images/fulda_thumb.jpg' width='252'
+ height='400' alt='LUDWIG FULDA. See Page 180' title='LUDWIG FULDA' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>GERHART HAUPTMANN. See <a href="#page175">Page 175</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>LUDWIG FULDA. See <a href="#page180">Page 180</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <p>His patient and heroic end is told by Private Derry, and I imagine that the
+ exhortation to "Stick it, Welsh!" which from time to time he uttered in his agony,
+ will not soon be forgotten in his regiment. Of that end we who mourn him can only say
+ in the simple words of Derry's letter, that he "died as he had lived&mdash;an officer
+ and a gentleman."</p>
+ <p>Perhaps it would not be inappropriate to add as a thought of consolation to those
+ throughout the land who day by day see their loved ones thus devoured by the waste of
+ war, that of a truth these do not vainly die. Not only are they crowned with fame,
+ but by the noble manner of their end they give the lie to Bernhardi and his school,
+ who tell us that we English are an effete and worn-out people, befogged with mean
+ ideals; lost in selfishness and the lust of wealth and comfort. Moreover, the history
+ of these deeds of theirs will surely be as a beacon to those destined to carry on the
+ traditions of our race in that new England which shall arise when the cause of
+ freedom for which we must fight and die has prevailed&mdash;to fall no more.</p>
+ <p>I am, Sir, your obedient servant,</p>
+ <p>H. RIDER HAGGARD.</p>
+ <p>Ditchingham, Norfolk, Oct. 9.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>An Anti-Christian War</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Robert Bridges.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The [London] Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: Since the beginning of this war the meaning of it has in one respect
+ considerably changed, and I hope that our people will see that it is primarily a holy
+ war. It is manifestly a war declared between Christ and the devil.</p>
+ <p>The conduct of the German conscripts has demonstrated that they have been
+ instructed to adopt in full practice the theories of their political philosophers,
+ and that they have heartily consented to do this and freely commit every cruelty that
+ they think will terrorize the people whom they intend to crush. The details of their
+ actions are too beastly to mention.</p>
+ <p>Their philosophers, as I read them, teach openly that the law of love is silly and
+ useless, but that brutal force and cruelty are the useful and proper means of
+ attaining success in all things. Shortly, you are not to do to others as you wish
+ they should do to you, but you should do exactly what you wish they should not do to
+ you; that is, you should cut their throats and seize their property, and then you
+ will get on.</p>
+ <p>As for these enlightened philosophers, their doctrines are plainly an apostasy
+ from the Gospel&mdash;and this they do not scruple to avow; and their tenets are only
+ a recrudescence or reassertion of the barbarism which we hoped we had grown out of;
+ it is all merely damnable. But it seems to me that, judged only as utilitarian
+ policy, it is stupid; and that they blundered in neglecting the moral force (for that
+ is also a force) of the antagonism that they were bound to arouse in all gentle
+ minds, whether simple or cultured. It was stupid of them not to perceive that their
+ hellish principles would shock everything that is most beloved and living in modern
+ thought, both the "humanitarian" tendency of the time and the respect which has grown
+ up for the rights of minorities and nationalities. Now, not to reckon with such
+ things was stupid, unless they can win temporary justification by immediate
+ success.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>{130}</span>What success
+ is possible for those who thus openly outrage humanity remains to be seen; but they
+ cannot be allowed the advantage of any doubt as to what they are about. Those who
+ fight for them will fight for "the devil and all his works"; and those who fight
+ against them will be fighting in the holy cause of humanity and the law of love. If
+ the advocacy of their bad principles and their diabolical conduct do not set the
+ whole world against them, then the world is worse than I think. My belief is that
+ there are yet millions of their own countrymen who have not bowed the knee to Satan,
+ and who will be as much shocked as we are; and that this internal moral disruption
+ will much hamper them. This morning I have a legal notice sent me from a German
+ resident in England announcing that he has changed his name, for shame (I suppose) of
+ his Fatherland.</p>
+ <p>All their apology throughout has been a clumsy tissue of self-contradictory lies,
+ and their occasional hypocrisy has been hastily pretended and ill-conceived. The
+ particular contention against us&mdash;that we were betraying the cause of
+ civilization by supporting the barbarous Slav&mdash;does not come very convincingly
+ from them if their apostle is Nietzsche, while the Russian prophet is Tolstoy.</p>
+ <p>The infernal machine which has been scientifically preparing for the last
+ twenty-five years is now on its wild career like one of Mr. Wells's inventions, and
+ wherever it goes it will leave desolation behind it and put all material progress
+ back for at least half a century. There was never anything in the world worthier of
+ extermination, and it is the plain duty of all civilized nations to unite to drive it
+ back into its home and exterminate it there. I am, &amp;c.,</p>
+ <p>ROBERT BRIDGES.</p>
+ <p>Sept. 1.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>English Artists' Protest</b></h2>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Art lovers in Great Britain have drawn up a protest against the vandalism of
+ German soldiers. Copies of this protest have been sent to the Comte de Lalaing,
+ Belgian Minister in London; the American Ambassador, with a humble request that it
+ may be forwarded to the President of the United States; and Baron Kervyn de
+ Lettenhove, Art Adviser to the Belgian Government. Those who have signed include
+ well-known collectors, Trustees of the British Museum, the National Gallery, the
+ National Portrait Gallery, and the National Galleries of Scotland; the Director and
+ Principal Librarian of the British Museum; the Directors of the National Gallery,
+ the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the National Galleries of Scotland and Ireland;
+ the Keepers of the Wallace Collection and the National Gallery of British Art;
+ Keepers in the British Museum; the Joint Honorary Secretaries of the National Art
+ Collections Fund, and many critics and others prominent in the art world.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The whole civilized world has witnessed with horror the terrible effects of modern
+ warfare on helpless inhabitants of Belgium and France, and on ancient buildings and
+ other works of art which are the abiding monuments of the piety and culture of their
+ ancestors.</p>
+ <p>Some of the acts of the invading German army against buildings may be defensible
+ from the military standpoint; but it seems certain from present information that in
+ some signal instances, notably at Louvain and Rheims, this defense cannot hold good
+ against the mass of evidence to the contrary.</p>
+ <p>The signatories of this protest claim that they are in no sense a partisan body.
+ Their contention in this matter is that the splendid monuments of the arts of the
+ Middle Ages which have been destroyed or damaged are the inheritance of the whole
+ world, and that it is the duty of all civilized communities to endeavor to preserve
+ them for the benefit and instruction of posterity. While France and Belgium are
+ individually the poorer from such wanton destruction, the world at large is no less
+ impoverished.</p>
+ <p>On these grounds, therefore, we desire to express our strong indignation and
+ abhorrence at the gratuitous destruction <span class="pagenum"><a name="page131"
+ id="page131"></a>{131}</span>of ancient buildings that has marked the invasion of
+ Belgium and France by the German Army, and we wish to enter a protest in the
+ strongest terms against the continuance of so barbarous and reckless a policy. That
+ it is the result of a policy, and not of an accident, is shown by the similarity of
+ the fate of Louvain, Malines, Termonde, Senlis, and finally Rheims.</p>
+ <p>Many of us have had the opportunity of showing that our love and respect for art
+ are not bounded by our nationality, but we feel compelled to publish to the world our
+ horror and detestation of the barbarous acts committed by the army that represents a
+ country which has done so much to promote and advance the study of art and its
+ history.</p>
+ <p>The signatories are:</p>
+ DEVONSHIRE.<br />
+ CHOLMONDELEY.<br />
+ LANSDOWNE.<br />
+ FEVERSHAM.<br />
+ MABEL FEVERSHAM.<br />
+ LEICESTER.<br />
+ LONSDALE.<br />
+ NORMANTON.<br />
+ NORTHBROOK.<br />
+ PLYMOUTH.<br />
+ DILLON.<br />
+ ALINGTON.<br />
+ D'ABERNON.<br />
+ ISABEL SOMERSET.<br />
+ FREDERICK L. COOK.<br />
+ AUDLEY D. NEELD.<br />
+ HERBERT RAPHAEL.<br />
+ SIDNEY COLVIN.<br />
+ MARTIN CONWAY.<br />
+ CHARLES HOLROYD.<br />
+ FREDERIC G. KENYON.<br />
+ HUGH LANE.<br />
+ FRANCIS BEAUFORT PALMER.<br />
+ C. HERCULES READ.<br />
+ CECIL HARCOURT SMITH.<br />
+ ISIDORE SPIELMANN.<br />
+ HERBERT B. TREE.<br />
+ WHITWORTH WALLIS.<br />
+ CHARLES AITKEN.<br />
+ OTTO BEIT.<br />
+ MAURICE W. BROCKWELL.<br />
+ A.H. BUTTERY.<br />
+ C.S. CARSTAIRS.<br />
+ JAMES L. CAW.<br />
+ HERBERT COOK.<br />
+ D.H.S. CRANAGE.<br />
+ LIONEL CUST.<br />
+ CAMPBELL DODGSON.<br />
+ CHARLES DOWDESWELL.<br />
+ DAVID ERSKINE.<br />
+ H.A.L. FISHER.<br />
+ J.L. GARVIN.<br />
+ PERCIVAL GASKELL.<br />
+ ALGERNON GRAVES.<br />
+ JAMES GREIG.<br />
+ O. GUTEKUNST.<br />
+ EDWARD HUTTON.<br />
+ G.B. CROFT-LYONS.<br />
+ D.S. MACCOLL.<br />
+ ERIC MACLAGAN.<br />
+ G. MAYER.<br />
+ MORTIMER MENPES.<br />
+ ALMERIC H. PAGET.<br />
+ J.S.R. PHILLIPS.<br />
+ G.N. COUNT PLUNKETT.<br />
+ JANET ROSS.<br />
+ ROBERT ROSS.<br />
+ M.E. SADLER.<br />
+ MARION SPIELMANN.<br />
+ A.J. SULLEY.<br />
+ D. CROAL THOMSON.<br />
+ T. HUMPHRY WARD.<br />
+ W.H. JAMES WEALE.<br />
+ FREDERICK A. WHITE.<br />
+ R.C. WITT.<br />
+
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id="page132"></a>{132}</span><b>To
+ Arms!</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Is it possible that there are still some of our people who do not understand the
+ causes of this war, and are ignorant of the great stakes at issue which will speedily
+ have so important a bearing upon the lives of each and all of them? It is hard to
+ believe it, and yet it is so stated by some who profess to know. Let me try, in the
+ shortest space and in the clearest words that I can command, to lay before them both
+ the causes and the possible effects, and to implore them now, now, at this very
+ moment, before it is too late, to make those efforts and sacrifices which the
+ occasion demands. In Germany, every man from the ages of sixteen to fifty-five is
+ with the colors. The last man has been called up. And yet we hear&mdash;we could not
+ bear to see&mdash;that young athletic men in this country are playing football or
+ cricket, while our streets are full of those who should be in our camps. All our
+ lives have been but a preparation for this supreme moment. All our future lives will
+ be determined by how we bear ourselves in these few months to come. Shame, shame on
+ the man who fails his country in this its hour of need! I would not force him to
+ serve. I could not think that the service of such a man was of any avail. Let the
+ country be served by free men, and let them deal with the coward or the sluggard who
+ flinches.</p>
+ <p>The causes of the war are only of moment to us, at this stage, in that we gain
+ more strength in our arms and more iron in our souls by a knowledge that it is for
+ all that is honorable and sacred for which we fight. What really concerns us is that
+ we are in a fight for our national life, that we must fight through to the end, and
+ that each and all of us must help, in his own fashion, to the last ounce of his
+ strength, that this end may be victory. That is the essence of the situation. It is
+ not words and phrases that we need, but men, men&mdash;and always more men. If words
+ can bring the men then they are of avail. If not they may well wait for the times to
+ mend. But if there is a doubt in the mind of any man as to the justice of his
+ country's quarrel, then even a writer may find work ready to his hand.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Let us cast our minds back upon the events which have led up to this conflict.
+ They may be divided into two separate classes, those which prepared the general
+ situation, and those which caused the special quarrel. Each of these I will treat in
+ its turn.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Teuton Intoxication.</b></p>
+ <p>It is a matter of common knowledge, one which a man must be blind and deaf not to
+ understand, that for many years Germany, intoxicated by her success in war and by her
+ increase of wealth, has regarded the British Empire with eyes of jealousy and hatred.
+ It has never been alleged by those who gave expression to this almost universal
+ national passion that Great Britain had in any way, either historically or
+ commercially, done Germany a mischief. Even our most bitter traducers, when asked to
+ give any definite historical reasons for their dislike, were compelled to put forward
+ such ludicrous excuses as that the British had abandoned the Prussian King in the
+ year 1761, quite oblivious of the fact that the same Prussian King had abandoned his
+ own allies in the same war under far more damaging circumstances, acting up to his
+ own motto that no promises are binding where the vital interests of a State are in
+ question. With all their malevolence they could give no examples of any ill turn done
+ by us until their deliberate policy had forced us into antagonism. On the other hand,
+ a long list of occasions could very easily be compiled on which we had helped them in
+ some <span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id="page133"></a>{133}</span>common
+ cause, from the days of Marlborough to those of Blucher. Until the twentieth century
+ had turned they had no possible cause for political hatred against us. In commerce
+ our record was even more clear. Never in any way had we interfered with that great
+ development of trade which has turned them from one of the poorest to one of the
+ richest of European States. Our markets were open to them untaxed, while our own
+ manufactures paid 20 per cent. in Germany. The markets of India, of Egypt, and of
+ every portion of the empire which had no self-appointed tariff, were as open to
+ German goods as to British ones. Nothing could possibly have been more generous than
+ our commercial treatment. No doubt there was some grumbling when cheap imitations of
+ our own goods were occasionally found to oust the originals from their markets. Such
+ a feeling was but natural and human. But in all matters of commerce, as in all
+ matters political before the dawn of this century, they have no shadow of a grievance
+ against us.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>And yet they hated us with a most bitter hatred, a hatred which long antedates the
+ days when we were compelled to take a definite stand against them. In all sorts of
+ ways this hatred showed itself, in the diatribes of professors, in the pages of
+ books, in the columns of the press. Usually it was a sullen, silent dislike.
+ Sometimes it would flame up suddenly into bitter utterance, as at the time of the
+ unseemly dispute around the deathbed of the Emperor's father, or on the occasion of
+ the Jameson Raid. And yet this bitter antagonism was in no way reciprocated in this
+ country. If a poll had been taken at any time up to the end of the century as to
+ which European country was our natural ally, the vote would have gone overwhelmingly
+ for Germany. "America first and then Germany" would have been the verdict of nine men
+ out of ten. But then occurred two events which steadied the easy-going Briton, and
+ made him look more intently and with a more questioning gaze at his distant cousin
+ over the water. Those two events were the Boer war and the building of the German
+ fleet. The first showed us, to our amazement, the bitter desire which Germany had to
+ do us some mischief, the second made us realize that she was forging a weapon with
+ which that desire might be fulfilled.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Boer War and Germany.</b></p>
+ <p>We are most of us old enough to remember the torrent of calumny and insult which
+ was showered upon us in the day of our temporary distress by the nation to whom we
+ had so often been a friend and an ally. It is true that other nations treated us
+ little better, and yet their treatment hurt us less. The difference as it struck men
+ at the time may be summarized in this passage from a British writer of the
+ period.</p>
+ <p>"But it was very different with Germany," he says. "Again and again in the world's
+ history we have been the friends and the allies of these people. It was so in the
+ days of Marlborough, in those of the Great Frederick, and in those of Napoleon. When
+ we could not help them with men we helped them with money. Our fleet has crushed
+ their enemies. And now, for the first time in history, we have had a chance of seeing
+ who were our friends in Europe, and nowhere have we met more hatred and more slander
+ than from the German press and the German people. Their most respectable journals
+ have not hesitated to represent the British troops&mdash;troops every bit as humane
+ and as highly disciplined as their own&mdash;not only as committing outrages on
+ person and property, but even as murdering women and children.</p>
+ <p>"At first this unexpected phenomenon merely surprised the British people, then it
+ pained them, and finally, after two years of it, it has roused a deep, enduring anger
+ in their minds."</p>
+ <p>He goes on to say: "The continued attacks upon us have left an enduring feeling of
+ resentment, which will not and should not die away in this generation. It is not too
+ much to say that five years ago a complete defeat of Germany in a European war would
+ have certainly <span class="pagenum"><a name="page134"
+ id="page134"></a>{134}</span>caused British intervention. Public sentiment and racial
+ affinity would never have allowed us to see her really go to the wall. And now it is
+ certain that in our lifetime no British guinea and no soldier's life would under any
+ circumstances be spent for such an end. That is one strange result of the Boer war,
+ and in the long run it is possible that it may prove not the least important."</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Such was the prevailing mood of the nation when they perceived Germany, under the
+ lead of her Emperor, following up her expressions of enmity by starting with restless
+ energy to build up a formidable fleet, adding programme to programme, out of all
+ possible proportion to the German commerce to be defended or to the German coastline
+ exposed to attack. Already vainglorious boasts were made that Germany was the
+ successor to Britain upon the seas. "The Admiral of the Atlantic greets the Admiral
+ of the Pacific," said the Kaiser later in a message to the Czar. What was Britain to
+ do under this growing menace? So long as she was isolated the diplomacy of Germany
+ might form some naval coalition against her. She took the steps which were necessary
+ for her own safety, and without forming an alliance she composed her differences with
+ France and Russia and drew closer the friendship which united her with her old rival
+ across the Channel. The first fruit of the new German fleet was the entente cordiale.
+ We had found our enemy. It was necessary that we should find our friends. Thus we
+ were driven into our present combination.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>And now we had to justify our friendship. For the first time we were compelled to
+ openly oppose Germany in the deep and dangerous game of world politics. They wished
+ to see if our understanding was a reality or a sham. Could they drive a wedge between
+ us by showing that we were a fair-weather friend whom any stress would alienate?
+ Twice they tried it, once in 1906 when they bullied France into a conference at
+ Algeciras but found that Britain was firm at her side, and again in 1911 when in a
+ time of profound peace they stirred up trouble by sending a gunboat to Agadir, and
+ pushed matters to the very edge of war. But no threats induced Britain to be false to
+ her mutual insurance with France. Now for the third and most fatal time they have
+ demanded that we forswear ourselves and break our own bond lest a worse thing befall
+ us. Blind and foolish, did they not know by past experience that we would keep our
+ promise given? In their madness they have wrought an irremediable evil to themselves,
+ to us, and to all Europe.</p>
+ <p>I have shown that we have in very truth never injured nor desired to injure
+ Germany in commerce nor have we opposed her politically until her own deliberate
+ actions drove us into the camp of her opponents. But it may well be asked why then
+ did they dislike us, and why did they weave hostile plots against us? It was that, as
+ it seemed to them, and as indeed it actually may have been, we, independently of our
+ own wills, stood between Germany and that world empire of which she dreamed. This was
+ caused by circumstances over which we had no control and which we could not modify if
+ we had wished to do so. Britain, through her maritime power and the energy of her
+ merchants and people, had become a great world power when Germany was still unformed.
+ Thus, when she had grown to her full stature, she found that the choice places of the
+ world and those most fitted for the spread of a transplanted European race were
+ already filled up. It was not a matter which we could help nor could we alter it,
+ since Canada, Australia, and South Africa would not, even if we could be imagined to
+ have wished it, be transferred to German rule. And yet the Germans chafed, and if we
+ can put ourselves in their places we may admit that it was galling that the surplus
+ of their manhood should go to build up the strength of an alien and possibly a rival
+ State. So far we could see their grievance, or, rather their misfortune, since no one
+ was in truth to blame in the matter. Had their needs been openly and reasonably
+ expressed, and had the two States moved in concord in the matter, <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>{135}</span>it is difficult to
+ think that no helpful solution of any kind could have been found.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>As Germans See England.</b></p>
+ <p>But the German method of approaching the problem has never been to ask sympathy
+ and co-operation, but to picture us as a degenerate race from whom anything might be
+ gained by playing upon our imagined weakness and cowardice. A nation which attends
+ quietly to its own sober business must, according to their mediaeval notions, be a
+ nation of decadent poltroons. If we fight our battles by means of free volunteers
+ instead of enforced conscripts then the military spirit must be dead among us.
+ Perhaps, even in this short campaign, they have added this delusion also to the
+ dust-bin of their many errors. But such was their absurd self-deception about the
+ most virile of European races. Did we propose disarmament, then it was not
+ humanitarianism but cowardice that prompted us, and their answer was to enlarge their
+ programme. Did we suggest a navy-building holiday, it was but a cloak for our
+ weakness and an incitement that they should redouble their efforts. Our decay had
+ become a part of their national faith. At first the wish may have been the father to
+ the thought, but soon under the reiterated assertions of their crazy professors the
+ proposition became indisputable. Bernhardi in his book upon the next war cannot
+ conceal the contempt in which he has learned to hold us. Neibuhr long ago had
+ prophesied the coming fall of Britain, and every year was believed to bring it nearer
+ and to make it more certain. To these jaundiced eyes all seemed yellow, when the
+ yellowness lay only in themselves. Our army, our navy, our colonies, all were equally
+ rotten. "Old England, old, indeed, and corrupt, rotten through and through." One blow
+ and the vast sham would fly to pieces, and from those pieces the victor could choose
+ his reward. Listen to Prof. Treitschke, a man who, above all others, has been the
+ evil genius of his country, and has done most to push it toward this abyss: "A thing
+ that is wholly a sham," he cried, in allusion to our empire, "cannot, in this
+ universe of ours, endure forever. It may endure for a day, but its doom is certain."
+ Were ever words more true when applied to the narrow bureaucracy and swaggering
+ Junkerdom of Prussia, the most artificial and ossified sham that ever our days have
+ seen? See which will crack first, our democracy or this, now that both have been
+ plunged into the furnace together. The day of God's testing has come, and we shall
+ see which can best abide it.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Blame Not England's.</b></p>
+ <p>I have tried to show that we are in no way to blame for the hostility which has
+ grown up between us. So far as it had any solid cause at all it has arisen from fixed
+ factors, which could no more be changed by us than the geographical position which
+ has laid us right across their exit to the oceans of the world. That this deeply
+ rooted national sentiment, which forever regarded us as the Carthage to which they
+ were destined to play the part of Rome, would, sooner or later, have brought about
+ war between us, is, in my opinion, beyond all doubt. But it was planned to come at
+ the moment which was least favorable for Britain. "Even English attempts at a
+ rapprochement must not blind us to the real situation," says Bernhardi. "We may, at
+ most, use them to delay the necessary and inevitable war until we may fairly imagine
+ we have some prospect of success." A more shameless sentence was never penned, and
+ one stands marveling which is the more grotesque&mdash;the cynicism of the sentiment
+ or the folly which gave such a warning to the victim. For be it remembered that
+ Bernhardi's words are to be taken very seriously, for they are not the ravings of
+ some Pan-German monomaniac, but the considered views of the foremost military writer
+ of Germany, one who is in touch with those inner circles whose opinions are the
+ springs of national policy. "Our last and greatest reckoning is to be with Great
+ Britain," said the bitter Treitschke. Sooner or later the shock was to come. Germany
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id="page136"></a>{136}</span>sat brooding
+ over the chessboard of the world waiting for the opening which should assure a
+ winning game.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>It was clear that she should take her enemies separately rather than together. If
+ Britain were attacked it was almost certain that France and Russia would stand by her
+ side. But if, on the contrary, the quarrel could be made with these two powers, and
+ especially with Russia, in the first instance, then it was by no means so certain
+ that Great Britain would be drawn into the struggle. Public opinion has to be
+ strongly moved before our country can fight, and public opinion under a Liberal
+ Government might well be divided upon the subject of Russia. Therefore, if the
+ quarrel could be so arranged as to seem to be entirely one between Teuton and Slav
+ there was a good chance that Britain would remain undecided until the swift German
+ sword had done its work. Then, with the grim acquiescence of our deserted allies, the
+ still bloody sword would be turned upon ourselves, and that great final reckoning
+ would have come.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Such was the plan, and fortune favored it. A brutal murder had, not for the first
+ time, put Servia into a position where a State may be blamed for the sins of
+ individuals. An ultimatum was launched so phrased that it was impossible for any
+ State to accept it as it stood and yet remain an independent State. At the first sign
+ of argument or remonstrance the Austrian Army marched upon Belgrade. Russia, which
+ had been already humiliated in 1908 by the forcible annexation of Bosnia, could not
+ possibly submit a second time to the Caudine Forks. She laid her hand upon her sword
+ hilt. Germany sprang to the side of her ally. France ranged herself with Russia. Like
+ a thunderclap the war of the nations had begun.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>So far all had worked well for German plans. Those of the British public who were
+ familiar with the past and could look into the future might be well aware that our
+ interests were firmly bound with those of France, and that if our faggots were not
+ tied together they would assuredly be snapped each in its turn. But the unsavory
+ assassination which had been so cleverly chosen as the starting point of the war
+ bulked large in the eyes of our people, and, setting self-interest to one side, the
+ greater part of the public might well have hesitated to enter into a quarrel where
+ the cause seemed remote and the issues ill-defined. What was it to us if a Slav or a
+ Teuton collected the harbor due of Saloniki! So the question might have presented
+ itself to the average man who in the long run is the ruler of this country and the
+ autocrat of its destinies. In spite of all the wisdom of our statesmen, it is
+ doubtful if on such a quarrel we could have gained that national momentum which might
+ carry us to victory. But at that very moment Germany took a step which removed the
+ last doubt from the most cautious of us and left us in a position where we must
+ either draw our sword or stand forever dishonored and humiliated before the world.
+ The action demanded of us was such a compound of cowardice and treachery that we ask
+ ourselves in dismay what can we ever have done that could make others for one instant
+ imagine us to be capable of so dastardly a course. Yet that it was really supposed
+ that we could do it, and that it was not merely put forward as an excuse for drawing
+ us into war, is shown by the anger and consternation of the Kaiser and his Chancellor
+ when we drew back from what the British Prime Minister had described as "an infamous
+ proposal." One has only to read our Ambassador's description of his interview with
+ the German Chancellor after our decision was announced, "so evidently overcome by the
+ news of our action," to see that through some extraordinary mental aberration the
+ German rulers did actually believe that a vital treaty with Britain's signature upon
+ it could be regarded by this country as a mere "scrap of paper."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Treaty of 1839.</b></p>
+ <p>What was this treaty which it was proposed so lightly to set aside? It was the
+ guarantee of the neutrality of Belgium signed in 1839 (confirmed verbally and in
+ writing by Bismarck in 1870) by <span class="pagenum"><a name="page137"
+ id="page137"></a>{137}</span>Prussia, France, and Britain, each of whom pledged their
+ word to observe and to enforce it. On the strength of it Belgium had relied for her
+ security amid her formidable neighbors. On the strength of it also France had
+ lavished all her defenses upon her eastern frontier, and left her northern exposed to
+ attack. Britain had guaranteed the treaty, and Britain could be relied upon. Now, on
+ the first occasion of testing the value of her word it was supposed that she would
+ regard the treaty as a worthless scrap of paper, and stand by unmoved while the
+ little State which had trusted her was flooded by the armies of the invader. It was
+ unthinkable, and yet the wisest brains of Germany seem to have persuaded themselves
+ that we had sunk to such depths of cowardly indolence that even this might go
+ through. Surely they also have been hypnotized by those foolish dreams of Britain's
+ degeneration, from which they will have so terrible an awakening.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>As a matter of fact the General Staff had got ahead of the diplomatists, and the
+ German columns were already over the border while the point was being debated at
+ Berlin. There was no retreat from the position which had been taken up. "It is to us
+ a vital matter of strategy and is beyond argument," said the German soldier. "It is
+ to us a vital matter of honor and, is beyond argument," answered the British
+ statesman. The die was cast. No compromise was possible. Would Britain keep her word
+ or would she not? That was the sole question at issue. And what answer save one could
+ any Briton give to it? "I do not believe," said our Prime Minister, "that any nation
+ ever entered into a great controversy with a clearer conscience and stronger
+ conviction that it is fighting, not for aggression, not for the maintenance of its
+ own selfish interest, but in defense of principles the maintenance of which is vital
+ to the civilization of the world." So he spoke, and history will indorse his words,
+ for we surely have our quarrel just.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>So much for the events which have led us to war. Now for a moment let us glance at
+ what we may have to hope for, what we may have to fear, and, above all, what we must
+ each of us do that we win through to a lasting peace.</p>
+ <p>What have we to gain if we win? That we have nothing material to gain, no colonies
+ which we covet, no possessions of any sort that we desire, is the final proof that
+ the war has not been provoked by us. No nation would deliberately go out of its way
+ to wage so hazardous and costly a struggle when there is no prize for victory. But
+ one enormous indirect benefit we will gain if we can make Germany a peaceful and
+ harmless State. We will surely break her naval power and take such steps that it
+ shall not be a menace to us any more. It was this naval power, with its rapid
+ increase and the need that we should ever, as Mr. Churchill has so well expressed it,
+ be ready at our average moment to meet an attack at their chosen moment&mdash;it was
+ this which has piled up our war estimates during the last ten years until they have
+ bowed us down. With such enormous sums spent upon ships and guns, great masses of
+ capital were diverted from the ordinary channels of trade, while an even more serious
+ result was that our programmes of social reform had to be curtailed from want of the
+ money which could finance them. Let the menace of that lurking fleet be
+ withdrawn&mdash;the nightmare of those thousand hammers working day and night in
+ forging engines for our destruction&mdash;and our estimates will once again be those
+ of a civilized Christian country, while our vast capital will be turned from measures
+ of self-protection to those of self-improvement. Should our victory be complete,
+ there is little which Germany can yield to us save the removal of that shadow which
+ has darkened us so long. But our children and our children's children will never, if
+ we do our work well now, look across the North Sea with the sombre thoughts which
+ have so long been ours, while their lives will be brightened and elevated by money
+ which we, in our darker days, have had to spend upon our ships and our guns.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page138" id="page138"></a>{138}</span>Consider, on
+ the other hand, what we should suffer if we were to lose. All the troubles of the
+ last ten years would be with us still, but in a greatly exaggerated form. A larger
+ and stronger Germany would dominate Europe and would overshadow our lives. Her coast
+ line would be increased, her ports would face our own, her coaling stations would be
+ in every sea, and her great army, greater then than ever, would be within striking
+ distance of our shores. To avoid sinking forever into the condition of a dependant,
+ we should be compelled to have recourse to rigid compulsory service, and our
+ diminished revenues would be all turned to the needs of self-defense. Such would be
+ the miserable condition in which we should hand on to our children that free and
+ glorious empire which we inherited in all the fullness of its richness and its
+ splendor from those strong fathers who have built it up. What peace of mind, what
+ self-respect could be left for us in the remainder of our lives! The weight of
+ dishonor would lie always upon our hearts. And yet this will be surely our fate and
+ our future if we do not nerve our souls and brace our arms for victory. No regrets
+ will avail, no excuses will help, no after-thoughts can profit us. It is
+ now&mdash;now&mdash;even in these weeks and months that are passing that the final
+ reckoning is being taken, and when once the sum is made up no further effort can
+ change it. What are our lives or our labors, our fortunes or even our families, when
+ compared with the life or death of the great mother of us all? We are but the leaves
+ of the tree. What matter if we flutter down today or tomorrow, so long as the great
+ trunk stands and the burrowing roots are firm. Happy the man who can die with the
+ thought that in this greatest crisis of all he has served his country to the
+ uttermost, but who would bear the thoughts of him who lives on with the memory that
+ he had shirked his duty and failed his country at the moment of her need?</p>
+ <p>There is a settled and assured future if we win. There is darkness and trouble if
+ we lose. But if we take a broader sweep and trace the meanings of this contest as
+ they affect others than ourselves, then ever greater, more glorious are the issues
+ for which we fight. For the whole world stands at a turning point of its history, and
+ one or other of two opposite principles, the rule of the soldier or the rule of the
+ citizen, must now prevail. In this sense we fight for the masses of the German
+ people, as some day they will understand, to free them from that formidable military
+ caste which has used and abused them, spending their bodies in an unjust war and
+ poisoning their minds by every device which could inflame them against those who wish
+ nothing save to live at peace with them. We fight for the strong, deep Germany of
+ old, the Germany of music and of philosophy, against this monstrous modern aberration
+ the Germany of blood and of iron, the Germany from which, instead of the old things
+ of beauty, there come to us only the rant of scolding professors with their final
+ reckonings, their Weltpolitik, and their Godless theories of the Superman who stands
+ above morality and to whom all humanity shall be subservient. Instead of the
+ world-inspiring phrases of a Goethe or a Schiller, what are the words in the last
+ decade which have been quoted across the sea? Are they not always the ever-recurring
+ words of wrath from one ill-balanced man? "Strike them with the mailed fist." "Leave
+ such a name behind you as Attila and his Huns." "Turn your weapons even upon your own
+ flesh and blood at my command." These are the messages which have come from this
+ perversion of a nation's soul.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Mighty Despotism.</b></p>
+ <p>But the matter lies deep. The Hohenzollerns and the Hapsburgs have used their
+ peoples as a great landowner might use the serfs upon his estate. It was, and is,
+ their openly expressed theory that they were in their position by the grace of God,
+ that they owed no reckoning to any man, and that kingdom and folk were committed for
+ better or worse to their charge. Round this theory of the Dark Ages there gathered
+ all the forces <span class="pagenum"><a name="page139"
+ id="page139"></a>{139}</span>of the many courts of the empire, all the nobility who
+ make so huge a class in Germanic countries, all the vast army to whom strict
+ discipline and obedience were the breath of life, all the office-holders of the
+ State, all the purveyors of warlike stores. These and their like were the natural
+ setting to such a central idea. Court influence largely controlled the teaching at
+ school and universities, and so the growing twig could be bent. But all these forces
+ together could not have upheld so dangerous and unnatural a theory had it not been
+ for the influence of a servile press. How that press was managed, how the thoughts of
+ the people could be turned to the right or the left with the same precision as a
+ platoon of grenadiers, has been shown clearly enough in the memoirs of Bismarck.
+ Public opinion was poisoned at its very roots. The average citizen lived in a false
+ atmosphere where everything was distorted to his vision. He saw his Kaiser, not as an
+ essentially weak and impetuous man with a dangerous entourage who were ever at his
+ ear, but as Germany personified, an angel with a flaming sword, beating back envious
+ assailants from the beloved Fatherland. He saw his neighbors not as peaceful nations
+ who had no possible desire to attack him, but on the contrary lived in constant fear
+ of him, but as a band, of envious and truculent conspirators who could only be kept
+ in order by the sudden stamp of the jackboot and the menacing clatter of the sabre.
+ He insensibly imbibed the Nietzsche doctrine that the immorality of the Superman may
+ be as colossal as his strength and that the slave-evangel of Christianity was
+ superseded by a sterner law. Thus, when he saw acts which his reason must have told
+ him were indefensible he was still narcotized by this conception of some new standard
+ of right. He saw his Kaiser at the time of a petty humiliation to Great Britain
+ sending a telegram of congratulation to the man who had inflicted this rebuff. Could
+ that be approved by reason? At a time when all Europe was shuddering over the
+ Armenian massacres he saw this same Kaiser paying a complimentary visit to the Sultan
+ whose hands were still wet with the blood of murdered Christians. Could that be
+ reconciled with what is right? A little later he saw the Kaiser once again pushing
+ himself into Mediterranean politics, where no direct German interest lay, and
+ endeavoring to tangle up the French developments in Northern Africa by provocative
+ personal appearances at Morocco, and, later, by sending a gunboat to intrude upon a
+ scene of action which had already by the Treaty of Algeciras been allotted to France.
+ How could an honest German whose mind was undebauched by a controlled press justify
+ such an interference as that? He is or should be aware that, in annexing Bosnia,
+ Austria was tearing up a treaty without the consent of the other signatories, and
+ that his own country was supporting and probably inciting her ally to this public
+ breach of faith. Could he honestly think that this was right? And, finally, he must
+ know, for his own Chancellor has publicly proclaimed it, that the invasion of Belgium
+ was a breach of international right, and that Germany, or, rather, Prussia, had
+ perjured herself upon the day that the first of her soldiers passed over the
+ frontier. How can he explain all this to himself save on a theory that might is
+ right, that no moral law applies to the Superman, and that so long as one hews one's
+ way through, the rest can matter little? To such a point of degradation have public
+ morals been brought by the infernal teachings of Prussian military philosophy, dating
+ back as far as Frederick II., but intensified by the exhortations of press and
+ professors during our own times. The mind of the average kindly German citizen has
+ been debauched and yet again debauched until it needed just such a world crisis as
+ this to startle him at last from his obsession and to see his position and that of
+ his country in its true relation with humanity and progress.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Final Stakes.</b></p>
+ <p>Thus I say, that for the German who stands outside the ruling classes, our victory
+ would bring a lasting relief, and some hope that in future his destiny should be
+ controlled by his own judg<span class="pagenum"><a name="page140"
+ id="page140"></a>{140}</span>ment and not by the passions or interests of those
+ against whom he has at present no appeal. A system which has brought disaster to
+ Germany and chaos to all Europe can never, one would think, be resumed, and amid the
+ debris of his empire the German may pick up that precious jewel of personal freedom
+ which is above the splendor of foreign conquest. A Hapsburg or a Hohenzollern may
+ find his true place as the servant rather than the master of a nation. But apart from
+ Germany, look at the effects which our victory must have over the whole wide world.
+ Everywhere it will mean the triumph of reasoned democracy, of public debate, of
+ ordered freedom in which every man is an active unit in the system of his own
+ Government, while our defeat would stand for a victory to a priviliged class, the
+ thrusting down of the civilian by the arrogance and intolerance of militarism, and
+ the subjection of all that is human and progressive to all that is cruel, narrow, and
+ reactionary. This is the stake for which we play, and the world will lose or gain as
+ well as we. You may well come, you democratic oversea men of our blood, to rally
+ round us now, for all that you cherish, all that is bred in your very bones, is that
+ for which we fight. And you, lovers of freedom in every land, we claim at least your
+ prayers and your wishes, for if our sword be broken you will be the poorer. But fear
+ not, for our sword will not be broken, nor shall it ever drop from our hands until
+ this matter is forever set in order. If every ally we have upon earth were to go down
+ in blood and ruin, still would we fight through to the appointed end. Defeat shall
+ not daunt us. Inconclusive victory shall not turn us from our purpose. The grind of
+ poverty and the weariness of hopes deferred shall not blunt the edge of our resolve.
+ With God's help we shall go to the end, and when that goal is reached it is our
+ prayer that a new era shall come as our reward, an era in which, by common action of
+ State with State, mutual hatreds and strivings shall be appeased, land shall no
+ longer be estranged from land, and huge armies and fleets will be nightmares of the
+ past. Thus, as ever, the throes of evil may give birth to good. Till then our task
+ stands clear before us&mdash;a task that will ask for all we have in strength and
+ resolution. Have you who read this played your part to the highest? If not, do it
+ now, or stand forever shamed.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Conan Doyle on British Militarism</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Early last year, in the course of some comments which I made upon the slighting
+ remarks about our army by Gen. von Bernhardi, I observed: "It may be noted that Gen.
+ von Bernhardi has a poor opinion of our troops. This need not trouble us. We are what
+ we are, and words will not alter it. From very early days our soldiers have left
+ their mark upon Continental warfare, and we have no reason to think that we have
+ declined from the manhood of our forefathers." Since then he has returned to the
+ attack.</p>
+ <p>With that curious power of coming after deep study to the absolutely diametrically
+ wrong conclusion which the German expert, political or military, appears to possess,
+ he says in his "War of Today": "The English Army, trained more for purposes of show
+ than for modern war," adding in the same sentence a sneer at our "inferior colonial
+ levies."</p>
+ <p>He will have an opportunity of reconsidering his views presently upon the fighting
+ value of our oversea troops, and surely, so far as our own are concerned, he must
+ already be making some interesting notes for his next edition, or, rather, for the
+ learned volume upon "Germany and the Last War," which will, no doubt, come from his
+ pen. He is a man to whom we might well raise a statue, for I am convinced that his
+ frank <span class="pagenum"><a name="page141" id="page141"></a>{141}</span>confession
+ of German policy has been worth at least an army corps to this country. We may
+ address to him John Davidson's lines to his enemy:</p>
+ Unwilling friend, let not your spite abate.<br />
+ Spur us with scorn and strengthen us with hate.<br />
+
+ <p>There is another German gentleman who must be thinking rather furiously. He is a
+ certain Col. Gadke, who appeared officially at Aldershot some years ago, was
+ hospitably entertained, being shown all that he desired to see, and on his return to
+ Berlin published a most deprecatory description of our forces. He found no good thing
+ in them. I have some recollection that Gen. French alluded in a public speech to this
+ critic's remarks, and expressed a modest hope that he and his men would some day have
+ the opportunity of showing how far they were deserved. Well, he has had his
+ opportunity, and Col. Gadke, like so many other Germans, seems to have made a
+ miscalculation.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germans Untried in War.</b></p>
+ <p>An army which has preserved the absurd parade schritt, an exercise which is
+ painful to the bystander, as he feels that it is making fools of brave men, must have
+ a tendency to throw back to earlier types. These Germans have been trained in peace
+ and upon the theory of books. In all that vast host there is hardly a man who has
+ stood at the wrong end of a loaded gun. They live on traditions of close formations,
+ vast cavalry charges, and other things which will not fit into modern warfare. Braver
+ men do not exist, but it is the bravery of men who have been taught to lean upon each
+ other, and not the cold, self-contained, resourceful bravery of the man who has
+ learned to fight for his own hand. The British have had the teachings of two recent
+ campaigns fought with modern weapons&mdash;that of the Tirah and of South Africa. Now
+ that the reserves have joined the colors there are few regiments which have not a
+ fair sprinkling of veterans from these wars in their ranks. The Pathan and the Boer
+ have been their instructors in something more practical than those imperial grand
+ manoeuvres where the all-highest played with his puppets in such a fashion that one
+ of his Generals remarked that the chief practical difficulty of a campaign so
+ conducted would be the disposal of the dead.</p>
+ <p>Boers and Pathans have been hard masters and have given many a slap to their
+ admiring pupils, but the lesson has been learned. It was not show troops, General,
+ who, with two corps, held five of your best day after day from Mons to
+ Compi&egrave;gne. It is no reproach to your valor, but you were up against men who
+ were equally brave and knew a great deal more of the game. This must begin to break
+ upon you, and will surely grow clearer as the days go by. We shall often in the
+ future take the knock as well as give it, but you will not say that we are a slow
+ army if you live to chronicle this war, nor will your imperial master be proud of the
+ adjective which he has demeaned himself in using before his troops had learned their
+ lesson.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The South African Lesson.</b></p>
+ <p>The fact is that the German Army, with all its great traditions, has been
+ petrifying for many years back. They never learned the lesson of South Africa. It was
+ not for want of having it expounded to them, for their military attache&mdash;"'im
+ with the spatchcock on 'is 'elmet,'" as I heard him described by a British
+ orderly&mdash;missed nothing of what occurred, as is evident from their official
+ history of the war. And yet they missed it, and with all those ideas of individual
+ efficiency and elastic independent formation which are the essence of modern
+ soldiering. Their own more liberal thinkers were aware of it. Here are the words
+ which were put into the mouth of G&uuml;ntz, the representative of the younger
+ school, in Beverlein's famous novel:</p>
+ <p>"The organization of the German Army rested upon foundations which had been laid a
+ hundred years ago. Since the great war they had never seriously been put to the
+ proof, and during the last three decades they had only been altered in the most
+ trifling details. In <span class="pagenum"><a name="page142"
+ id="page142"></a>{142}</span>three long decades! And in one of those decades the
+ world at large had advanced as much as in the previous century.</p>
+ <p>"Instead of turning this highly developed intelligence to good account, they bound
+ it hand and foot on the rack of an everlasting drill which could not have been more
+ soullessly mechanical in the days of Frederick. It held them together as an iron hoop
+ holds together a cask, the dry staves of which would fall asunder at the first
+ kick."</p>
+ <p>Lord Roberts has said that if ten points represent the complete soldier, eight
+ should stand for his efficiency as a shot. The German maxim has rather been that
+ eight should stand for his efficiency as a drilled marionette. It has been reckoned
+ that about two hundred books a year appear in Germany upon military affairs, against
+ about twenty in Britain. And yet, after all this expert debate, the essential point
+ of all seems to have been missed&mdash;that in the end everything depends upon the
+ man behind the gun, upon his hitting his opponent and upon his taking cover so as to
+ avoid being hit himself.</p>
+ <p>After all the efforts of the General Staff, the result when shown upon the field
+ of battle has filled our men with a mixture of admiration and contempt&mdash;contempt
+ for the absurd tactics and admiration for the poor devils who struggle on in spite of
+ them. Listen to the voices of the men who are the real experts. Says a Lincolnshire
+ Sergeant: "They were in solid square blocks, and we couldn't help hitting them." Says
+ Private Tait (Second Essex): "Their rifle shooting is rotten. I don't believe they
+ could hit a haystack at 100 yards." "They are rotten shots with their rifles," says
+ an Oldham private. "They advance in close column, and you simply can't help hitting
+ them," writes a Gordon Highlander. "You would have thought it was a big crowd
+ streaming out from a cup tie," says Private Whitaker of the Guards. "It was like a
+ farmer's machine cutting grass," so it seemed to Private Hawkins of the Coldstreams.
+ "No damned good as riflemen," says a Connemara boy. "You couldn't help hitting them.
+ As to their rifle fire, it was useless." "They shoot from the hip, and don't seem to
+ aim at anything in particular."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Not Books That Count.</b></p>
+ <p>These are the opinions of the practical men upon the field of battle. Surely a
+ poor result from the 200 volumes a year and all the weighty labors of the General
+ Staff! "Artillery nearly as good as our own, rifle fire beneath contempt." That is
+ the verdict. How will the well-taught parade schritt avail them when it comes to a
+ stricken field?</p>
+ <p>But let it not seem as if this were meant for disparagement. We should be sinking
+ to the Kaiser's level if we answer his "contemptible little army" by pretending that
+ his own troops are anything but a very formidable and big army. They are formidable
+ in numbers, formidable, too, in their patriotic devotion, in their native courage,
+ and in the possession of such material, such great cannon, aircraft, machine guns,
+ and armored cars as none of the Allies can match. They have every advantage which a
+ nation would be expected to have when it has known that war was a certainty, while
+ others have only treated it as a possibility. There is a minuteness and earnestness
+ of preparation which are only possible for an assured event. But the fact remains,
+ and it will only be brought out more clearly by the Emperor's unchivalrous phrase,
+ that in every arm the British have already shown themselves to be the better troops.
+ Had he the Froissart spirit within him he would rather have said: "You have today a
+ task which is worthy of you. You are faced by an army which has a high repute and a
+ great history. There is real glory to be won today." Had he said this then, win or
+ lose, he would not have needed to be ashamed of his own words&mdash;the words of
+ ungenerous spirit.</p>
+ <p>It is a very strange thing how German critics have taken for granted that the
+ British Army had deteriorated, while the opinion of all those who were in close touch
+ with it was that it was never so good. Even some of the French experts <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page143" id="page143"></a>{143}</span>made the same mistake,
+ and Gen. Bonnat counseled his countrymen not to rely upon it, since "it would take
+ refuge amid its islands at the first reverse." One would think that the cause which
+ makes for its predominance were obvious. Apart from any question of national spirit
+ there is the all-important fact that the men are there of their own free will, an
+ advantage which I trust that we shall never be compelled to surrender. Again, the men
+ are of longer service in every arm, and they have far more opportunities of actual
+ fighting than come to any other force. Finally they are divided into regiments with
+ centuries of military glories streaming from their banners, which carry on a mighty
+ tradition. The very words the Guards, the Rifles, the Connaught Rangers, the Buffs,
+ the Scots Greys, the Gordons, sound like bugle calls. How could an army be anything
+ but dangerous which had such units in its line of battle?"</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>History Repeating Itself</b>.</p>
+ <p>And yet there remains the fact that both enemies and friends are surprised at our
+ efficiency. This is no new phenomenon. Again and again in the course of history the
+ British armies have had to win once more the reputation which had been forgotten.
+ Continentals have always begun by refusing to take them seriously. Napoleon, who had
+ never met them in battle, imagined that their unbroken success was due to some
+ weakness in his Marshals rather than in any excellence of the troops. "At last I have
+ them, these English," he exclaimed as he gazed at the thin, red line at Waterloo. "At
+ last they have me, these English," may have been his thought that evening as he
+ spurred his horse out of the d&eacute;bacle. Foy warned him of the truth. "The
+ British infantry is the devil," said he. "You think so because you were beaten by
+ them," cried Napoleon. Like von Kluck or von Kluck's master, he had something to
+ learn.</p>
+ <p>Why this continual depreciation? It may be that the world pays so much attention
+ to our excellent right arm that it cannot give us credit for having a very
+ serviceable left as well. Or it may be that they take seriously those jeremiads over
+ our decay which are characteristic of our people, and very especially of many of our
+ military thinkers. I have never been able to understand why they should be of so
+ pessimistic a turn of mind, unless it be a sort of exaltation of that grumbling which
+ has always been the privilege of the old soldier. Croker narrates how he met
+ Wellington in his later years, and how the Iron Duke told him that he was glad he was
+ so old, as he would not live to see the dreadful military misfortunes which were
+ about to come to his country. Looking back, we can see no reason for such pessimism
+ as this. Above all, the old soldier can never make any allowance for the latent
+ powers which lie in civilian patriotism and valor. Only a year ago I had a long
+ conversation with a well-known British General, in which he asserted with great
+ warmth that in case of an Anglo-German war with France involved the British public
+ would never allow a trained soldier to leave these islands. He is at the front
+ himself and doing such good work that he has little time for reminiscence, but when
+ he has he must admit that he underrated the nerve of his countrymen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Assurance Beneath Pessimism.</b></p>
+ <p>And yet under the pessimism of such men as he there is a curious contradictory
+ assurance that there are no troops like our own. The late Lord Goschen used to tell a
+ story of a letter that he had from a Captain in the navy at the time when he was
+ First Lord. This Captain's ship was lying alongside a foreign cruiser in some port,
+ and he compared in his report the powers of the two vessels. Lord Goschen said that
+ his heart sank as he read the long catalogue of points in which the British ship was
+ inferior&mdash;guns, armor, speed&mdash;until he came to the postscript, which was:
+ "I think I could take her in twenty minutes."</p>
+ <p>With all the grumbling of our old soldiers, there is always some reservation of
+ the sort at the end of it. Of course, those who are familiar with our ways of getting
+ things done would understand <span class="pagenum"><a name="page144"
+ id="page144"></a>{144}</span>that a good deal of the croaking is a means of getting
+ our little army increased, or at least preventing its being diminished. But whatever
+ the cause, the result has been the impression abroad of a "contemptible little army."
+ Whatever surprise in the shape of 17-inch howitzers or 900-foot Zeppelins the Kaiser
+ may have for us, it is a safe prophecy that it will be a small matter compared to
+ that which Sir John French and his men will be to him.</p>
+ <p>But above all I look forward to the development of our mounted riflemen. This I
+ say in no disparagement of our cavalry, who have done so magnificently. But the
+ mounted rifleman is a peculiarly British product&mdash;British and
+ American&mdash;with a fresh edge upon it from South Africa. I am most curious to see
+ what a division of these fellows will make of the Uhlans. It is good to see that
+ already the old banners are in the wind, Lovat's Horse, Scottish Horse, King Edward's
+ Horse, and the rest. All that cavalry can do will surely be done by our cavalry. But
+ I have always held, and I still very strongly hold, that the mounted rifleman has it
+ in him to alter our whole conception of warfare, as the mounted archer did in his
+ day; and now in this very war will be his first great chance upon a large scale. Ten
+ thousand well-mounted, well-trained riflemen, young officers to lead them, all broad
+ Germany, with its towns, its railways and its magazines before them&mdash;there lies
+ one more surprise for the doctrinaires of Berlin.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Need of Being Merciless</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Maurice Maeterlinck.</h3>
+ <h4>From The London Daily Mail.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>At these moments of tragedy none should be allowed to speak who cannot shoulder a
+ rifle, for the written word seems so monstrously useless and so overwhelmingly
+ trivial in face of this mighty drama that will for a long time and maybe forever free
+ mankind from the scourge of war&mdash;the one scourge among all that cannot be
+ excused and that cannot be explained, since alone among all scourges it issues
+ entirely from the hands of man.</p>
+ <p>But it is while this scourge is upon us&mdash;while we have our being in its very
+ centre&mdash;that we shall do well to weigh the guilt of those who committed this
+ inexpiable crime. It is now, when we are in the awful horror, undergoing and feeling
+ it, that we have the energy and clearsightedness needed to judge it. From the depths
+ of the most fearful injustice justice is best perceived. When the hour shall have
+ come for settling accounts&mdash;it will not be long delayed&mdash;we shall have
+ forgotten much of what we have suffered and a censurable pity will creep over us and
+ cloud our eyes.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Will Seek Sympathy.</b></p>
+ <p>This is the moment, therefore, for us to frame our inexorable resolution. After
+ the final victory, when the enemy is crushed&mdash;as crushed as he will
+ be&mdash;efforts will be made to enlist our sympathy. We shall be told that the
+ unfortunate German people are merely the victims of their monarch and their feudal
+ caste; that no blame attaches to the Germany we know that is so sympathetic and
+ cordial&mdash;the Germany of quaint old houses and open-hearted greetings; the
+ Germany that sits under its lime trees beneath the clear light of the moon&mdash;but
+ only to Prussia, hateful, arrogant Prussia; that homely, peace-loving Bavaria, the
+ genial, hospitable dwellers on the banks of the Rhine, the Silesian and Saxon&mdash;I
+ know not who besides&mdash;have merely obeyed and been compelled to obey orders they
+ detested, but were unable to resist.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id="page145"></a>{145}</span>We are in the
+ face of reality now. Let us look at it well and pronounce our sentence, for this is
+ the moment when we hold the proofs in our hands; when the elements of the crime are
+ hot before us and should out&mdash;the truth that will soon fade from our memory. Let
+ us tell ourselves now therefore that all we shall be told hereafter will be false.
+ Let us unflinchingly adhere to what we decide at this moment when the glare of the
+ horror is on us.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>No Degrees of Guilt.</b></p>
+ <p>It is not true that in this gigantic crime there are innocent and guilty or
+ degrees of guilt. They stand on one level, all who have taken part. The German from
+ the north has no more especial craving for blood than the German from the south has
+ especial tenderness and pity. It is very simple. It is the German from one end of the
+ country to the other who stands revealed as a beast of prey that the firm will of our
+ planet finally repudiates. We have here no wretched slaves dragged along by a tyrant
+ King who alone is responsible. Nations have the Government they deserve, or rather
+ the Government they have is truly no more than a magnified public projection of the
+ private morality and mentality of the nation.</p>
+ <p>If eighty million innocent people merely expose the inherent falseness and
+ superficiality of their innocence&mdash;and it is a monster they maintain at their
+ head who stands for all that is true in their nature, because it is he who represents
+ the eternal aspirations of their race, which lie far deeper than their apparent
+ transient virtues&mdash;let there be no suggestion of error, of intelligent people
+ having been tricked and misled. No nation can be deceived that does not wish to be
+ deceived. It is not intelligence that Germany lacks. In the sphere of intellect such
+ things are not possible, nor in the region of the enlightened, reflecting will. No
+ nation permits herself to be coerced into the one crime man cannot pardon. It is of
+ her own accord she hastens toward it. Her chief has no need to persuade. It is she
+ who urges him on.</p>
+ <p>We have forces here quite different from those on the surface&mdash;forces that
+ are secret, irresistible, profound. It is these we must judge, must crush under heel
+ once for all, for they are the only ones that will not be improved, softened or
+ brought into line by experience, progress, or even the bitterest lesson. They are
+ unalterable, immovable. Their springs lie far beneath hope or influence. They must be
+ destroyed as we destroy a nest of wasps, since we know these never can change into a
+ nest of bees.</p>
+ <p>Even though individually and singly Germans are all innocent and merely led
+ astray, they are none the less guilty in mass. This is the guilt that
+ counts&mdash;that alone is actual and real, because it lays bare underneath their
+ superficial innocence, the subconscious criminality of all. No influence can prevail
+ on the unconscious or subconscious. It never evolves. Let there come a thousand years
+ of civilization, a thousand years of peace, with all possible refinements, art, and
+ education, the German spirit which is its underlying element will remain absolutely
+ the same as today and would declare itself when the opportunity came under the same
+ aspect with the same infamy.</p>
+ <p>Through the whole course of history two distinct will-powers have been noticed
+ that would seem to be the opposing elemental manifestations of the spirit of our
+ globe, one seeking only evil, injustice, tyranny, suffering, the other strives for
+ liberty, right, radiance, joy. These two powers stand once again face to face. Our
+ opportunity is to annihilate the one that comes from below. Let us know how to be
+ pitiless that we have no more need for pity. It is the measures of organic
+ defense&mdash;it is essential that the modern world should stamp out Prussian
+ militarism as it would stamp out a poisonous fungus that for half a century had
+ poisoned its days. The health of our planet is the question. Tomorrow the United
+ States and Europe will have to take measures for the convalescence of the earth.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page146" id="page146"></a>{146}</span><b>Letters
+ to Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia University, has
+ permitted</i> THE NEW YORK TIMES <i>to have the extracts printed herewith from
+ letters sent to him since the beginning of the war by Baron d'Estournelles de
+ Constant, Senator of France, and Member of the International Court at The
+ Hague.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>First Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Aug. 15, 1914.&mdash;* * * Today I am full of grief to feel myself impotent
+ before the murderous conflicts now going on in Belgium and at a number of points on
+ our northern and eastern frontiers, while awaiting the great battles and hecatombs
+ which will follow; my thought is full of these terrible calamities willfully brought
+ about; so many precious lives already wiped out or soon to be; so much avoidable
+ mourning which one neither can nor wishes now to avoid!</p>
+ <p>In France there is not a single family which has not given without hesitation all
+ its children of military age to fight for the repulse of the invader. All the men
+ from Cr&eacute;ans, of ages 20 to 48 years, have gone, with one exception, and he is
+ now going; and meanwhile no work has ceased because of their absence. In all the
+ communes, in all the hamlets of the whole of France, the women, the children, and the
+ men over 48 have assumed all duties, in particular the gathering of the harvests,
+ which I see already finished as in normal times. * * *</p>
+ <p>When one thinks that Servia alone, even though exhausted by two atrocious wars, is
+ sufficient to hold in check imperial Austria; when one sees Italy remain neutral, and
+ in reality hostile to Austria, and Russia open slowly, inexorably, her reservoir of
+ men, resources, and infinite energy on the eastern frontier of Germany, one asks
+ truly if the Pan-Germanists have not been the veritable plague of God for their
+ country; the Fatherland, which men like Goethe, Kant, and Beethoven had made so
+ cultured, so glorious, and which asked only to live and to prosper, the
+ Pan-Germanists have isolated only to deliver it to the execration of the world. It
+ was the same in France formerly, when she ceded to chauvinistic influences.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Second Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 3, 1914.</p>
+ <p>* * * May you never witness such calamities as have fallen upon Europe. The
+ visions of horror, which formerly we evoked in order to terrify the world and to try
+ to conjure them away, are now surpassed; and we are only at the commencement of the
+ war! The trains, thronged with youth and enthusiasm, which I saw leave are now
+ returning crowded with the wounded. They have filled all the hospitals, the barracks
+ which had been left empty, the lyceums, and the schools throughout France. In but a
+ few days they have arrived everywhere in the south, the west and the centre of the
+ country. At La Fl&egrave;che alone we have five improvised hospitals with 1,200 beds.
+ Cr&eacute;ans is a hospital annex, and so it is in all the villages and in the
+ dwellings which can provide one or more beds. The wounded who occupy these beds are
+ happy, very happy. One of them, who has only a broken leg, but who thinks of the
+ thousands of his comrades who remain wounded upon the fields of battle, said to me,
+ "I am in heaven." * * *</p>
+ <p>The worst of all, (I have always said it, but it is even worse than I had
+ thought,) the worst is that each of the combatants, for the most part incapable of
+ cruelty under ordinary conditions, is now devoted to the horrible work of hatred and
+ of reprisal; and even more than the combatants, their children, their orphans, all
+ those who are to remain in mourning. * * *</p>
+ <p>As far as France is concerned, our first reverses have served to exalt the
+ national <span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id="page147"></a>{147}</span>spirit
+ and to fortify the unanimous resolution to conquer or to die. It is important that
+ this be well understood in the United States and that it be given due consideration
+ if it is desired to intervene without irritating the most noble scruples. * * *</p>
+ <p>It is the Prussian military system of domination with its contagion which has done
+ the harm and which ought to disappear, and that system itself is the fruit of
+ Napoleonic imperialism. The struggle is always, and more now than ever, between
+ imperialism and liberty, between force and right. May you in the United States profit
+ by this lesson, so that you may avoid falling into the European error. * * * It is
+ barbarity triumphant. But that triumph will be only momentary, and all agree at the
+ conclusion of this terrible drama on having a United States of Europe with
+ disarmament, or at least with armaments limited to a collective police force.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Third Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 8, 1914.</p>
+ <p>* * * You have comprehended that France is struggling for justice and peace. Be
+ sure that she will resist even to the last man, with the certainty that she is
+ defending not herself alone but also civilization. Never have I suspected to what
+ degree of savagery man can be degraded by unrestrained violence. I had believed that
+ the world could never again see the time of the Massacre of the Innocents; I deceived
+ myself; we have returned to barbarity, and the Prussian Army leaves us no alternative
+ between victory and extermination; should she become mistress of Paris, which I
+ doubt, and of the half of France, she will find the other half which will bury her
+ under its ruins. * * *</p>
+ <p>The English troops march on our roads, stop at Clermont-Cr&eacute;ans! Oh,
+ miracle! I see among my compatriots the worst chauvinists, those who openly desire
+ for me the fate of Jaur&egrave;s, those who fought me in 1902 with cries of "Fashoda"
+ or "Chicago," hasten to meet the English soldiers in order to aid and acclaim them,
+ in this country still full of the memories and the ruins of the hundred years' war!
+ It is because the English troops are also defending the land of liberty, theirs as
+ ours and as yours. Every one except the Prussians comprehend this, and this it is
+ which exalts their souls! * * *</p>
+ <p>The whole misfortune, I repeat, is the result of the crime committed forty-three
+ years ago, the crime which we accepted to avoid recommencing the war. Our resignation
+ has not sufficed; it has not caused the trouble to disappear; the German Government
+ has none the less been obliged to confirm it each day. The misfortune has been the
+ forcible annexation of Alsace-Lorraine. For that the Germans are paying today; for
+ that they will pay until they have made atonement for their fault. In this regard
+ France is irreproachable; she has resisted the chauvinists; our general elections,
+ the conferences of Berne and of Basle, have proved that, far from seeking revenge,
+ she wished by mutual concessions to arrive worthily at reconciliation in peace.</p>
+ <p>The Germans are paying today for their fault of 1870-71, because that fault has
+ corrupted and poisoned them. I have said it a thousand times. In order to keep those
+ two unfortunate provinces under their domination it has been necessary for them to
+ use force, to institute a r&eacute;gime of force. * * * It has been necessary to
+ prevent revolts by repressive measures, as at Saverne, which have disgusted, and even
+ disquieted, the whole world; that ignominious brutality become sovereign mistress, by
+ the force of circumstances, even against the will of the Kaiser and against the
+ protestation of all the &eacute;lite of Germany, of such men as Zorn, F&ouml;rster,
+ Nippold, and Bebel, has ended by being a menace and a danger to Germany itself. All
+ this is connected, and, whatever happens, Germany cannot emerge victorious from a war
+ which is itself but the logical result of the abuse of her victories. She cannot
+ conquer civilization; it is impossible. * * *</p>
+ <p>Comprehend this well, repeat it, publish it if you wish; France, Belgium, and
+ England may suffer check after check; they are prepared for this, they expect it, but
+ they will not be discouraged. The German armies may exhaust themselves <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id="page148"></a>{148}</span>uselessly in killing,
+ burning, and destroying. They will destroy themselves in the end. Our national policy
+ is to take them in their own trap and to wear them out.</p>
+ <p>The day of reckoning is coming, when the inexorable advance of the Slavic race,
+ always increasing in numbers&mdash;it little matters whether it is well or badly
+ organized&mdash;will come from the rear to attack the Germans at the time when they
+ are confident of victory and to drown them in the floods of blood which they have
+ caused to flow; terrible punishment for a war which we and our friends have done
+ everything to prevent. The victims of this punishment will be at least a half million
+ of French, Belgians, and Englishmen, together with a whole nation which desired peace
+ as we did, but which has allowed herself to be misled by a Government mad enough to
+ wish to reconcile the irreconcilable, namely, the maintenance of peace and the spirit
+ of conquest. May this punishment at least begin an era of new peace! Alas! how may we
+ hope for this when we see the human beast awakening in a delirium of fury and getting
+ beyond our control to destroy the masterpieces of human genius.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Fourth Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 11, 1914.</p>
+ <p>The Germans appear to have comprehended that the atrocities which have bitterly
+ aggravated the remorseless violation of Belgian neutrality have only aroused general
+ indignation, and have at the same time exasperated the opposing nations and armies.
+ Contrary to the tales which appear in the sensational journals, which are naturally
+ as eager today to embitter the war as they were formerly to bring it about, I am
+ assured that the German armies in France are repudiating the unworthy excesses of the
+ beginning of the campaign and are respecting life and private property. This will
+ alleviate the horrors of the war, but France nevertheless will place no limit on the
+ sacrifices which she will make. She will wear out the German Army and destroy it, day
+ after day, in continuous battles. * * *</p>
+ <p>The Belgians with us at Clermont-Cr&eacute;ans, instead of being a burden, as I
+ had feared, are making themselves useful. They are very welcome. They are gradually
+ recognized and appreciated as estimable people, and are employed in the homes and
+ farms and fields. We should like to have more of them. How we shall regret them when
+ they leave! * * *</p>
+ <p>The German Emperor must stand either as a pacifist or as a conqueror. He cannot
+ pass as both. All the results which may follow this war could well have been obtained
+ in peace by a general effort of good-will. On the other hand, the legacy of the war
+ will be endless rancor, hatred, reprisal, and savagery. When it shall be understood
+ that, in spite of Governments and Parliaments, the war has been, in large part,
+ excited by the manoeuvres of an international band of the dealers in military
+ supplies and by their all-powerful newspapers, when it shall be thoroughly
+ comprehended that these dealers and these newspapers have played with rumors of war
+ as with a scarecrow, for the purpose of keeping up a general condition of disquiet
+ favorable to their sinister operations, then, too late, alas! there will be a
+ revulsion of public opinion to sustain finally those men, like our friends, who have
+ urged arbitration rather than war, and conciliation rather than arbitration.</p>
+ <p>* * * More than ever our motto, "Pro patria per orbis concordiam," will be that of
+ every good patriot who wishes to develop the internal prosperity of his country
+ through friendly foreign relations. * * * More than a century ago you Americans
+ condemned and executed British imperialism; subsequently Europe condemned and
+ executed Napoleonic imperialism; Europe is now going to condemn and execute Germanic
+ imperialism; profit by this threefold lesson to make an end of imperialism in your
+ country, and by your good example to render to Europe an incalculable service.</p>
+ <p>Such an example will be more efficacious than overhasty or superficial
+ intervention, however well intentioned it might be. Above all, beware of offering
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>{149}</span>aid to Europe in
+ a spirit of opportunism rather than of high principle. Especially, do not try to take
+ advantage of some circumstances in order to urge a lame and ephemeral peace. Public
+ opinion will be bitterly divided if the war is brought to an end merely by lassitude
+ and a desire for comfort. Public opinion will accept only a peace inspired with high
+ ideals, without needless humiliation for the conquered, and equally without sacrifice
+ of any principles which have brought together the anti-German coalition.</p>
+ <p>The war itself, however atrocious it has been and still may be, will have been
+ only a commencement, the beginning of continual wars into which the New World will be
+ drawn, if we do not leave the desire of life and the means of living to Germany,
+ conquered but still alive. It is possible to conquer and to exterminate armies, but
+ it is not possible to exterminate a nation of 70,000,000 people. It will then be
+ necessary to make a place for Germany which will permit the exercise of her fecund
+ activity in the struggle of universal competition. If we yield to the temptation to
+ make an end of German competition, we shall neither end the competition nor shall we
+ end war.</p>
+ <p>For years I have repeated this to our English friends who were intoxicated with
+ the theories of Chamberlain. I see without surprise but with sorrow that serious
+ journals of London and Paris spread before the eyes of their readers the absurd idea
+ that this war will kill the German foreign commerce, while the English and French
+ production will be enriched without a rival, and consequently without effort. Place
+ should be made for Germany from Berlin to Vienna in the organization of a general
+ European confederation which will give full satisfaction to Italy at Trieste, will
+ install the Turkish Government in Asia, will bring about an agreement between the
+ Christian Balkan States, and give the free disposal of their destinies to Poland,
+ Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Rumania, and Alsace-Lorraine.</p>
+ <p>In this manner the worst problems on which general peace depends would be solved,
+ and with these problems that of armaments, which it would no longer be dangerous nor
+ humiliating to reduce if the general reduction, extending even to Japan and seconded
+ by all the republics of the New World, were agreed to by all. Certainly such an
+ agreement would be difficult to develop; it would terrify the diplomats, but outside
+ of such an agreement I see in perspective nothing but perpetual war, internal
+ revolution, and general ruin.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Fifth Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 18, 1914.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>* * * The pride of an empire may not be crushed without a bitter struggle. The
+ German Government has at its disposition the live force of a young and growing
+ people. However, the day is coming when that people, aware that they have been
+ deceived, will be able to repudiate their Government, just as the French people did
+ after Sedan. Meanwhile the German armies have stopped their retreat in order to form
+ a new line of resistance. But to what good? This line will be overthrown, and in the
+ end the German Army will be obliged to retreat in disorder and again to cross the
+ land which it has laid waste.</p>
+ <p>The true difficulties, in my opinion, are going to commence when the conquered
+ Germans must submit to the conditions made by the conquerors. The victors will be
+ able to agree, I believe, to stop the war and to dictate conditions. But will they
+ agree to make these conditions moderate? That is the question. At that moment even
+ France will be far from unanimous, as she has been unanimous in defending herself.
+ France is of one opinion on these principal points:</p>
+ <p>1. Alsace-Lorraine ought to be liberated at last, free to return to France; her
+ rights ought to be respected and recognized. Such liberation should extend as far as
+ possible to every country in Europe whose right has been violated.</p>
+ <p>2. We must make an end of ruinous armed peace, invented, so it was said, to
+ prevent war, but which has made war inevitable. German militarism must be crushed
+ unless it is again to become a menace and give the signal for another <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id="page150"></a>{150}</span>competition of
+ armaments. This peace will be only a truce, a sinister comedy, unless it is crowned
+ by a general convention of disarmament, to which Germany must subscribe with all the
+ others and before all the others.</p>
+ <p>3. Arbitration, conciliation, all the means already provided for amicable
+ adjustment, and if possible for the prevention of international conflicts, should be
+ organized on a more solid and more definite basis than in the past, with the
+ sanction, or at least the maximum of necessary precautions, of a federated Europe.
+ All which we have done at The Hague, far from being lost, will serve as a foundation
+ for the building of a pacific federation.</p>
+ <p>On these three points one may prophesy a unanimity almost complete; but the
+ division will begin when it comes to distinguishing between Germany and the empire,
+ between the German people who have a right to live and the German Empire which
+ opposed the right to live; the division will begin when some demand the humiliation
+ of Germany, others the ruin of her colonies, and of her very life. France, who has
+ defended peace, will, I am sure, also defend justice; but justice will not triumph
+ without difficulty. And it is here that the United States will render great service,
+ if the United States has preserved, as one can see so clearly in the Mexican crisis,
+ her moral authority and disinterestedness.</p>
+ <p>In the cuttings from the American papers which you have sent me I have read with
+ great disquietude an article which says that, after all, the United States "will be
+ the beneficiary of the European war." This article claims that the United States may
+ profit very easily by this war to take away from Germany her commerce in the three
+ Americas, &amp;c. It is a dangerous form of reasoning, which, however, is not
+ new.</p>
+ <p>If war has attracted ardent partisans it is because it appeals to the temperament
+ of many people, it flatters their self-pride, but also it serves their interests. I
+ have never understood it as I do at present. I see, for example, the town of Mons
+ enriching itself through the war; caf&eacute;s, restaurants, the hotels, are unable
+ to accommodate all who come to them; the farmers are seen disputing about their
+ products. There are also the military requisitions by which one can profit in getting
+ rid of an old horse, of a wagon, an automobile, &amp;c.; there are the butchers, the
+ bakers, the dealers in cutlery, &amp;c., who have never had so many purchasers; the
+ furnishers of materials for the hospitals, pharmacists, orthopedists, &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>Add to these an immense number of furnishers of military supplies, not only those
+ who sell cannon, arms, and ammunition, but the accessories, the uniforms, material
+ for the transports, and for the administrative work, &amp;c. They are legion. Add to
+ these all the combatants who have been promised positions as officers, Colonels,
+ Generals. * * * Napoleon I. gave titles and honors. * * * You will understand that
+ after the war, if there is an infinite number of unfortunates who mourn and who are
+ ruined by the war, there are others, on the contrary, who have profited very well,
+ who have enriched themselves and been raised to a privileged, fortunate class, who
+ will find it quite natural to demand war or whose children will demand it later;
+ while the mass of unfortunates, without strength, without resources, without
+ protection, will need years to reconquer in peace the rights which they legally
+ enjoyed before the war, and which the war suddenly took from them.</p>
+ <p>If to this class, more powerful than numerous, of natural partisans of the war in
+ Europe you are going to add the American partisans of the European war, you will
+ commit a grave fault, for the Americans have more than ever everything to gain by
+ peace and all to lose in war, which they will not be able to limit if it breaks out
+ again in the world.</p>
+ <p>The truth is that the Americans evidently gain in the war, but they lose more.
+ Europe is something else to them than a market over which to dispute, she is a
+ reservoir of experiences, good and bad, but of experiences which you cannot do
+ without. To wish for the continuation of the war in Europe or even to take <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id="page151"></a>{151}</span>sides with it as a
+ sort of half evil is for the Americans a crime, a sort of suicide; that would be to
+ applaud the destruction of models which civilization seems to have collected for your
+ edification and for your development. Later, the United States can do without many of
+ these lessons which she learns from Europe, but she will always have need of the
+ inspiration of the masterpieces of our civilization. It is only a barbarous reasoning
+ which allows one to see in the European war profit for the United States; it is a
+ loss, a mourning, a shame for the whole world, and particularly for the free
+ countries which are the guides of other peoples and which can only fulfill their
+ mission in times of peace.</p>
+ <p>I have often heard the profits of war discussed. The undertakers of impressive
+ funeral services can also congratulate themselves over catastrophes. A railroad
+ accident which puts an entire country in mourning can enrich them. The most murderous
+ battles bring profit in the final reckoning to somebody, if it is only to the jackals
+ and the crows; but it is the whole of a country, and for the United States it is the
+ whole world, which must be considered, and the more the whole world prospers the more
+ will the United States find friends, collaborators, and clients. The more the world
+ is troubled, on the contrary, the more commerce and general activities will suffer
+ from it, without mention of the development of instruction and of the progress of
+ human thought, which will be paralyzed.</p>
+ <p>I have been surprised to see a serious American paper bring up these old questions
+ for discussion, and I conclude that we are going to feel in Europe the result of our
+ errors. It is going to be necessary to find money to fill up the financial gulf which
+ we dig each day under our feet without realizing it; a gulf twice made, by the
+ billions which it has been necessary to spend for the war, by the billions of
+ ordinary income which must now go by default. We cannot reasonably expect that
+ Germany will be able to pay all the deficits in France, England, Russia, Belgium, and
+ Japan; she will have no longer her foreign commerce; her misery is going to be
+ frightful; it will be necessary then that each of the adversaries which she has so
+ rashly provoked limit his demands; we must ourselves limit her ruin unless our own
+ credit shall be ruined also.</p>
+ <p>In a word, there are two victories equally difficult for the Allies to win: the
+ first over Germany, the second over themselves. Let us prepare ourselves to the
+ uttermost and with all the authority which we can husband to facilitate the first
+ here, and from your side as well as from ours, the second. To make war there is the
+ first difficulty; but to finish well, that is what makes me anxious for the
+ future.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Sixth Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 24, 1914.</p>
+ <p>In spite of all, unity of purpose is maintained among the Allies as well as among
+ Frenchmen. I say in spite of all, because at Berlin this was hardly believed possible
+ at the beginning of the war.</p>
+ <p>* * * All the men have left Cr&eacute;ans; my farm is empty, and as I told you,
+ the work is accomplished just the same. Means are found to feed the wounded English,
+ becoming more and more numerous, the wounded Belgians and the prisoners. At the mill
+ the miller's wife has four sons and a son-in-law in the army. I went to see her; not
+ a tear, she looked straight before her absorbed in her work and said only "It is
+ necessary." She continues her work as yesterday, as always, only with more energy and
+ seriousness than formerly, with the purpose to accomplish double.</p>
+ <p>Meanwhile in spite of lack of news, we are beginning to learn that many sons,
+ husbands, fathers, and brothers whom we saw go away will never return. Each day a few
+ of the wounded are buried, and so it is in all the communities in the country which
+ are not occupied by the Germans. In every town, village, home, and heart the national
+ tribulations have their local echo.</p>
+ <p>If all France were victim of a catastrophe of nature, an earthquake, a
+ conflagration, or a flood, the country would be crushed; but, no, the contrary is now
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>{152}</span>true, for the
+ present catastrophe has been brought about by an evil will and each one comprehends
+ that this will, if left free to act, will continue to do evil until it has been
+ crushed. We have neither the time nor the wish to complain; we fight. * * *</p>
+ <p>The people, all those who are now devoted to my policy, to our policy, remain more
+ faithful than ever. They keep silent awaiting the end of the war and knowing well
+ that in fact it is not so much a question of Germany as of German reaction, German
+ imperialism, and German militarism. They know also that if the German reaction might
+ have been crushed sooner, the war would not have broken out. Thus, far from being
+ blind, public opinion is alive to the truth. The grandeur, and to speak the whole
+ truth, alas, the beauty of the atrocious war is that it is a war of liberation. * *
+ *</p>
+ <p>It is impossible that the New World should remain a simple spectator before the
+ gigantic struggle which is progressing in Europe. I do not ask that the New World
+ intervene by armed force, but that it shall not conceal its opinion, its aversion for
+ that horror which is called reaction and which truly is only death; that it shall not
+ conceal its indignation for the abominable calculation of that reaction which is
+ incapable of comprehending anything of the life, the work, the science and the art of
+ human genius. I ask that the New World shall not remain skeptical before the senile
+ attacks of those armies which respect nothing, neither women, children, old men,
+ unfortified cities, museums, nor cathedrals. * * *</p>
+ <p>It is impossible that the free United States, born out of the sacred struggle
+ against European domination, enlarged, enriched, and ennobled by that struggle, and
+ now in the front rank among nations as the fruit of that struggle, should hesitate
+ between revolution and reaction, between right and conquest, between peace and
+ war.</p>
+ <p>Americans are too generous to hesitate, too wise, also, for Prussian reaction is
+ cracking and is going to crumble; even Americans of German origin would be acting
+ against their own fatherland if they, by their sympathies, should sustain the
+ r&eacute;gime of caporalism which is now destroying it.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Vital Energies of France</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Henri Bergson.</h3>
+ <h4>From The Bulletin des Armees, Nov. 5, 1914.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The issue of the war is not doubtful: Germany will succumb. Material force and
+ moral force, all that sustains her will end by failing her because she lives on
+ provisions garnered once for all, because she wastes them and will not know how to
+ renew them.</p>
+ <p>Everything has been said about her material resources. She has money, but her
+ credit is sinking, and it is not apparent where she can borrow. She needs nitrates
+ for her explosives, oil for her motors, bread for her sixty-five millions of
+ inhabitants. For all this she has made provision, but the day will come when her
+ granaries will be empty and her reservoirs dry. How will she fill them? War as she
+ practices it consumes a frightful number of her men, and here, too, all
+ revitalization is impossible; no aid will come from without, since an enterprise
+ launched to impose German domination, German "culture," German products, does not and
+ never will interest those who are not Germans. Such is the situation of Germany
+ confronting a France who keeps her credit intact and her ports open, who procures
+ provisions and ammunition according to her need, who reinforces her army with all
+ that her Al<span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>{153}</span>lies
+ bring to her, and who can count&mdash;since her cause is that of humanity
+ itself&mdash;upon the increasingly active sympathy of the civilized world.</p>
+ <p>But it is not merely a question of material force, of visible force. What of the
+ moral force that cannot be seen and that is more important than the other&mdash;which
+ to a certain degree can be supplied&mdash;that is essential, since without it nothing
+ avails?</p>
+ <p>The moral energy of nations, like that of individuals, can only be sustained by
+ some ideal superior to themselves, stronger than they are, to which they can cling
+ with a strong grip when they feel their courage vacillate. Where lies the ideal of
+ contemporary Germany? The time has past when her philosophers proclaimed the
+ inviolability of justice, the eminent dignity of the person, (the individual?), the
+ obligation laid upon nations to respect one another. Germany militarized by Prussia
+ has thrust far from her those noble ideas which came to her formerly for the most
+ part from the France of the eighteenth century and the Revolution. She has made for
+ herself a new soul, or rather, she has docilely accepted that which Bismarck has
+ given her. To that statesman has been attributed the famous phrase: "Might makes
+ right." As a matter of fact Bismarck never said it, because he was unable to
+ distinguish between might and right; in his eyes right was simply that which is
+ desired by the strongest, that which is declared in the law imposed by the victor
+ upon the vanquished. His whole moral philosophy is summed up in that. The Germany of
+ the present knows no other. She also worships brute force. And as she believes
+ herself strongest she is entirely absorbed in adoration of herself. Her energy has
+ its origin in this pride. Her moral force is only the confidence by which her
+ material force inspires her. That is to say, that here also she lives on her
+ reserves, that she has no means of revitalization. Long before England was blockading
+ her coasts she had blockaded herself, morally, by isolating herself from all ideals
+ capable of revivifying her.</p>
+ <p>Therefore she will see her strength and her courage worn out. But the energy of
+ our soldiers is linked to something which cannot be worn out, to an ideal of justice
+ and liberty. Time has no hold on us. To a force nourished only by its own brutality
+ we oppose one that seeks outside of itself, above itself, a principle of life and of
+ renewal. While the former is little by little exhausted, the latter is constantly
+ revived. The former already is tottering, the latter remains unshaken. Be without
+ fear: the one will be destroyed by the other.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>France Through English Eyes</b></h2>
+ <h4>With Rene Bazin's Appreciation.</h4>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Referring to the article printed below, which appeared in The London Times
+ Literary Supplement of Oct. 1, and which the French Government ordered to be read
+ in all Parisian schools, M. Rene Bazin writes in l'Echo de Paris:</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Is not this language admirable? What full and flowing phrases. They are like a
+ ship filled with grain sailing into port with her sails full. Preserve them, these
+ fugitive lines written by a neighbor, and read them to your children. They will teach
+ them the greatness of France and the greatness of England.</p>
+ <p>The whole world recognizes two qualities in the Englishman: his bravery and his
+ common sense. We know that the Englishman is true to his given word, and that even in
+ the antipodes he never changes his habits. As I write, the postman brings me a letter
+ from the front, dated Oct. 17. The cavalryman who sends it tells of our Allies. "We
+ are fighting the enemy's cavalry," he writes, "and for two days my brigade was in
+ action with the British. They know how to fight and they astonish us by their
+ marvelous <span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id="page154"></a>{154}</span>powers
+ of organization and their coolness."</p>
+ <p>Yes, we know that of old. We also know that England never closes her doors to
+ liberty. We have a confused memory of the hospitality given to our priests in the
+ times of the Revolution. Now England provides us with fresh proof of her kindness of
+ heart. You have heard the news&mdash;the professors and students of the Catholic
+ University of Louvain invited to Cambridge. The destroyed Belgian university
+ reconstituted in the home of the celebrated English university. What a magnificent
+ idea!</p>
+ <p>I do not know whether the author who has spoken so well of France in the great
+ English newspaper has ever visited this country. But he has surely meditated on our
+ history and has divined the reason of the very existence of France; why she merits
+ love beyond her frontiers, and why she should be defended "like a treasure." England
+ is not made up of traders, soldiers, sailors, politicians, but also&mdash;and that is
+ what the French people will learn better every day&mdash;of poets, subtle
+ philosophers, and of thoughtful and religious spirits.</p>
+ <p>In truth, the day which Joan of Arc foresaw has arrived. She did not hate the
+ English. It was only their intolerable rule of the kingdom which was hateful to her.
+ The good maid of Lorraine said that after having driven the English out of France she
+ would reconcile them with the French and lead them together in a crusade. This has
+ become true. Her dream is accomplished. The crusade is not against the Saracens, but
+ it is a crusade all the same.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>France through English Eyes</b></h2>
+ <h4>From The London Times Literary Supplement</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Among all the sorrows of this war there is one joy for us in it: that it has made
+ us brothers with the French as no other two nations have ever been brothers before.
+ There has come to us, after ages of conflict, a kind of millennium of friendship; and
+ in that we feel there is a hope for the world that outweighs all our fears, even at
+ the height of the worldwide calamity. There were days and days, during the swift
+ German advance, when we feared that the French armies were no match for the German,
+ that Germany would be conquered on the seas and from her eastern frontier, that after
+ the war France would remain a power only through the support of her Allies. For that
+ fear we must now ask forgiveness; but at least we can plead in excuse that it was
+ unselfish and free from all national vanity. If, in spite of ultimate victory, France
+ had lost her high place among the nations, we should have felt that the victory
+ itself was an irreparable loss for the world. And now we may speak frankly of that
+ fear because, however unfounded it was, it reveals the nature of the friendship
+ between France and England.</p>
+ <p>That is also revealed in the praise which the French have given to our army. There
+ is no people that can praise as they can: for they enjoy praising others as much as
+ some nations enjoy praising themselves, and they lose all the reserve of egotism in
+ the pleasure of praising well. But in this case they have praised so generously
+ because there was a great kindliness behind their praise, because they, like us, feel
+ that this war means a new brotherhood stronger than all the hatreds it may provoke, a
+ brotherhood not only of war but of the peace that is to come after it. That welcome
+ of English soldiers in the villages of France, with food and wine and flowers, is
+ only a foretaste of what is to be in both countries in a happier time. It is what we
+ have desired in the past of silly wrangles and misunderstandings, and now we know
+ that our desire is fulfilled.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"That Sweet Enemy."</b></p>
+ <p>For behind all those misunderstandings, and in spite of the difference of
+ character between us, there was always an understanding which showed itself in <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>{155}</span>the courtesies of
+ Fontenoy and a hundred other battles. When Sir Philip Sidney spoke of France as that
+ sweet enemy, he made a phrase for the English feeling of centuries past and centuries
+ to be. We quarrelled bitterly and long; but it was like a man and woman who know that
+ some day their love will be confessed and are angry with each other for the quarrels
+ that delay the confession. We called each other ridiculous, and knew that we were
+ talking nonsense; indeed, as in all quarrels without real hatred, we made charges
+ against each other that were the opposite of the truth. We said that the French were
+ frivolous; and they said that we were gloomy. Now they see the gayety of our soldiers
+ and we see the deep seriousness of all France at this crisis of her fate. She, of all
+ the nations at war, is fighting with the least help from illusion, with the least
+ sense of glory and romance. To her the German invasion is like a pestilence; to
+ defeat it is merely a necessity of her existence; and in defeating it she is showing
+ the courage of doctors and nurses, that courage which is furthest removed from animal
+ instinct and most secure from panic reaction. There is no sign in France now of the
+ passionate hopes of the revolutionary wars; 1870 is between them and her; she has
+ learned, like no other nation in Europe, the great lesson of defeat, which is not to
+ mix material dreams with spiritual; she has passed beyond illusions, yet her spirit
+ is as high as if it were drunk with all the illusions of Germany.</p>
+ <p>And that is why we admire her as we have never admired a nation before. We
+ ourselves are an old and experienced people, who have, we hope, outlived gaudy and
+ dangerous dreams; but we have not been tested like the French, and we do not know
+ whether we or any other nation could endure the test they have endured. It is not
+ merely that they have survived and kept their strength. It is that they have a kind
+ of strength new to nations, such as we see in beautiful women who have endured great
+ sorrows and outlived all the triumphs and passions of their youth, who smile where
+ once they laughed; and yet they are more beautiful than ever, and seem to live with a
+ purpose that is not only their own, but belongs to the whole of life. So now we feel
+ that France is fighting not merely for her own honor and her own beautiful country,
+ still less for a triumph over an arrogant rival, but for what she means to all the
+ world; and that now she means far more than ever in the past.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Furia Francese.</b></p>
+ <p>This quarrel, as even the Germans confess, was not made by her. She saw it
+ gathering, and she was as quiet as if she hoped to escape war by submission. The
+ chance of revenge was offered as it had never been offered in forty years; yet she
+ did not stir to grasp it. Her enemy gave every provocation, yet she stayed as still
+ as if she were spiritless; and all the while she was the proudest nation on the
+ earth, so proud that she did not need to threaten or boast. Then came the first
+ failure, and she took it as if she had expected nothing better. She had to make war
+ in a manner wholly contrary to her nature and genius, and she made it as if patience,
+ not fire, were the main strength of her soul. Yet behind the new patience the old
+ fire persisted; and the <i>Furia Francese</i> is only waiting for its chance. The
+ Germans believe they have determined all the conditions of modern war, and, indeed of
+ all modern competition between the nations to suit their own national character. It
+ is their age, they think, an age in which the qualities of the old peoples, England
+ and France, are obsolete. They make war, after their own pattern, and we have only to
+ suffer it as long as we can. But France has learned what she needs from Germany so
+ that she may fight the German idea as well as the German armies; and when the German
+ armies were checked before Paris there was an equal check to the German idea. Then
+ the world, which was holding its breath, knew that the old nations, the old faith and
+ mind and conscience of Europe, were still standing fast and that science had not
+ utterly betrayed them all to the new barbarism. Twice before, at Tours and in the
+ Cata<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id="page156"></a>{156}</span>launian
+ fields, there had been such a fight upon the soil of France, and now for the third
+ time it is the heavy fate and the glory of France to be the guardian nation. That is
+ not an accident, for France is still the chief treasury of all that these conscious
+ barbarians would destroy. They knew that while she stands unbroken there is a spirit
+ in her that will make their Kultur seem unlovely to all the world. They know that in
+ her, as in Athens long ago, thought remains passionate and disinterested and free.
+ Their thought is German and exercised for German ends, like their army; but hers can
+ forget France in the universe, and for that reason her armies and ours will fight for
+ it as if the universe were at stake. Many forms has that thought taken, passing
+ through disguises and errors, mocking at itself, mocking at the holiest things; and
+ yet there has always been the holiness of freedom in it. The French blasphemer has
+ never blasphemed against the idea of truth even when he mistook falsehood for it. In
+ the Terror he said there was no God, because he believed there was none, but he never
+ said that France was God so that he might encourage her to conquer the world.
+ Voltaire was an imp of destruction perhaps, but with what a divine lightning of
+ laughter would he have struck the Teutonic Antichrist, and how the everlasting soul
+ of France would have risen in him if he could have seen her most sacred church, the
+ visible sign of her faith and her genius, ruined by the German guns. Was there ever a
+ stupidity so worthy of his scorn as this attempt to bombard the spirit? For, though
+ the temple is ruined, the faith remains; and whatever war the Germans may make upon
+ the glory of the past, it is the glory of the future that France fights for. Whatever
+ wounds she suffers now she is suffering for all mankind; and now, more than ever
+ before in her history, are those words become true which one poet who loved her gave
+ to her in the Litany of Nations crying to the earth:</p>
+ I am she that was thy sign and standard bearer,<br />
+ <span style='margin-left: 2em;'>Thy voice and cry;</span><br />
+ She that washed thee with her blood and left thee fairer,<br />
+ <span style='margin-left: 2em;'>The same am I.</span><br />
+ Are not these the hands that raised thee fallen, and fed thee,<br />
+ <span style='margin-left: 2em;'>These hands defiled?</span><br />
+ Am not I thy tongue that spake, thine eye that led thee,<br />
+ <span style='margin-left: 2em;'>Not I thy child?</span><br />
+
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Soldier of 1914</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Rene Doumic.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>In spite of the great European war, which struck France with the full force
+ of its horrors, the Institute of France, which includes the world-famous French
+ Academy, held its regular session on Oct. 26 last. The feature of this session,
+ widely heralded beforehand, was the address of the celebrated critic, M. Rene
+ Doumic of the Academy, on "The Soldier of 1914." "Every sentence, every word of it,
+ was punctuated with acclamations from the audience," says Le Figaro in its report.
+ Below is a translation of M. Doumic's address:</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The soldier of 1914. We think only of him. We live only for him, just as we live
+ only through him. I have not chosen this subject; it has forced itself upon me. My
+ only regret is that I come here in academician's costume, with its useless sword, to
+ speak to you about those whose uniforms are torn by bullets, whose rifles are black
+ with powder.</p>
+ <p>And I am ashamed, above all, of placing so feeble a voice at the service of so
+ great a cause. But what do words matter, when the most brilliant of them would pale
+ before acts of which each day makes us the witnesses? For these acts we have only
+ words, but let us hope that these, coming from the heart, may bring <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>{157}</span>to those who are
+ fighting for their country somewhere near the frontier the spirit of our gratitude
+ and the fervor of our admiration.</p>
+ <p>Our history is nothing but the history of French valor, so ingenious in adopting
+ new forms and adapting itself each time to the changing conditions of warfare.
+ Soldiers of the King or of the republic, old "grognards" of Napoleon, who always
+ growled yet followed just the same, youngsters who bit their cartridges with childish
+ lips, veterans of fights in Africa, cuirassieurs of Reichshofen, gardes-mobiles of
+ the Loire, all, at the moment of duty and sacrifice, did everything that France
+ expected of her sons.</p>
+ <p>So, too, for this war, the soldier needed has arisen. After so many heroes he has
+ invented a new form of heroism.</p>
+ <p>I say the soldier, for the soldier is what one must say. Here begins what is
+ clearly expressed in one phrase only&mdash;the French miracle. This national union in
+ which all opinions have become fused is merely a reflection of the unity which has
+ been suddenly created in our army.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>When War Broke Out.</b></p>
+ <p>When war broke out it found military France ready and armed; mere troopers,
+ officers none of whom ever thought that he would one day lead his men under fire, and
+ that admirable General Staff which, never allowing itself to be deflected from its
+ purpose, did its work silent and aloof.</p>
+ <p>But there was beside this France another France, the France of civilians,
+ accustomed by long years of peace to disbelieve in war; which, in conjuring up a
+ picture of Europe delivered over to fire and blood, could not conceive that any human
+ being in the world would assume the responsibility for such an act before history.
+ War surprised the employe at his desk, the workman in his workshop, the peasant in
+ his field. It snatched them from the intimacy of their hearths, from the amenities of
+ family life which in France is sweeter than elsewhere. These men were obliged to
+ leave behind beings whom they loved tenderly. For the last time they clasped in their
+ arms the beloved partners of their lives, so deeply moved yet so proud, and their
+ children, the eldest of whom have understood and will never forget. And all of them,
+ artist and artisan, priest and teacher, those who dreamed of revenge and those who
+ dreamed of the fraternity of nations, those of every mind, every profession, every
+ age, as they stepped into their places, were endowed with the soul of the soldier of
+ France, every one of them, and became thus the same soldier.</p>
+ <p>The war which lay in wait for these men, many of whom did not seem made for war,
+ was a war of which nobody had ever seen the like. We have heard tell of wars of
+ giants, of battles of nations, but nobody had ever seen a war extending from the
+ Marne to the Vistula, nor battles with a front of hundreds of kilometers, lasting
+ weeks without respite day or night, fought by millions of men. Never in its worst
+ nightmares had hallucinated imagination conjured up the progress made in the art of
+ mowing down human lives. The German Army, to which the German Nation has never
+ refused anything, either moral support or money, the nerve of war, has been able to
+ profit by all this progress, to reduce to a formula the violence which drives forward
+ the attack, to prepare the spy system which watches over the unarmed foe, to organize
+ even incendiarism, and to become thus, forged by forty-four years of hatred, the most
+ formidable tool of destruction that has ever sown ruin and death.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>German Meets Belgian.</b></p>
+ <p>The Germans arrived, with the irresistible impetus of their masses, with the fury
+ of a tempest, with the roar of thunder, enraged at having been confronted on their
+ road by that little Belgian Nation which has just inscribed its name among the first
+ on the roster of heroism. Already the German chiefs imagined themselves lords of
+ Paris, which they threatened to reduce to ashes&mdash;and which did not tremble.</p>
+ <p>It was to meet this colossus of war that our little soldier marched forth. And he
+ made it fall back.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id="page158"></a>{158}</span>To this new
+ war he brings his old qualities, the qualities of all time. Courage&mdash;let us not
+ speak of that. Can one speak of courage? Just read the short sentences in the army
+ orders.</p>
+ <p>Corporal Voituret of the Second Dragoons, mortally wounded on a reconnoissance,
+ cries: "Vive la France! I die for her! I die happy!" Private Chabannes of the
+ Eighteenth Chasseurs, unhorsed and wounded, replies to the Major who asks him why he
+ had not surrendered: "We Frenchmen never surrender!" And remember those who, mortally
+ wounded, stick to their posts so as to fight to the end with their men, and those
+ wounded men who have but one desire&mdash;every one of us can vouch for this&mdash;to
+ return to the firing line! And that one who, hopelessly mutilated, said to me: "It is
+ not being crippled that hurts me; it is that I shall not be able to see the best part
+ of the thing!" These, and the others, the thousands of others, shall we speak of
+ their courage? &mdash;what would it mean to speak of their courage?</p>
+ <p>And the dash of them!&mdash;the only criticism to which they lay themselves open
+ is that they are too fiery, that they do not wait the right moment for the charge, in
+ order to drive back the enemy at the point of the bayonet. What spirit! What gayety!
+ All the letters from our soldiers are overflowing with cheerfulness. Where, for
+ instance, does that nickname come from applied by them to the enemy&mdash;the
+ "Boches"? It comes from where so many more have come; its author is nobody and
+ everybody; it is the spontaneous product of that Gallic humor which jokes at danger,
+ takes liberities with it.</p>
+ <p>What pride! What sense of honor! Whereas the German officer, posted behind his
+ men, drives them forward like a flock of sheep, revolver in his hand and insults on
+ his lips, we, on our side, hear nothing but those beautiful, those radiant words:
+ "Forward! For your country!"&mdash;the call of the French officer to his children,
+ whom he impels forward by giving them the example, by plunging under fire first,
+ before all of them, at their head.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Password: "Smile!"</b></p>
+ <p>And&mdash;supreme adornment of all&mdash;with what grace they deck their
+ gallantry! A few seconds before being killed by an exploding shell, Col. Doury,
+ ordered to resist to the last gasp, replies: "All right! We will resist. And now,
+ boys, here is the password: Smile!" It is like a flower thrown on the scientific
+ brutality of modern war, that memory of the days when men went to war with lace on
+ their sleeves. There we recognize the French soldier such as we have always known him
+ through fifteen centuries of the history of France.</p>
+ <p>But now we look upon him in a form of which we did not suspect the existence, the
+ form in which he has just revealed himself to us.</p>
+ <p>To go forward is all very well; but to fall back in good order, to understand that
+ a retreat may be a masterpiece of strategy, to find in himself that other kind of
+ courage which consists in not getting discouraged, to be able to wait without getting
+ demoralized, to preserve unshaken the certainty of the final outcome&mdash;in these
+ things lies a virtue which we did not know we possessed: the virtue of patience. It
+ won us our victory of the Marne. One man is its personification today, that great
+ chief, wise and prudent, who spares his men, who makes up his mind not to give battle
+ except in his own time on his own ground, that chief toward whom at this moment the
+ calm and confident eyes of the entire country are turned.</p>
+ <p>To carry a position by assault is one thing. But to stand impassive in a rain of
+ shot, amid exploding shells, amid infernal din and blinding smoke; to fire at an
+ invisible enemy, to dispute foot by foot ground covered with traps, to retake the
+ same village ten times, to burrow into the soil and crouch there, to watch day after
+ day for the moment when the beast at bay ventures from his lair&mdash;where have we
+ acquired the phlegmatic coolness for such things? Has it come from the proximity of
+ our English allies? <span class="pagenum"><a name="page159"
+ id="page159"></a>{159}</span>It is in the English reports that we read the eulogies
+ of our army for its endurance and tenacity.</p>
+ <p>We have always known how to pluck the laurels of the brave on fields of battle and
+ to water them with our blood. We Frenchmen, all of us, are lovers of glory. The
+ stories of war which we read in our childhood days&mdash;captures of redoubts, fiery
+ charges, furious fights around the flag&mdash;made us thrill. And, like the Athenians
+ who left the performance of a tragedy by Aeschylus thirsting to close their books and
+ march on the enemy, we dreamed of combats in which we were to win fame.</p>
+ <p>But since those days military literature has undergone somewhat of a change, and
+ the communiqu&eacute;s which we devour twice a day, hungry for news, give us no such
+ tales of prowess.</p>
+ <p>"On the left wing we have progressed. On the right wing we have repulsed violent
+ counter-attacks. On the front the situation remains without change." Where are our
+ men? What troops are meant? What Generals? Nothing is told of such things. The veil
+ of anonymity shrouds great actions, a barrier of impenetrable mystery protects the
+ secret of the operations.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Great Things Done Simply.</b></p>
+ <p>Our soldiers have endured every hardship, braved every danger, never knowing
+ whether each dawning day was their last, yet the cleverest manoeuvring, the most
+ gallant feats, are obliterated, effaced, lost, in the calculated colorlessness of an
+ enigmatic report. But that sacrifice also have they made. To be at the post assigned
+ to them, to play a great or infinitesimal role in the common work, is the only reward
+ they desire. Can it be that the disease of individualism is a thing of yesterday? The
+ soldier of 1914 has cured us of it. Never have disinterestedness and modesty been
+ pushed so far.</p>
+ <p>Let us say it in a word: Never have great things been done so simply.</p>
+ <p>But he knows why he is fighting. It is not for the ambition of a sovereign or the
+ impatience of his heir, for the arrogance of a caste of country squires or the profit
+ of a firm of merchants. No; he fights for the land where he was born and where his
+ dead sleep; he fights to free his invaded country and give her back her lost
+ provinces, for her past, struck to the heart by the shells that bombarded the
+ Cathedral of Rheims; he fights so that his children may have the right to think,
+ speak, and feel in French, so that there may still be in the world a French race,
+ which the world needs. For this war of destruction is aimed at the destruction of our
+ race, and our race has been moved to its depths. It has risen as one man and
+ assembled together; it has called up from its remotest history all its energy, in
+ order to reincarnate them in the person of him whose duty is to defend the race
+ today; it has inspired in him the valor of the knights of old, the endurance of the
+ laborer bending over his furrow, the modesty of the old masters who made of our
+ cathedrals masterpieces of anonymity, the honesty of the bourgeois, the patience of
+ humble folk, the consciousness of duty which mothers teach to their children, all
+ those virtues which, developed from one generation to another, become a tradition,
+ the tradition of an industrious people, made strong by a long past and made to
+ endure. It is these qualities, all of them together, which we admire in the soldier
+ of 1914, the complete and superb type of the entire race.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Holy Intoxication.</b></p>
+ <p>When it has such an aim, the noblest of all, war is sublime; all who go into it
+ are as if transfigured. It exalts, expands, and purifies souls. On approaching the
+ battlefield a holy intoxication, a holy happiness, takes possession of those for whom
+ has been reserved the supreme joy of braving death for their country. Death is
+ everywhere, but they do not believe in it any more. And when, on certain mornings, to
+ the sound of cannon that mix their rumblings with mystic voices of bells, in the
+ devastated church which cries to the heavens through every breach opened in its
+ walls, the Chaplain <span class="pagenum"><a name="page160"
+ id="page160"></a>{160}</span>blesses the regiment that he will accompany the next
+ minute to the firing line, every head will be bent at the same time and all will feel
+ on their brows the breath of God.</p>
+ <p>Alas! the beauty of the struggle does not hide from me its sadness. How many went
+ away, full of youth and hope, to return no more. How many have fallen already without
+ seeing realized what they so ardently desired; sowers they, who to make the land
+ fertile have watered it with their blood, yet will not see the harvest.</p>
+ <p>But at least their sacrifice will not have been in vain. They have brought
+ reconciliation to their divided country, they have made her become conscious of
+ herself again, they have made her learn enthusiasm once again. They have not seen
+ victory, but they have merited it. Honor to them, struck down first, and glory to
+ those who will avenge them! We enfold them both in our devotion to the same sacred
+ cause.</p>
+ <p>Would that a new era might dawn, thanks to them, that a new world might be born in
+ which we might breathe more freely, where injustices centuries old might be made
+ good, where France, arising from long humiliation, might resume her rank and destiny.
+ Then, in that cured, vivified France, what an awakening, what a renewal, what a sap,
+ what a magnificent flowering there would be! This will be thy work, soldier of 1914!
+ To you we shall owe this resurrection of our beloved country. And later on, and
+ always, in everything beautiful and good that may be done among us, in the creations
+ of our poets and the discoveries of our savants, in the thousand forms of national
+ activity, in the strength of our young men and the grace of our young women, in all
+ that will be the France of tomorrow, there will be, soldier so brave and so simple in
+ your greatness, a little of your heroic soul!</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Germany's Civilized Barbarism</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Emile Boutroux.</h3>
+ <h4>From the Revue des Deux Mondes.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>I sincerely thank M. Emile Boutroux for the letter he has been good enough to
+ write to me; and the readers of the Revue will join me, for it is addressed to them
+ also. No one could speak of Germany more authoritatively than M. Boutroux; no one,
+ indeed, is better acquainted with the Germany of yesterday and that of today, or
+ better equipped to draw a comparison between them, which for the Prussianized Germany
+ of the present is a verdict and a condemnation. The violence, brutality, barbarism
+ which she displays&mdash;a frightful spectacle&mdash;doubtless spring from the
+ deepest instincts of race; but man always feels the need of justifying his conduct,
+ and the Germans are too much philosophers not to seek justification for theirs in a
+ scientific system in which these doctrinaires of a new sort are encouraged to
+ persevere without the least scruple or pity. M. Boutroux explains to us the
+ detestable sophism which has perverted the entire German soul and made of a nation
+ which our grandfathers loved and admired, a monster whose implacable egotism weighs
+ heavily on the world. But let M. Boutroux speak.</p>
+ <p>FRANCIS CHARMES.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <br />
+
+ <p>PARIS, 28 September, 1914.</p>
+ <p>To the Director of the Revue des Deux Mondes:</p>
+ <p>Mr. Director and Dear Colleague: You have done me the honor to ask me, as I have
+ lived in Germany and studied in part German philosophy and literature, whether I was
+ not prepared to submit some observations touching the present war. I confess that at
+ this moment words, and even thoughts, seem to me to amount to little. Like every
+ French<span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>{161}</span>man, I am
+ given up wholly to the task of the hour; all my interest is in our generous and
+ admirable army, and my sole concern is to take part, however modestly, in the work of
+ the nation. True, a thousand memories and reflections crowd my mind; the notion of
+ pausing to express them in writing had not occurred to me, but it would be ungracious
+ in me to decline your kind invitation. Please omit from the ideas I throw on paper
+ whatever seems to you to be lacking in interest.</p>
+ <center>
+ <br />
+ <a href="images/harrison.jpg"><img src='images/harrison_thumb.jpg' width='254'
+ height='400' alt='FREDERIC HARRISON. See Page 192' title='FREDERIC HARRISON' /></a>
+ <a href="images/guyot.jpg"><img src='images/guyot_thumb.jpg' width='249'
+ height='400' alt='YVES GUYOT. See Page 194' title='YVES GUYOT' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>FREDERIC HARRISON. See <a href="#page192">Page 192</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>YVES GUYOT. See Page <a href="#page194">194</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Mephistopheles Appears.</b></p>
+ <p>In the presence of such events as are passing before our eyes, how can we keep our
+ minds free? We have to say to ourselves: "See what has come of that philosophic,
+ artistic, scientific development whose grandeur and idealistic character all the
+ world has proclaimed!" "That is what the infernal cur had in his belly," said Faust
+ as he saw the dog which was playing at his side change into Mephistopheles. What!
+ Having declared the morality of Plato and Aristotle inadequate and mediocre, having
+ preached duty for duty's sake, having established the unconditioned supremacy of
+ moral worth, the royalty of the intellect, to end by officially declaring that a
+ signed engagement is but a scrap of paper, and that juridic or moral laws do not
+ count if they incommode us and if we are the strongest! Having given to the world
+ marvelous music, in which the purest and deepest aspirations seem to be heard; having
+ raised art and poetry to a sort of religion, in which man communes with the Eternal
+ by the worship of the ideal; having exalted the universities as the most sublime of
+ human creations, temples of science and of intellectual freedom, to come to
+ bombarding Louvain, Malines, and the Cathedral of Rheims! Having assumed the role of
+ representative par excellence of culture, of civilization in its loftiest form, at
+ the end to aim at the subjugation of the world and to strive toward that aim by the
+ methodical letting loose of brute force, wickedness, and barbarism! To boast of
+ having attained the highest plane of human nature, and to reveal themselves as
+ survivors of the Huns and Vandals!</p>
+ <p>Only yesterday Germany was feared throughout the world because of her power, but
+ esteemed for her science and her heritage of idealism. Today, on the contrary, there
+ is a common cry of reprobation and horror raised against her from one end of the
+ earth to the other. Fear is overcome by indignation. On every side it is asserted
+ that the victory of German imperialism and militarism would be the triumph of
+ despotism, brutality, and barbarism. These ideas are expressed to us by Americans of
+ the North and South, by Spaniards, Italians, Greeks, Swiss, and Rumanians. The nation
+ which burned the University of Louvain and the Cathedral of Rheims has brought
+ dishonor upon itself.</p>
+ <p>What shall we think of the prodigious contrast which manifests itself between the
+ high culture of Germany and the end at which she aims, the means which she employs in
+ the present war? Is it enough to explain this contrast, to allege that in spite of
+ all their science the Germans are but slightly civilized, that in the sixteenth
+ century they were still boorish and uncultivated and that their science, an affair of
+ specialists and pundits, has never penetrated their soul or influenced their
+ character?</p>
+ <p>This explanation is justified. Consider the German professor in the beer garden,
+ in the relations of everyday life, in his amusements. With certain notable exceptions
+ he excels only in discovering and collecting materials for study and in drawing from
+ them, by mechanical operations, solutions that rest wholly upon text and argument and
+ make no appeal whatever to ordinary judgment and good sense. What a disproportion
+ often between his science and his real education. What vulgarity of tastes and
+ sentiments and language. What brutality of methods on the part of this man whose
+ authority is indisputable in his specialty. Take this learned man from his university
+ chair, place him on that scene of war where force can alone reign and where the gross
+ appetites are un<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162"
+ id="page162"></a>{162}</span>chained, it is not surprising that his conduct
+ approaches that of savages.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Culture of Violence.</b></p>
+ <p>That is the current judgment and not without reason. The savant and the man, among
+ the Germans, are only too often strangers to each other. The German in war is inhuman
+ not merely because of an explosion of his true nature, gross and violent, but by
+ order. His brutality is calculated and systematized. It justifies the words of La
+ Harpe, "There is such a thing as a scientific barbarity." In 1900 the German Emperor
+ haranguing his soldiers about to set sail for China, exhorted them to leave nothing
+ living in their path and to bear themselves like Huns.</p>
+ <p>If, then, in this war, in the manner in which they have prepared and provoked it
+ and now conduct it, they violate without scruple the laws of the civilized world, it
+ is not despite their superior culture, it is in consequence of that very culture.
+ They are barbarous because they are more civilized. How can such a combination of
+ contradictory elements, such a synthesis, be possible?</p>
+ <p>Fichte in the famous discourses to the German Nation which he delivered at the
+ University of Berlin during the Winter of 1807 and 1808, had one object: to arouse
+ the German Nation by kindling its self-consciousness, that is to say, its pure
+ Germanic essence, <i>Deutschheit</i>, in order to realize that essence when possible
+ beyond its borders and to make it dominate the world. The general idea which must
+ guide Germany in the accomplishment of this double task is: Germany is to all the
+ rest of the world as good is to evil.</p>
+ <p>The appeal of Fichte was heard. During the century which followed, Germany in the
+ most precise and practical manner, on the one hand built up the theory of Germanism
+ or <i>Deutschtum</i>, on the other hand prepared the domination of Germanism in the
+ world. This notion of Germanism furnishes, if I am not mistaken, the principle of the
+ inference which I wish to indicate, the explanation of the surprising solidarity
+ which Germans have created between culture and barbarism.</p>
+ <p>It would be interesting to probe this notion and follow its development.</p>
+ <p>In the first place how can a people come to claim for its ideas, its virtue, its
+ achievements, not only the right to exist and to be respected by other people, but
+ the privilege of being the sole expression of the true and the good while everything
+ which emanates from other peoples represents nothing but error and evil?</p>
+ <p>The philosopher Fichte after having built up his system under the influence of
+ Kant and of French ideas, notably under the influence of Rousseau&mdash;of whom he
+ said "peace to his ashes, for he has done things"&mdash;could think of nothing better
+ to reinforce the German soul after Jena than to persuade it that in itself and itself
+ alone there was to be found the sense of the ideal combined with power to realize
+ that ideal in the world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Power to Realize.</b></p>
+ <p>Starting from a certain notion of the absolute he found after Jena that this very
+ notion constituted the foundation of the German genius. Soon this mystic method was
+ merged in a more concrete method better adapted to the positive spirit of modern
+ generations. The one science where all knowledge and ideas which concern human life
+ are concentrated is history. To this science our epoch has devoted a veritable
+ worship. Now the Germans have drawn from history two lessons of the highest
+ importance. One is that history is not only the succession of events, which mark the
+ life of humanity, it is the judgment of God upon the rivalries of peoples. Everything
+ which is wishes to be, and to endure, struggle, and impose itself. History tells us
+ which are the men and the things Providence has elected. The sign of that election is
+ success. To subsist, grow, conquer, dominate is to prove that one is the confidant of
+ the thought of Providence, the dispenser of the power of Providence. If one people
+ appears designated by history to dominate the others then that people is the
+ vicegerent <span class="pagenum"><a name="page163" id="page163"></a>{163}</span>of
+ God upon earth, is God Himself, visible and tangible for His creatures.</p>
+ <p>The second lesson which German erudition has drawn from the study of history is
+ that the actual existence of a people charged with representing God is not a myth,
+ that such a people exists and that the German people is that people. From the victory
+ of Hermann (Arminius) over Varus in the forest of Teutoburg in the year 9 A.D., the
+ will of God is evident. The Middle Ages show it, and if in modern times Germany has
+ appeared to efface herself it is because she was reposing to collect her force and
+ strike more heavily. When she was not obviously the first, she was so virtually. It
+ was in 1844 that Hoffmann von Fallersleben composed the national song, <i>Deutschland
+ &uuml;ber alles, &uuml;ber alles in der Welt</i>. Germany over all, Germany over all
+ the world, Germany extending from the Meuse to the Niemen, from the Adige to the
+ Belt.</p>
+ <p>Not only is Germany the elect of Providence but the sole elect, and other nations
+ are rejected. The sign of her election is the annihilation of the three legions of
+ Quinctilius Varus, and her eternal task is to revenge herself for the insolence of
+ the Roman General. "We shall give battle to Hermann and we shall avenge ourselves,
+ "<i>und wollen Rache haben</i>." Thus ran the celebrated national song. <i>Der Gott,
+ der Eisen wachsen liess</i>.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germanism and God.</b></p>
+ <p>German civilization has developed in antagonism with the Greco-Roman civilization.
+ To adopt the former was on the part of God to reject the latter. Therefore German
+ consciousness, realized without hindrance in all its force, is but the Divine
+ consciousness. <i>Deutschtum</i> = God and God = <i>Deutschtum</i>. In practice it is
+ enough that an idea is authentically German in order that we may and must conclude
+ that it is true, that it is just, and that it ought to prevail.</p>
+ <p>What are the essential dogmas of this truth, which is German because it is true
+ and which is true because it is German? German metaphysicians explain that to us more
+ clearly than is usual by thought. The first quality of this truth is that it is in
+ opposition to what classic or Greco-Latin thought would recognize as true. The latter
+ has sought to discover what in man is essentially human, to render man superior to
+ other beings, and to substitute more and more the superior elements for the inferior
+ elements in human life&mdash;reason for blind impulse, justice for force, good for
+ wickedness. It has undertaken to create in the world a moral force capable of
+ controlling and humanizing material forces. To this doctrine, which rests upon man as
+ its centre and which was essentially human, German thought opposes itself as the
+ infinite opposes the finite, the absolute the relative, the whole the part. The
+ disciples of the Greeks had at their disposition no light except that of human
+ reason; the German genius possesses a transcendent reason which pierces the mysteries
+ of the absolute, of the Divine. What would light be without the shadow from which it
+ is detached? How could the ego exist if there was not somewhere a non ego to which it
+ is opposed? Evil is not less indispensable than good in the transcendent symphony of
+ the whole.</p>
+ <p>There is something more. It may be a satisfaction for a Greco-Latin, impelled by
+ his mediocre logic to say that good is good, evil is evil, but these simple formulas
+ are contrary to the truth per se. Good by itself is absolutely impotent to realize
+ itself. It is only an idea, an abstraction. The power and faculty of creation belong
+ to evil alone. So that if good is to be realized it can only be by means of evil, and
+ by means of evil left entirely to itself. God could not exist if He were not created
+ by the devil, and thus, in a sense, evil is good and good is bad. Evil is good
+ because it creates. Good is bad because it is impotent. The supreme and true divine
+ law is just this: That evil left to itself, evil as evil, gives birth to good, which,
+ by itself, would never be able to advance from the ideal to the real. "I am," said
+ Mephistopheles, "part of that force which always wishes evil and always creates the
+ good." Such is the divine order. He who undertakes to do good by good will only do
+ evil. It is only in unchaining the power of evil <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page164" id="page164"></a>{164}</span>that one has a chance to realize any
+ good.</p>
+ <p>From these metaphysical principles questions raised by the idea of civilization
+ receive most remarkable solutions.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Essence of Civilization.</b></p>
+ <p>What is civilization in the German and true sense of the word?</p>
+ <p>Nations in general, especially the Latin nations, put the essence of civilization
+ in the moral element of human life, in the softening of human manners. To those who
+ understand human culture in this way the Germans will apply the words of Ibsen's
+ Brand, "You wish to do great things but you lack energy. You expect success from
+ mildness and goodness." According to the German thought, mildness and goodness are
+ only weakness and impotence. Force alone is strong and force <i>par excellence</i> is
+ science, which puts at our disposal the powers of nature and indefinitely multiplies
+ our strength. Science, then, should be the principal object of our efforts. From
+ science and from the culture of scientific intelligence there will necessarily
+ result, by the effect of Divine grace, the progress of the will and of the conscience
+ which is called moral progress. It is in this sense that Bismarck said, "Imagination
+ and sentiment are to science and intelligence what the tares are to the wheat. The
+ tares threaten to stifle the wheat; that is why they are cut down and burned." True
+ civilization is a virile education, aiming at force and implying force. A
+ civilization which under pretext of humanity and of courtesy enervates and softens
+ man is fit only for women and for slaves.</p>
+ <p>Is that to say that the notion of right which men invoke against force has in
+ reality no meaning, and that a highly civilized people would disregard it? We must
+ clearly understand the relation which exists between the notion of right and the
+ notion of force. Force is not the right. All existing forces do not have an equal
+ right to exist; mediocre forces in reality have but a feeble share in the Divine
+ force; but in proportion as a force becomes greater it is more noble. A universally
+ victorious and all-powerful force would be identical with Divine force and should,
+ therefore, be obeyed and honored in the same degree. Justice and force, moreover,
+ belong to two different worlds&mdash;the natural and the spiritual. The former is the
+ phenomenon and symbol of the latter. We live in a world of symbols; and so
+ preponderant force is for us the visible and practical equivalent of right.</p>
+ <p>It is, then, puerile to admit the existence of a natural right inherent in
+ individuals or in nations, and manifested in their aspirations, their powers, their
+ sympathies, their wills. The right of peoples should be determined by a purely
+ objective method.</p>
+ <p>Now in this sense people should be divided into <i>Naturv&ouml;lker</i>,
+ <i>Halbkulturv&ouml;lker</i>, and <i>Kulturv&ouml;lker</i>&mdash;people in the state
+ of nature, half-cultivated people, and cultivated people. This is not all. There are
+ people who are simply cultivated&mdash;<i>Naturv&ouml;lker</i>&mdash;and people who
+ are wholly cultivated&mdash;<i>Vollkulturv&ouml;lker</i>. Now the degree of right
+ depends on the degree of culture. As compared with the <i>Kulturv&ouml;lker</i> the
+ <i>Naturv&ouml;lker</i> have no rights. They have only duties&mdash;submission,
+ docility, obedience. And if there exists a people which deserves more than all others
+ the title of <i>Vollkulturv&ouml;lker</i>&mdash;completely cultured people&mdash;to
+ this people the earth belongs and the supremacy thereof. Its mission is to bend all
+ other peoples beneath the yoke of its omnipotence co-ordinated with its supreme
+ culture.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Master Nation.</b></p>
+ <p>Such is the idea of the master nation. This nation must not be simply an abstract
+ type, it must necessarily be able to realize itself in our world. In effect the
+ spirit is the supreme form of being; it necessarily wishes to be; and as it is
+ infinite, it can be realized only by means of an infinite force. A nation capable of
+ imposing its will upon everybody is the necessary instrument of the Divine will which
+ can grant the prayer: "Our Father, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it
+ is done in heaven."</p>
+ <p>As a master nation is necessary in the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page165"
+ id="page165"></a>{165}</span>world there must be subordinate nations. There can be no
+ efficient "yes" without a decided "no." The ego, says Fichte, is effort. Therefore it
+ presupposes something that resists it, namely, that which we call matter. The master
+ nation commands. Therefore nations must exist who are made to obey it. It is needful
+ even that these nations, which are to the master nation what the non ego is to the
+ ego, should resist the action of this superior nation. For this resistance is
+ necessary to enable the latter to develop and employ its force and to become fully
+ itself; that is, to become the whole, enriching itself by the spoils of its
+ enemies.</p>
+ <p>The ideal nation is thus defined by a transcendental deduction, and this same
+ deduction leads us to affirm that the master nation must be not merely an idea but a
+ reality. Now, it is plain that this realization of the ideal nation is going on under
+ our eyes in the German Nation, which represents the highest created race and which
+ surpasses all other nations in science and in power. It is to her, and to her alone,
+ that the task of accomplishing the will of God upon earth is consigned.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Means of Success.</b></p>
+ <p>To succeed in it, what means must she employ?</p>
+ <p>In the first place she must acquire complete consciousness of her superiority and
+ of her own genius. Nothing German is found in the same degree of excellence in other
+ nations. German women, German fidelity, German wine, the German song, hold the first
+ rank in the world. To combat Satan, that is to say, enemies of Germany, the Germans
+ have at their service the ancient god, the German god, <i>der alte, der deutsche
+ Gott</i>, who identifies His cause with theirs. And as everything which is German is
+ by that very fact unique and inimitable, so it is correspondingly true that
+ everything which the world has of excellence belongs to Germany in fact and in right.
+ Rembrandt, Shakespeare, Ibsen, are Germans. A German brain alone could understand
+ them and has a right to admire them. It is doubtful if even Joan of Arc, that sublime
+ heroine, is French. German savants have maintained her German nationality. If the
+ people of Alsace and Lorraine are faithful to France that only proves that they ought
+ to be German subjects, because fidelity is a German virtue.</p>
+ <p>As Germany possesses, in principle, all the virtues, all the perfections, she
+ suffices to herself and can learn nothing from other people. By still stronger reason
+ she owes them no duty of respect or good-will. What is called humanity has no meaning
+ for the German. The <i>mot</i> of William II., "Humanity for me stops at the Vosges,"
+ is not merely an instance of national egoism. The German Emperor feels that what is
+ for the present beyond his empire can only acquire value when it shall be annexed to
+ it.</p>
+ <p>How, then, ought Germany to behave to other nations?</p>
+ <p>There are people who wish to be loved, who believe that among nations as between
+ individuals, courtesy may have a place and that it would be an advance for humanity
+ to admit that justice and equity may rule international relations. But Germany, as
+ regards other nations, makes no account of justice. She has nothing but scorn for
+ that feminine sentiment which particularly characterizes the Latin races. The
+ sentiment of justice and humanity is weakness and Germany is and ought to be force.
+ <i>Wo Preussens Macht in Frage kommt, kenne ich kein Gesetz,</i> said
+ Bismarck&mdash;"When the power of Prussia is in question I know no law."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Enemies Most Welcome.</b></p>
+ <p>The German does not ask to be loved. He prefers to be hated provided he is feared.
+ <i>Oderint, dum metuant</i>. He does not mind being surrounded by enemies. He knows
+ with satisfaction that in the very heart of the empire certain annexed provinces
+ constantly protest against the violence which has been done to them. The ego cannot
+ work without opposition. The German needs enemies to keep himself in that state of
+ tension and of struggle which is the condition of vigor. He willingly applies to
+ himself what the Lord God said of man in general in the prologue of Goethe's
+ "Faust":</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id="page166"></a>{166}</span>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>Man's activity has only too great a propensity to relax. Left by himself man
+ seeks repose. That is why I give him a devil for a companion. He will excite him
+ and keep him from getting sleepy.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Germany has a certain satisfaction in recognizing in the neighbors whom she
+ menaces, in the subjects whom she oppresses, these providential devils whose mischief
+ will stimulate her activity and her virtue.</p>
+ <p>Not that Germany rejects, as regards other nations, every r&eacute;gime except
+ that of hostility. Her aim is domination, the only r&ocirc;le which suits the people
+ of God. Now, to attain that, two means are offered to her. The first plainly is
+ intimidation which must never flag. The feeble quickly become insolent if their
+ feebleness is not recalled to them. Other nations must feel themselves constantly
+ threatened with the worst catastrophes if they resist Germany. But it being well
+ understood that Germany is the strongest, that she will never give up what she
+ possesses, however unjustly, then bargains advantageous not only for herself but
+ occasionally for the other party, may be the more direct and less onerous means than
+ violence to attain her end. So Germany will be, by turns, or both at once,
+ threatening and amiable. Amiability itself can be effective when it rests on hatred,
+ contempt, and omnipotence.</p>
+ <p>Now power counts before all. Germany must possess armaments superior to those of
+ all other nations. The reason is plain. The German Empire is a rock of peace, <i>der
+ Hort des Friedens</i>. The force which it accumulates is directed toward imposing
+ upon mankind the German peace, the divine peace. Since Germany represents peace,
+ whoever opposes Germany intends war. Now it is legitimate that Germany should arm to
+ the teeth because she is the incarnation of peace, but the adversaries of Germany,
+ who, in opposing Germany oppose peace, cannot have the same right. It is the duty of
+ Germany to carry her armaments to the maximum; other peoples have the right to arm
+ only as Germany may permit.</p>
+ <p>Germany does not seek war. On the contrary, she tries by inspiring terror to
+ render it impossible. But if some nation should profit or be capable of profiting by
+ her love of peace to pretend to rights which offend her she will consent to punish
+ that nation. She will be pained by the violence she has to do to that nation and the
+ severity which she has to use toward the guilty. But soldier of God as she is, she
+ cannot fail to her mission. Any nation which refuses to do the will of Germany proves
+ by that very fact its cultural inferiority and becomes guilty. It must be
+ chastised.</p>
+ <p>The method according to which Germany will make war is determined by these
+ premises. War is a return to the state of nature. Germany yields to this temporary
+ retrogression because she has to do with people of an inferior culture who must be
+ taught a lesson, and must be spoken to in a language which they understand. Now a
+ characteristic of a state of nature is that force reigns undisputed. In this very
+ trait resides the sublime beauty of that state, its grandeur and its fecundity. Don't
+ talk of that romantic chivalry which pretends in time of war to temper the violence
+ of savage instincts by the intervention of feminine sensibility. War is war. <i>Krieg
+ ist Krieg</i>. It isn't child's play, it isn't sport where it is necessary to blend
+ barbarity and humanity so as to conciliate and humanize them. It is barbarity itself
+ let loose as widely and fully as possible. This is not perversity. Man as man suffers
+ in becoming barbarous, but the man who replaces God suppresses the feebleness of the
+ creature. He submits himself to the mysterious and sublime law in virtue of which
+ evil is by so much more beneficent as it is achieved with resolution and
+ completeness. <i>Pecca fortiter.</i></p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Nature of War.</b></p>
+ <p>The first article of the code of war is then the suppression of all sensibility,
+ pity, humanity. The nature of war is to kill and destroy. The more it destroys and
+ kills the sooner it comes to its ideal form. Moreover, it is at bottom <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page167" id="page167"></a>{167}</span>more humane the more
+ inhuman it is, because the very terrors which its excesses inspire shorten it and
+ make it less murderous.</p>
+ <p>In the second place, war necessarily ignores moral laws. Respect for laws,
+ treaties, conventions, loyalty, good faith, sentiment and honor, scruples, nobility
+ of soul generosity&mdash;these are mere fetters. The God-people do not recognize
+ them. It will then, without hesitation, violate the rights of neutrals if it is to
+ its interest. It will use falsehood, perfidy, treachery. It will justify itself by
+ futile pretexts in committing the most atrocious acts&mdash;bombardment of undefended
+ cities, massacre of old men, women and children; barbarous torture, pillage and
+ assassination; bestiality to women; organized incendiarism; methodical destruction of
+ monuments which, by their history and their antiquity and by the admiration of the
+ world, would seem to be inviolable. "I am told: I must avenge myself." This reason
+ suffices. We are told that some inhabitant of one city or another has been wanting in
+ respect toward one of our men. Therefore we must burn the city and show the
+ inhabitants what we have. Definitively, our duty is to let loose the elementary
+ energies of nature as far as possible to attain the maximum force and the maximum of
+ result.</p>
+ <p>The effect should, moreover, be psychological as well as material. Actions which
+ seem horrible to man and which spread terror are commendable means, because they
+ break the spirit even if they have no value from a military point of view. Moreover,
+ what offends common morality is conformed to transcendent morality. The mission of
+ the Germans at war is to punish. They work Divine vengeance. They compel their
+ enemies to expiate the crime of resisting them. After they have taken a city, if the
+ enemy has the insolence to take it back, it is just that they shall sack that city if
+ possible, killing its inhabitants and burning its finest monuments.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Barbarity Multiplied by Science.</b></p>
+ <p>Given this problem, how to let loose most widely the powers of evil, it is clear
+ that a people of superior culture is better equipped than any other to resolve that
+ problem. In fact, science, where it excels, can work destruction and evil with the
+ very forces which nature employs only to create light, heat, life, and beauty. The
+ God-people therefore unites the maximum of science to the maximum of barbarity. The
+ formula of its action may be thus written: "Barbarity multiplied by science."</p>
+ <p>This is the last word of the famous doctrine of Germanism. Now the identity of the
+ ultimate consequences of the doctrine and the features which the present war presents
+ is evident. The problem which we undertook is, therefore, solved. If, contrary to all
+ likelihood, barbarity co-exists with culture in the Germans; if in the present war it
+ appears to be absolutely bound up in that culture, the reason is that German culture
+ differs profoundly from what humanity understands by culture and civilization. Human
+ civilization tries to humanize war. German culture tends indefinitely to increase its
+ primitive brutality by science.</p>
+ <p>In everything the Germans must be unique&mdash;in their women, their God, their
+ wine, their loyalty. The war which the Germans wage against us strikes the world with
+ horror and terror, because it is in the full force of the term "the German way,
+ <i>die deutsche Art</i>, the German war."</p>
+ <p>As the world recognizes this astonishing proposition it asks with anxiety, what
+ may be its future relations to Germany? Knowingly and systematically, Germany opposes
+ to all Hellenic, Christian, humane civilizations the devastating theory of the Huns.
+ True, after the war she will claim that she has done nothing but conform, often with
+ pain, to the conditions of ideal and divine war, and she will appear willing to
+ pardon to her enemies the cruelties she has had to inflict upon them. Decidedly, the
+ world will refuse to admire this horrible magnanimity which on the first impulse of
+ resistance becomes savagery. Today the veil is torn away. German culture is shown to
+ be a scientific bar<span class="pagenum"><a name="page168"
+ id="page168"></a>{168}</span>barity. The world, which means in the future to rid
+ itself of all despotism, will not compromise with the despotism of barbarity.</p>
+ <p>But what a disappointment and what a grief! Formerly, Germany was held to be a
+ great nation. Its praises were sounded in many a land of solid and high culture. The
+ German tradition once held other doctrines than those we have now seen devolop under
+ the hands of Prussia. Germanism, as the Prussians formulate it, consists essentially
+ in contempt for all other nations and in the pretension of domination. But
+ Leibnitz&mdash;as highly esteemed in the Latin world as in the German&mdash;professed
+ a philosophy which valued unity only under the form of harmony between free and
+ autonomous forces. Leibnitz exalted the multiple, the diverse, the spontaneous.
+ Between rival powers he sought to establish relations which would reconcile them
+ without changing or diminishing the value or independence of any of them. Witness his
+ effort at the reunion of the Catholic and Protestant Churches. After Leibnitz came
+ Kant. He certainly was very much of a German. He owned, nevertheless, that he had
+ learned from Rousseau to honor the common man who, not being a savant, possesses
+ moral value far above the savant, who has no merit but science. And, starting from
+ the principle that every person, so far as he is capable of moral value, is entitled
+ to respect, he urged men to create not a universal and despotic monarchy but a
+ republic of nations in which each should possess a free and independent
+ personality.</p>
+ <p>This willingness to put liberty before unity, and respect and honor the dignity of
+ other nations while at the same time serving its own, was not extinguished in Germany
+ with Leibnitz and Kant. Permit me, my dear Director, on this subject to indulge in
+ some personal reminiscences.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Treitschke Versus Bluntschli.</b></p>
+ <p>In January, 1869, I was sent to Heidelberg by the Minister of Public Instruction,
+ Victor Duruy, to study the organization of German universities. Germany was for me
+ the land of metaphysics, music, and poetry. I was greatly astonished to find that
+ outside of the lecture courses the only thing discussed was the war which Prussia was
+ about to make on France. Invited to a soir&eacute;e, I heard it whispered behind me,
+ <i>Vielleicht ist er ein franz&ouml;sischer Spion</i>&mdash;"Perhaps he is a French
+ spy." Such were the words as I caught them. At the beer garden a student seated
+ himself near me. He said to me, "We are going to war with you. We shall take Alsace
+ and Lorraine." That night I could see from my window, looking out on the Neckar, the
+ students clad in their club costumes floating down the river on an illuminated raft
+ singing the famous song in honor of Bl&uuml;cher, who "taught the Welches the way of
+ the Germans." And at the university itself the lectures of Treitschke, attended by
+ excited crowds, were heated harangues against the French, inciting to hatred and to
+ war. Seeing that nothing was thought of but the preparation for war, I came back at
+ the Easter vacation of 1869 convinced that hostilities would ensue. I returned to
+ Heidelberg some time later and became acquainted with other persons, other centres of
+ ideas. I understood then that opinion in Germany was divided between two opposite
+ doctrines. The general aspiration was for the unity of Germany, but there was no
+ agreement as to the way of conceiving and realizing this unity. The thesis of
+ Treitschke was, <i>Freiheit durch Einheit</i>, "liberty through unity," that is to
+ say, unity first, unity before all; liberty later, when circumstances should permit.
+ And to realize at once this unity, which really was the only thing that mattered, the
+ enrollment of all Germany under the command of Prussia for a war against France.</p>
+ <p>Now the formula of Treitschke was opposed by that of Bluntschli, <i>Einheit durch
+ Freiheit</i>&mdash;"Unity through liberty." This doctrine, which counted at that time
+ some eminent advocates, aimed first to safeguard the independence and unity of the
+ German States and then to establish between them on that basis a <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>{169}</span>federated union. And
+ as it contemplated in the heart of Germany a union without hegemony, so it conceived
+ of German unity as something to be realized without harm to other nations, and
+ especially without harm to France. It was to be a free Germany in a free world.</p>
+ <p>Germany at that epoch was at the parting of the ways. Should she follow a tendency
+ still living in many and noble minds or should she abandon it entirely, to march head
+ down in the ways in which Prussia had entangled her? That was the question. The party
+ of war, the party of unity as a means of attacking and despoiling France, the
+ Prussian party, gained the day. And its success rendered its preponderance
+ definitive. Since then those who have undertaken to remain faithful to an ideal of
+ liberty and humanity have been annihilated.</p>
+ <p>Is it still possible that Germany may some day regain the parting of the ways
+ where she was before 1870 and this time take the other road, the road of the
+ Leibnitzes, the Kants, the Bluntschlis, which leads first to the liberty of
+ individuals and of peoples and afterward&mdash;- and only afterward&mdash;a form of
+ harmony where the rights of all are equally respected? A word of the Scotch
+ professor, William Knight, comes back to my memory at this moment: "The best things
+ have to die and be reborn." The Germany which the world respected and admired, the
+ Germany of Leibnitz, appears indeed dead. Can it be reborn?</p>
+ <p>Accept, I beg, my dear Director, the assurance of my cordial devotion.</p>
+ <p>EMILE BOUTROUX.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id="page170"></a>{170}</span><b>The
+ German Religion of Duty</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Gabriele Reuter.<a id="FNanchor_2" name='FNanchor_2'></a><a
+ href='#Footnote_2'><sup>[2]</sup></a></h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>On various occasions in the past I have been reproached by my friends for not
+ showing the proper spirit of patriotism.</p>
+ <p>I have merely smiled at their criticism, for it was my opinion that true
+ patriotism does not consist of flowery speeches and assertions, but in the effort
+ dutifully to accomplish that for which one is best qualified.</p>
+ <p>It seemed to me that I was truly showing my love for the Fatherland by writing my
+ books to the best of my ability.</p>
+ <p>But the source of this reproach was very evident to me. The cause could be traced
+ to a quality which I share with many of my compatriots. It must, in truth, be called
+ a particularly characteristic trait. This is a very earnest desire for and love of
+ justice, which is not satisfied simply to "recognize," but endeavors thoroughly to
+ understand the material and spiritual points of view of the other nations in order to
+ show them the proper appreciation.</p>
+ <p>It is natural to develop affection for that which one earnestly desires to
+ understand.</p>
+ <p>Many Germans have had the experience that they have rather overzealously commenced
+ by weighing the good of a foreign people in the balance with the good of their own,
+ and with well-nigh fanatic honesty they have ended by acknowledging their own
+ shortcomings compared to the merits and advantages of the foreign nation. There have
+ been instances when some foreigner has drawn our attention to this or that particular
+ weakness and immediately innumerable of my countrymen assented, saying, "Certainly it
+ is true, the criticism is just, matters are probably even worse than they have been
+ represented."</p>
+ <p>Many of us, and I acknowledge I am one of the many, have developed a form of
+ ascetic mania for self-abasement, a desire for truth which knows no limits in the
+ dissection of its own condition and the disclosure of social and personal
+ shortcomings and disadvantages. This tendency may be easily discerned in much of the
+ German literature of the past twenty years; also, in my books.</p>
+ <p>The individual is really always the symbol of the whole, and the thoughts and
+ feelings of one person are but the expression of strong forces in national life and
+ culture. It was not want of patriotism, but an unbounded love for the universality of
+ European culture which drove us, drove many thousand people with German souls, to
+ reach out over the boundaries of our own Fatherland for intellectual conquests, for
+ permeation and coalescence with all the world's riches, goodness, and beauty.</p>
+ <p>We loved the others; and believing ourselves among friends we were candid and
+ disclosed our weaknesses.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germans Trusted Too Well.</b></p>
+ <p>We permitted criticism and criticised ourselves, because we were convinced that
+ those others had our welfare at heart, and also because we were convinced that only
+ by unsparing self-knowledge can the heights be scaled which lead to superior and more
+ refined development. It is therefore probable that we ourselves have delivered the
+ weapons into our enemies' hands.</p>
+ <p>Confiding and harmless as children, we were blind to the enigmatical hatred which
+ has to an appalling extent developed all around us. This hate which has been
+ nourished systematically and with satanic cleverness probably originated in a slight
+ feeling of jealousy, and the tendency of my countrymen to criticise each other led
+ our enemies to believe that they might look for internal disc<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page171" id="page171"></a>{171}</span>ord in the Fatherland and that our
+ humiliation could therefore be more easily accomplished.</p>
+ <p>If we had recognized the danger in time, we might have prevented this hatred, to
+ which they at the beginning were hardly prone, from taking root in the souls of
+ nations. But only very few among us were aware of it and they received little
+ credence from the others. There were times when each one of us sensed the antipathy
+ which we encountered beyond the boundary lines of our own country. But we never
+ realized how deeply it had taken root and how widely it had spread. We loved our
+ enemies! We loved this French nation for its high development of etiquette, language,
+ and taste; a culture which seemed well adapted to serve as a complement to our own.
+ How much misery France might have been spared had she but understood this unfortunate
+ love of the German people for the "Hereditary Enemy!"</p>
+ <p>We loved the deep, mystically religious soul of the Russians in their anguished
+ struggles for freedom! How many Germans have looked upon Tolstoy as a new savior!</p>
+ <p>Above all, though, the German admired the Englishman, in the r&ocirc;le of the
+ "royal merchant," the far-seeing colonizer, the master of the seas. Without envy
+ Germany gave England credit for all these qualities. And when during the Boer war
+ voices were raised to warn against the English character, even then to most of us our
+ Anglo-Saxon cousin remained the "Gentleman beyond reproach."</p>
+ <p>Then there is the great German love for Holland, Switzerland, and the Scandinavian
+ countries; here we may find the Germanic race less adulterated than in our own
+ country. Scandinavian poets have become our poets and we are as proud of the works of
+ the Swedish artist as we are of those of our people.</p>
+ <p>We gaze with delight upon the proud, blonde grace of the Norse maid; the more
+ gentle and pliant manners of the Swedes and Danes arouse our admiration; and we
+ dearly love their beautiful fjords and forests of beech and birch.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Love Changed to Suspicion.</b></p>
+ <p>Many of us wonder today how much of all this love we, in the days to come, will be
+ able to rescue from the debris. "Has the world gone mad that it has ceased to believe
+ in our sincerity?" This at present is the cry of many, many thousand German men and
+ women. Do we deserve to have our love requited with hate? And to find in the
+ countries which declare themselves neutral, distrust, reserve, and, in fact, doubt of
+ our honest intentions? Sad, dull despair has taken possession of the hearts of our
+ best men and women. It is not because they tremble for the fate of the loved ones who
+ have been compelled to go to the front and not because there is any fear as to the
+ outcome of this war. Not one among us doubts the ultimate triumph of Germany. We also
+ know that we must pay a terrible toll for this victory with the blood of our sons,
+ fathers and husbands.</p>
+ <p>Equally as much as they mourn the loss of our young manhood many of our best
+ citizens deplore the hatred which has spread over the face of the globe, hate which
+ has torn asunder what was believed to have been a firmly woven net of a common
+ European culture. That which we with ardent souls have labored to create is being
+ devastated by ruthless force.</p>
+ <p>The following story of the non-commissioned German officer is typical or
+ symbolical of many. He, while the bullets of the inhabitants of Louvain fell around
+ him, rescued the priceless old paintings from the burning Church of St. Peter, simply
+ because he was an art-historian and knew and loved each of the masterpieces. And well
+ we all understand the feelings which mastered him during those moments of horror.</p>
+ <p>He would probably think and say, "I have but done my duty."</p>
+ <p>And now we have arrived at the point which gives rise to the greatest amount of
+ antipathy. Our opponents declare we are endowed with great ability&mdash;they say
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page172" id="page172"></a>{172}</span>they must
+ acknowledge that. But how can a race of stiff, dry, duty-performing beings awaken
+ love? The German must lose all claim to individual freedom and independence of
+ thought in consequence of the training which he receives. When he is a child he
+ commences it in a military subordination in the school, he continues it in the
+ barracks, and later, when he enters a vocational life, under the stern leadership of
+ his superiors. He becomes, our critics continue, simply a disagreeable pedantic tool
+ of the all-powerful "drill." This atmosphere of "drill," or in other words this stern
+ hard military spirit, envelops him, accompanies him as guardian from the cradle to
+ the grave, and makes of him an unbearable companion for all the more refined, gentle,
+ and amiable nations. Yes, our opponents often declare that they are waging war not
+ only against Germany, but against this pedantic, military, tyrannical sense of duty,
+ which they call the "Prussian spirit." It shall once and for all, they assert, be
+ eradicated from the world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Religious Feeling of Duty.</b></p>
+ <p>Far be it from me to deny that my country people, male and female, do indeed
+ possess an unusually strong sense of duty. This is combined with a desire for justice
+ which is so often looked upon by outsiders as a lack of patriotic pride, and with an
+ honesty which easily makes the German appear so clumsy and awkward. These three
+ characteristics belong indissolubly together and one is not to be thought of without
+ the other. The spirit from which the German sense of duty arises is what the
+ foreigner so often misunderstands in us. He generally confuses sense of duty with
+ blind obedience. But this sense of duty does not originate from a need for submission
+ or from a mental dependence. No, it rests on a deep philosophical reason and arises
+ from the mental recognition of ethical and national necessity. That is why it can
+ exist side by side with the most extreme individualism, which also belongs to the
+ peculiarities of the character of our people. The Germans have always been a nation
+ of thinkers. Not only the scholar, also the simple worker, the laborer, the modest
+ mother take a deep pleasure in forming their philosophy of life and the world. Side
+ by side with the loud triumph of our industry goes this quieter existence, which has
+ been rather pushed into the background in the last decades, but has not, therefore,
+ ceased to exist. And the further the belief in miracles stepped into the background,
+ the more the belief in duty acquired a warm religious tinge. The loud complaints
+ about the vanishing of the sense of duty among the young, which has so often been
+ voiced by public opinion, only prove how strongly this ethical force was governing
+ people's minds. Every seeming diminution of it was felt to be a disastrous
+ endangerment of the knowledge of the people. We have perhaps acted childishly and
+ foolishly toward other nations by too great confidence. But in the consciousness of
+ the entire German Nation the ominous feeling was living and working with mighty
+ power, that only if every one of us devotes his entire strength to the post assigned
+ to him, and works until the exhaustion of his last mental and physical power, only
+ then can we as a national whole retain our high level and, surrounded by dangers on
+ all sides, create sufficient room for ourselves to breathe and live.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Military and the Socialists.</b></p>
+ <p>Two mighty organizations exist among us which were opposed to each other until
+ recently&mdash;the military and the Social Democratic. The world sees with amazement
+ the perfection which has been reached by the military organization of our army. Its
+ achievements have only become possible through the above-mentioned philosophical
+ conception of the sense of duty which raises it far above any systematic obedience
+ and lets it appear in the light of religious ideal. Duty becomes in these serious and
+ energetic minds a voluntary adaptation to a carefully organized whole with the
+ knowledge that to serve this whole at the same time produces the highest achievement
+ of the individual personality. The Social Democratic or<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page173" id="page173"></a>{173}</span>ganization, opposed though it is to the
+ military organization, is also composed of Germans and is, therefore, directed by the
+ same basic principles as the military organization, although for entirely different
+ purposes. For this one reason it was almost a matter of course that the Social
+ Democrats offered their services for the war at the moment when they recognized that
+ it had become of imperious necessity to set aside personal wishes and ideals and to
+ put in the foreground only the duty of the defense of their country. The idea of our
+ opponents, that they would find a support in the Socialists of our country, rested on
+ a complete misunderstanding of the German character.</p>
+ <p>A foreign woman wrote to me in the days of the mobilization: "I do not understand
+ the German enthusiasm for war&mdash;how it is possible that one can become
+ enthusiastic about murder!" The woman only saw the exterior and superficial phase of
+ things.</p>
+ <p>In its endeavor to unite itself with the world the German soul had suddenly come
+ upon the wildest hatred * * * numerous high ideals of culture fell to ruin within a
+ few hours. Deeply wounded, it was hurled back into its most personal possessions.
+ Here it found itself face to face with tasks which far surpassed anything demanded
+ heretofore of it as fulfillment of duty. And now there came to pass a wonder which
+ will be unforgettable for every one who lived through this period. Everything dry,
+ petty, pedantic, connected with German ways, which had often made many of us
+ impatient with ourselves, was suddenly swept away by the storm of these days.</p>
+ <p>A gigantic wave of fiery hot feeling passed through our country flaming up like a
+ beautiful sacrificial pyre. It was no longer a duty to offer one's self and one's
+ life&mdash;it was supreme bliss. That might easily sound like a hollow phrase. But
+ there is a proof, which is more genuine than words, than songs, and cheers. That is
+ the expression in the faces of the people, their uncontrolled spontaneous movements.
+ I saw the eyes light up of an old woman who had sent four sons into battle and
+ exclaimed: "It is glorious to be allowed to give the Fatherland so much!" I saw the
+ controlled calm in the features of sorrowing mothers who knew that their only sons
+ had fallen. But the expression in the faces of many wounded who were already
+ returning home gripped me the most. They had lived through the horror of the battle,
+ their feet had waded through blood, their young bodies were horribly maimed. I saw
+ this strangely serene, quietly friendly expression in the young faces. They were men
+ who had sacrificed their ego. They were great patient conquerors of selfishness. And
+ with what tenderness, what goodness are they surrounded, to lighten their lot, to
+ give them joy. How the general sentiment is often expressed in the gesture of a
+ single person&mdash;you did that for us&mdash;how can we sufficiently requite
+ you?</p>
+ <p>A stream of love is flowing through our Fatherland and is uniting all hearts. The
+ unobtrusive mother "duty" gave birth to the genial child "feeling." She bestowed on
+ it her strong vitality so that it can defy a world of hatred&mdash;and conquer
+ it.</p>
+ <p><b>Note:</b></p>
+ <div class='note'>
+ <a id="Footnote_2" name='Footnote_2'></a> <a href='#FNanchor_2'>[2]</a> Gabriele
+ Reuter is one of the foremost German woman authors.<br />
+ <br />
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>{174}</span><b>A Letter
+ to Gerhart Hauptmann</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Romain Rolland.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>I am not, Gerhart Hauptmann, of those Frenchmen who call Germany barbarian. I
+ recognize the intellectual and moral grandeur of your mighty race. I realize all that
+ I owe to the thinkers of old Germany; and even at this extreme hour I recall to mind
+ the example and the words of our Goethe&mdash;for he belongs to all
+ humanity&mdash;repudiating national hatred and preserving his soul serene in those
+ heights "where one feels the joys and sorrows of all peoples as one's own." It has
+ been the labor of my life to bring together the minds of our two nations; and the
+ atrocities of impious war shall never lead me to soil my heart with hatred.</p>
+ <p>Whatever reason I may have, therefore, to suffer through the deeds of your Germany
+ and to judge as criminal the German policy and the German methods, I do not hold
+ responsible the people who submit thereto and are reduced to mere blind instruments.
+ This does not mean that I regard war as a fatality. A Frenchman knows no such word as
+ fatality. Fatality is the excuse of souls that lack a will.</p>
+ <p>No. This war is the fruit of the feebleness of peoples and of their stupidity. One
+ can only pity them; one cannot blame them. I do not reproach you for our sorrows.
+ Your mourning will not be less than ours. If France is ruined, so also will be
+ Germany. I did not even raise my voice when I saw your armies violate the neutrality
+ of noble Belgium. This forfeit of honor, which compels the contempt of every
+ right-thinking mind, is too well within the political tradition of Prussian Kings to
+ have surprised me.</p>
+ <p>But the fury with which you treated that generous land whose one crime was to
+ defend, unto despair, its independence and the idea of justice&mdash;that was too
+ much! The world revolts in wrath at this. Reserve for us your violence&mdash;for us
+ French, who are your enemies. But to trample upon your victims, upon the little
+ Belgian people, unfortunate and innocent&mdash;that is ignominy!</p>
+ <p>And not content with assaulting the Belgium that lives, you wage war on the dead,
+ on the glory of past centuries. You bombard Malines, you put Rubens to flame, Louvain
+ comes from your hands a heap of ashes&mdash;Louvain with its treasures of art and
+ knowledge, the holy city! Who indeed are you and what name do you conjure us to call
+ you, Hauptmann, you who reject the title of barbarian?</p>
+ <p>Are you the children of Goethe or of Attila? Do you wage war against armies or
+ against the human spirit? Kill men if you must, but respect man's work. For this is
+ the heritage of the human race. And you, like us, are its trustees. In making pillage
+ of it as you have done you prove yourselves unworthy of this great inheritance,
+ unworthy of holding rank in the small European army which is the garde d'honneur of
+ civilization.</p>
+ <p>It is not to the sense of the rest of the world that I appeal against you. It is
+ to yourself, Hauptmann. In the name of our Europe, of which up to the present you
+ have been one of the noblest champions&mdash;in the name of that civilization for
+ which the greatest of men have struggled&mdash;in the name of the honor even of your
+ German race, Gerhart Hauptmann, I adjure you, I command you, you and the intellectual
+ &eacute;lite of Germany, where I have so many friends, to protest with utmost
+ vehemence against this crime which leaps back upon yourselves.</p>
+ <p>If you fail in this, one of two things will be proved&mdash;that you acquiesce,
+ (and then the opinion of the world will crush you,) or that you are powerless to
+ raise <span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id="page175"></a>{175}</span>your voice
+ against the Huns that now command you. And in that case, with what right will you
+ still pretend, as you have written, that your cause is that of liberty and human
+ progress?</p>
+ <p>You will be giving to the world a proof that, incapable of defending the liberty
+ of the world, you are helpless even to uphold your own; that the &eacute;lite of
+ Germany lies subservient to the blackest despotism&mdash;to a tyranny which mutilates
+ masterpieces and assassinates the human spirit.</p>
+ <p>I await your response, Hauptmann&mdash;a response which shall be an act. The
+ opinion of Europe awaits it, as do I. Bear this in mind; in a moment like this, even
+ silence is an act.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>A Reply to Rolland</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Gerhart Hauptmann.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>You address me, Herr Rolland, in public words which breathe the pain over this
+ war, (forced by England, Russia and France,) pain over the endangering of European
+ culture and the destruction of hallowed memorials of ancient art. I share in this
+ general sorrow, but that to which I cannot consent is to give an answer whose spirit
+ you have already prescribed and concerning which you wrongly assert that it is
+ awaited by all Europe. I know that you are of German blood. Your beautiful novel,
+ "Jean-Christophe," will remain immortal among us Germans together with "Wilhelm
+ Meister," and "der gr&uuml;ne Heinrich."</p>
+ <p>But France became your adopted fatherland; therefore your heart must now be torn
+ and your judgment confused. You have labored zealously for the reconciliation of both
+ peoples. In spite of all this when the present bloody conflict destroys your fair
+ concept of peace, as it has done for so many others, you see our nation and our
+ people through French eyes, and every attempt to make you see clearly and as a German
+ is absolutely sure to be in vain.</p>
+ <p>Naturally everything which you say of our Government, of our army and our people,
+ is distorted, everything is false, so false that in this respect your open letter to
+ me appears as an empty black surface.</p>
+ <p>War is war. You may lament war, but you should not wonder at the things that are
+ inseparable from the elementary fact itself. Assuredly it is deplorable that in the
+ conflict an irreplaceable Rubens is destroyed, but&mdash;with all honor to
+ Rubens!&mdash;I am among those in whom the shattered breast of his fellow-man compels
+ far deeper pain.</p>
+ <p>And, Herr Rolland, it is not exactly fitting that you should adopt a tone implying
+ that the people of your land, the French, are coming out to meet us with palm
+ branches, when in reality they are plentifully equipped with cannon, with cartridges,
+ yes, even with dumdum bullets. It is apparent that you have grown pretty fearful of
+ our brave troops! That is to the glory of a power which is invincible through the
+ justice of its cause. The German soldier has nothing whatsoever in common with the
+ loathsome and puerile were-wolf tales which your lying French press so zealously
+ publishes abroad, that press which the French and the Belgian people have to thank
+ for their misfortune.</p>
+ <p>Let the idle Englishmen call us Huns; you may, for all I care, characterize the
+ warriors of our splendid Landwehr as sons of Attila; it is enough for us if this
+ Landwehr can shatter into a thousand pieces the ring of our merciless enemies. Far
+ better that you should call us sons of Attila, cross yourselves in fear and remain
+ outside our borders, than that you should indict tender inscriptions upon the tomb of
+ our German name, call<span class="pagenum"><a name="page176"
+ id="page176"></a>{176}</span>ing us the beloved descendants of Goethe. The epithet
+ Huns is coined by people who, themselves Huns, are experiencing disappointment in
+ their criminal attacks on the life of a sound and valorous race, because it knows the
+ trick of parrying a fearful blow with still more fearful force. In their impotence,
+ they take refuge in curses.</p>
+ <p>I say nothing against the Belgian people. The peaceful passage of German troops, a
+ question of life for Germany, was refused by Belgium because the Government had made
+ itself a tool of England and France. This same Government then organized an
+ unparalleled guerrilla warfare in order to support a lost cause, and by that
+ act&mdash;Herr Rolland, you are a musician!&mdash;struck the horrible keynote of
+ conflict. If you are at all in a position to break your way through the giant's wall
+ of anti-German lies, read the message to America, by our Imperial Chancellor, of
+ Sept. 7; read further the telegram which on Sept. 8 the Kaiser himself addressed to
+ President Wilson. You will then discover things which it is necessary to know in
+ order to understand the calamity of Louvain.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Another Reply to Rolland</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Karl Wolfskehl.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>To you, Rolland, belonging as a chosen one to the more important Frenchmen who can
+ rise above their race, the German nature has often been revealed. To you, now, we
+ shall make answer, offer frank testimony concerning the spirit of the time,
+ concerning that fate, that very fate in which you, the Frenchman, do not believe. You
+ do not believe in it; what to us is fate, mysterious necessity, to you is
+ fatalit&eacute;, an unavoidable Alp which threatens the individual in his individual
+ freedom. This fatalit&eacute;, we, too, do not believe in it, but we do believe in
+ the forces which bring forth the eternal in human will, that these both are one, will
+ and forces, one with necessity, with actuality, with creative, moral power, of which
+ all great ideas are the children, the idea of freedom, the idea of the beautiful, the
+ idea of tragic fidelity, and that these, reaching far above being and passing away,
+ are nevertheless real, life entire, fact entire. All that which is as dear to you as
+ to us, great works and great feelings, resignation and self-restraint, all that is
+ necessity, is fate, that became will&mdash;all that a unity out of choice and
+ compulsion. All that is for us eternal, not according to the measure of time, but
+ according to the beginning and the power of its working forces, in so far as it is
+ necessary.</p>
+ <p>Thus has it become fate, destiny, not fatalit&eacute;, rather like that fate which
+ in Beethoven's own words in the first movement of his "Eroica" "is the knocking at
+ the gate."</p>
+ <p>Such a fate is this war. No one wanted it in our Germany, for it was forced upon
+ us with terrible arbitrariness, contrary to all right. Do you not know of the net
+ that has been spun around us and drawn tight for the last half of a generation, to
+ choke us? Do you not know how often this most peaceful of peoples has drawn back, how
+ often the strange powers in the East and in the West have with contemptuous snarls
+ said, "Wilhelm will not make war"? That you ought to know, Rolland, for it is known
+ to the whole world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The War "Came from God."</b></p>
+ <p>But I will betray something to you that you cannot know, because you are a
+ stranger; and this will probably show you where we see fate. I will betray to you the
+ fact that there is still another Germany behind the exterior in which great politics
+ and great finance meet <span class="pagenum"><a name="page177"
+ id="page177"></a>{177}</span>with the literary champions of Europe. That Germany
+ tells you in this heavy hour of Europe:</p>
+ <p>This undesired war that has been forced upon us is nevertheless a necessity; it
+ had to come to pass for the sake of Germany and the world of European humanity, for
+ the sake of the world. We did not want it, but it came from God. Our poet knew of it.
+ He saw this war and its necessity and its virtues, and heralded it, long before an
+ ugly suspicion of it flew through the year&mdash;before the leaves began to turn. The
+ "Stern des Bundes" ["Star of the Federation"] is this book of prophecy, this book of
+ necessity and of triumph.</p>
+ <p>The present need and the present triumph are quite human and quite inexorable.
+ They have a part in all that has taken place, and they are unprecedented and new.
+ None of us&mdash;do you hear, Rolland?&mdash;none of us Germans today would hesitate
+ to help destroy every monument of our holy German past, if necessity made it a matter
+ of the last ditch, for that from which alone all monuments of all times draw their
+ right of existence and their worth unless they are empty husks, skeletons, and
+ framework; even so, we alone may ask what shall come to pass, not what shall cease.
+ Which ruins are ravings, and which are the pains of childbirth, we do not presume to
+ decide; but you, too, who are so pained by ruins, even as we are pained by them, you,
+ too, do not know it.</p>
+ <p>Today it is a question of the life or death of the European soul. Do you not
+ believe that this soul is more endangered at the hands of the hordes of stub-nosed
+ Slavs than of the phalanx of those whom you, Rolland, call Huns? Your sense must give
+ you the right to answer. Recall the terrible story of Russian incendiarism for the
+ last hundred years, which has torn to pieces in ever-increasing lust for murder
+ bodies and souls; recall the eternally perjured and law-defying regiment of grave
+ diggers; and then blush that you have characterized as a heavy crime a manfully
+ confessed act of self-defense on the part of the Germans, the temporary occupation of
+ Belgium! Blush that you have forgotten the Russian Moloch now loosed upon us, drunk
+ with the blood and tears of alien peoples as well as of its own children! That you
+ have forgotten all that, in order to lament over buildings which we have been forced
+ in self-defense&mdash;again in self-defense&mdash;to sacrifice! And blush for those
+ of your people who have become accomplices of that Moloch! Those who are sinning
+ against the Holy Ghost of Europe, in order to attempt belated vengeance against
+ Germany! Do you know what the ancients, the very Greeks and Romans from whom you have
+ drawn your blood and temperament, called that sin? Blood-guiltiness is the name of
+ that horror. And do you know how it is atoned for? I shrink to ask further, yea, even
+ to think further; for horror falls upon me, and I see the unspeakable.</p>
+ <p>Today, battling against you allies of the swarms of Muscovites, we Europeans are
+ battling also for that France which you are threatening&mdash;you, not we!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>German Intellectuals "All Afire."</b></p>
+ <p>Yes, Romain Rolland, try, Frenchman that you are, to look into the mysteries of
+ the time. Ask yourself, marvel, how it comes to pass that we, the intellectuals among
+ the Germans, take part without exception in this dreadful war; take part with body
+ and soul. None of us ambitious, none of us a politician, not one of us who, till this
+ war, busied himself about anything except his idea, the Palladium of his life! And
+ now we are all afire, with all our hearts, with our whole people, all full of
+ determination and prepared for the last. All our youth in the field, every man among
+ us thrilled with faith in our God and this battle of our God, every man among us
+ conscious of the sacred necessity that has driven us, every man among us consecrated
+ for timely death! Are these incendiaries? Are these slaves, whom a despot points the
+ way to the rolling dead? Every one knows it is our all that is at stake; it is a
+ matter of the divine in humanity, a matter of our preservation and that of
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id="page178"></a>{178}</span>And so we
+ stand amid death and ruins under the star&mdash;one federation, one single union.
+ This I have had to tell you, whether you will listen to it, whether Europe has ears
+ to hear it, or not. From now on, may our deeds be our words!</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Are We Barbarians?</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Gerhart Hauptmann.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The idea of cosmopolitanism has never taken deeper root anywhere than in Germany.
+ Let any person reflect about our literary translations and then name a nation that
+ has tried so honestly as we to do justice to the spirit and the feelings of other
+ races, to understand their inmost soul in all good-will.</p>
+ <p>I must out with it: We had and have no hatred against France: we have idolized the
+ fine arts, the sculpture and painting and the literature of that country. The
+ worldwide appreciation of Rodin had its origin in Germany&mdash;we esteem Anatole
+ France, Maupassant, Flaubert, Balzac, as if they were German authors. We have a deep
+ affection for the people of South France. We find passionate admirers of Mistral in
+ small German towns, in alleys, in attics. It was deeply to be regretted that Germany
+ and France could not be friends politically. They ought to have been, because they
+ were joint trustees of the intellectual treasures of the Continent, because they are
+ two of the great cultivated nations of Europe. But fate has willed it otherwise.</p>
+ <p>In the year 1870 the German races fought for the union of the Germans and the
+ German Empire. Owing to the success of this struggle Germany has enjoyed an era of
+ peace for more than forty years. A time of budding, growing, becoming strong,
+ flowering, and bearing fruit, without parallel in history. Out of a population,
+ growing more and more numerous, an ever-increasing number of individuals have been
+ formed. Individual energy and a general tendency to expand led to the great
+ achievements of our industry, our commerce, and our trade. I do not think that any
+ American, Englishman, Frenchman, or Italian when in a German family, in German towns,
+ in German hotels, on German ships, in German concerts, in German theatres, at
+ Baireuth, in German libraries, or in German museums, ever felt as if he were among
+ "barbarians." We visited other countries and kept an open door for every
+ stranger.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>English Relations.</b></p>
+ <p>It is with pain and with bitterness that I speak the word England. I am one of
+ those barbarians on whom the English University of Oxford conferred the degree of
+ Doctor Honoris Causa. I have friends in England who stand with one foot on the
+ intellectual soil of Germany. Haldane, formerly English Minister of War, and with him
+ countless other Englishmen, made regular pilgrimages to the little barbarous town of
+ Weimar, where the barbarians Goethe, Schiller, Herder, Wieland, and others, have
+ created another world for humanity. We have a poet, whose plays, more than those of
+ any other German poet, have become national property; his name is Shakespeare. This
+ Shakespeare is, at the same time, the prince of English poets. The mother of our
+ Emperor is an English woman, the wife of the King of England a German, and yet this
+ nation, so closely related by blood and choice, has declared war against us. Why?
+ Heaven only knows. This much, however, is certain, that the now beginning European
+ concert, saturated with blood, as it is, has an English statesman for its impresario
+ and its conductor. It is doubtful, however, whether the finale of this terrible music
+ will find the same conductor at <span class="pagenum"><a name="page179"
+ id="page179"></a>{179}</span>the stand. "My cousin, you did not mean well either with
+ yourselves or with us when your tools threw the fire-brand into our dwellings!"</p>
+ <p>If heaven wills that we should issue regenerated from this terrible trial, we
+ shall have the sacred duty of showing ourselves worthy of our regeneration. By the
+ complete victory of German arms the independence of Europe would be secured. It would
+ be necessary to make it clear to the different nations of Europe that this war must
+ be the last between themselves. They must see at last that their sanguinary duels
+ only bring a shameful advantage to the one who, without taking part in them, is their
+ originator. Then they must devote themselves mutually to the work of civilization and
+ peace, which will then make misunderstandings impossible.</p>
+ <p>In this direction much had already been done before the war began. The dfferent
+ nations had already met in peaceful emulation and were to meet again at Berlin for
+ the Olympian games. It is only necessary to recall the aeronautic races, the boat
+ races, the horse races, and the beneficial international influence of the arts and
+ sciences, and the great super-national Nobel Prizes. The barbarian Germany has, as is
+ well known, led the way among the other nations with her great institutions for
+ social reform. A victory would oblige us to go forward on this path and to make the
+ blessings of such institutions general. Our victory would, furthermore, secure the
+ future existence of the Teutonic race for the welfare of the world. During the last
+ decade, for example, how fruitful has the Scandinavian literature been for the
+ German, and vice versa, the German for the Scandinavian. How many Swedes, Norwegians,
+ and Danes have lately, without feeling conscious of a drop of foreign blood, shaken
+ hands with German brothers in Stockholm, Christiania, Copenhagen, Munich, Vienna, and
+ Berlin. How much homely good-fellowship has grown up around the noble names of Ibsen,
+ Bj&ouml;rnsen, and Strindberg.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Faust and Rifles.</b></p>
+ <p>I hear that abroad an enormous number of lying tales are being fabricated to the
+ detriment of our honor, our culture, and our strength. Well, those who create these
+ idle tales should reflect that the momentous hour is not favorable for fiction. On
+ three frontiers our own blood bears witness. I myself have sent out two of my sons.
+ All our intrepid German soldiers know why they are going to war. There are no
+ analphabets to be found among them; all the more, however, of those who, besides
+ their rifle, have their Goethe's "Faust," their "Zarathustra," a work of
+ Schopenhauer's, the Bible, or their Homer in their knapsacks. And even those who have
+ no book in the knapsack know that they are fighting for a hearth at which every guest
+ is welcome.</p>
+ <p>On the frontier stands our blood testimony; the Socialist side by side with the
+ bourgeois, the peasant beside the man of learning, the Prince beside the workman; and
+ they all fight for German freedom, for German domestic life, for German art, German
+ science, German progress; they fight with the full, clear consciousness of a noble
+ and rich national possession, for internal and external goods, all of which serve for
+ the general progress and development of mankind.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>{180}</span><b>To
+ Americans From a German Friend</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Ludwig Fulda.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Like most of the champions of Germany in the literary field, Ludwig Fulda is
+ a Doctor of Philosophy. He is also author of many famous poetical and prose works
+ of fiction.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Many things have been revealed to us by this war that even the keenest-minded
+ among us would have declared immediately before its outbreak to be impossibilities.
+ Nothing, however, has been a greater and more painful surprise to Germans than the
+ position taken by a great part of the American press. There is nothing that we would
+ have suspected less than that within the one neutral nation with which we felt
+ ourselves most closely connected, both by common interests and by common ideals,
+ voices would be raised that in the hour of our greatest danger would deny us their
+ sympathy, yes, even their comprehension of our course.</p>
+ <p>To me, personally&mdash;I cannot avoid saying it&mdash;this was a very bitter
+ disappointment. A year has hardly passed since I was over there the second time as a
+ guest and returned strengthened in my admiration for that great, upward striving
+ community. In my book, "Amerikanische Eindrucke," ("American Impressions,") a new
+ edition of which has just appeared in a considerably supplemented form, comprising
+ the fruits of that trip, I have made every effort to place before my countrymen in
+ the brightest light the advantages and superiorities of Americans, and especially to
+ convince them that the so-called land of the dollar was not only economically but
+ also mentally and spiritually striding upward irresistibly; that also in the longing
+ and effort to obtain education and knowledge and in the valuation of all the higher
+ things in life, it was not surpassed by any other country in the world. In the entire
+ book there is not a page that is not filled with the confidence that for these very
+ reasons America and Germany were called upon to march hand in hand at the head of
+ cultured humanity. Is this belief now to be contradicted? Shall I as a German no
+ longer be permitted to call myself a friend of America because over there they think
+ the worst of us for the reason that we, attacked in dastardly wise by a world of
+ foes, are struggling with unanimous determination for our existence?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Guillotining German Honor.</b></p>
+ <p>Of course I know very well that public opinion over there has largely been misled
+ by our opponents and is continuously being misled. Did not the English at the very
+ beginning of the war cut our cable, in order to be able to guillotine our honor
+ without the least interference? For this reason I cannot blame the masses if they
+ took for truth the absurd fables dished out to them, when no contradicting voice
+ could reach them. Less than that, however, can I understand how educated beings, even
+ men who, thanks to their gifts and their standing, play the part of responsible
+ leaders, not only accepted believingly these prevarications and distortions, but,
+ with them as a basis, immediately rendered a verdict against us. For he who publicly
+ judges must be expected to have heard first both parties; and whoever is not in a
+ position to do this must in decency be expected to postpone his verdict. Yes, even
+ more than that, one should think that the sense of justice of every non-partisan must
+ be violated if the one party is absolutely muzzled by the other, and even for this
+ one reason the cause of the latter must be considered as not being free from reason
+ for doubt. Furthermore, one should assume that he who once has been unmasked as a
+ liar therewith should have lost the blind confidence of the impartial in his future
+ assertions. In spite of this, although the first ridiculous news <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>{181}</span>of German defeats and
+ internal dissent could not withstand the far-sounding echo of facts, there still
+ seems to be no twisting of the truth, no defamation, which over there is considered
+ as too thin and too ridiculous by the press and as too shameless by the public.</p>
+ <p>Should the Germans, who, since the time when they fought for and attained their
+ national unity, have exclusively devoted themselves to works of peace and culture,
+ suddenly have been transformed into an adventurous, booty-hungry horde which from
+ mere lust challenged a tremendously superior force to do battle? Should they suddenly
+ have sacrificed to their so-called militarism all their other efforts in commerce,
+ industry, art, and science, in order to risk their very existence for the love of
+ this Moloch? Do you believe that, Americans?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Question of Militarism.</b></p>
+ <p>Our militarism! What does this expression, quoted until it is sickening, mean in
+ the mouth of enemies who in respect of the energy and extent of their armaments were
+ not behind us? Is there no such thing as militarism in France and in Russia? Is the
+ English giant fleet an instrument of peace? Was the Triple Entente founded in order
+ to bring about the millennium on earth? Would the Entente, if we had been foolish
+ enough to disarm, have guaranteed our possessions as a reward for being good? Do you
+ believe that, Americans?</p>
+ <p>It certainly may be difficult for the citizens of the Union&mdash;happy beings
+ they are for it&mdash;to put themselves in the place of a nation that knows it is
+ surrounded on its open borders by jealous, hateful, and greedy neighbors; of a
+ country that for centuries has been the battlefield of all European wars, the place
+ of strife of all the European peoples. They, the members of a nation which for itself
+ occupies a space nearly as large as Europe, almost half of a continent, protected on
+ both sides by the ocean and on the other borders not seriously threatened for as long
+ a time to come as may be anticipated, have no people's army because they do not need
+ any; and yet they would&mdash;their history proves it&mdash;give their blood and that
+ of their sons for the cause of their nation just as gladly as we, if the necessity
+ for doing so came to them. Will they, therefore, reproach us for loving our country
+ not less than they do theirs, only for the reason that we have a thousand times more
+ difficulty in protecting it?</p>
+ <p>Our general military service, which today is being defamed by the word
+ "militarism," is born of the iron commandment of self-preservation. Without it the
+ German Empire and the German Nation long ago would have been struck out of the list
+ of the living. Only lack of knowledge or intentional misconception of our character
+ could accuse us of having an aggressive motive back of it. On earth there is no more
+ peaceful nation than Germany, providing she be left in peace and her room to breathe
+ be not lessened. Germany never has had the least thought of assuming for herself the
+ European hegemony, much less the rulership of the world. She has never greedily eyed
+ colonial possessions of other great powers. On the contrary, in the acquisition of
+ her colonies she was satisfied with whatever the others had left for her. And least
+ of all did she carry up her sleeve a desire of extending the frontiers of the empire.
+ The famous word of Bismarck, that Germany was "saturated" with acquired territory, is
+ still accepted as fully in force to such an extent that even in case of her victory
+ the question as to which parts of the enemies' territory we should claim for our own
+ would cause us a great deal of perplexity. The German Empire could only lose as the
+ national State she is in strength and unity by acquiring new and strange
+ elements.</p>
+ <p>Otherwise would the empire, from the day of its founding until now, for nearly
+ half a century, actually have avoided every war, often enough under the most
+ difficult circumstances? Would it have quietly suffered the open or hidden
+ challenges, the machinations of its enemies constantly appearing more plainly? Yes,
+ would it have tried again and again to improve its relations with these very same
+ enemies by the greatest ad<span class="pagenum"><a name="page182"
+ id="page182"></a>{182}</span>vances? As opposed to the ill-concealed hostility of the
+ French, would it not have been shaken in its steadfast policy of conciliation by the
+ fact that this policy with them only made the impression of weakness and fear? Would
+ it have permitted France to reconstruct her power which was destroyed in 1870 to a
+ greater extent than before, and, in addition, allowed her to conquer a new and
+ gigantic colonial empire? Would it have permitted prostrate Russia to recuperate
+ undisturbed from the almost annihilating blows of the revolution and the Japanese
+ war? Would it, in the countless threatening conflicts of the last decades, have on
+ every occasion thrown the entire weight of its sword into the scales for the
+ preservation of peace?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Kaiser's Responsibility.</b></p>
+ <p>Then, too, many Americans emphasize the fact that they are making not the German
+ people but the Emperor alone responsible for this war. It is hardly conceivable how
+ serious-minded people can lend themselves to the spreading of a fable so childish.
+ When William II., 29 years old, mounted the throne, the entire world said of him that
+ his aim was the acquirement of the laurels of war. In spite of this for twenty-six
+ years he has shown that this accusation was absurd and has proved himself to be the
+ most honest and most dependable protector of European peace. In fact, the very circle
+ of enemies which now dares to call him a military despot thirsting for glory, has
+ year in and year out ridiculed him as a ruler, whose provocation to the very limit
+ was an amusement absolutely fraught with no danger. He who has never been misled by
+ the fiery enthusiasm of youth nor by the full strength of ripe manhood to adorn his
+ brow with the bloody halo of glory, should he suddenly, when his hair is turned gray,
+ have turned into a Caesar, an Attila? Do you believe that, Americans?</p>
+ <p>It is a fact in times of peace there have been certain differences of opinion
+ between the Emperor and his people. Although at all times the honesty of his
+ intentions was elevated above every doubt, the one or other impulsive moves he took
+ to obtain their realization exposed him to criticism at home. Today one may safely
+ admit that&mdash;today, when of these trifling disputes not even a breath, not even a
+ shadow, remains. Never before has his whole people, his whole nation, in every grade
+ of education, in all classes, in all parties, stood behind him so absolutely without
+ reserve as now, when in the last, the very last hour, and driven by direst need, he
+ finally drew the sword to ward off an attack from three sides, long ago prepared.</p>
+ <p>Our nation and our Emperor have not wanted this war and are not to be blamed for
+ it. Even the "White Book" of the German Government, by the very uncontrovertible
+ language of its documents, must convince every impartial being of this fact. And day
+ by day the overwhelming evidence of the plot systematically hatched and
+ systematically carried out under the guidance of England, which put before us the
+ alternative of cutting our way through or being annihilated, is increasing.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>No Treason to Austria Considered.</b></p>
+ <p>It may be that the catastrophe, so far as we are concerned, might have been staved
+ off once more if we would have disregarded the obligation of our alliance and would
+ have left Austria in the lurch&mdash;the Austria which did not want anything else
+ than to put a stop to the nasty work of a band of assassins organized by a
+ neighboring State. But it requires an extreme degree of political blindness for the
+ assumption that by such cowardly treason we should have been able to purchase a
+ change of mind or a lasting peace from our enemies. On the contrary, they would soon
+ enough have used a suitable opportunity to fall upon Germany, which then would have
+ been completely isolated, and the struggle for our national existence would have had
+ to be fought under conditions very much more favorable to our enemies.</p>
+ <p>According to a newspaper report, the esteemed President Eliot of Harvard has
+ written that the fear of the Muscovites could not explain our action, and that an
+ alliance with the Western powers would <span class="pagenum"><a name="page183"
+ id="page183"></a>{183}</span>have offered better protection against a Russian attack.
+ Yes; if such a thing had been possible! As a matter of fact, however, the Western
+ powers did not ally themselves with us against Russia, but with Russia against us;
+ and not the fear of the Muscovites, but their mobilization, encouraged and aided by
+ the very same Western powers, drove us to war. I wonder what President Eliot himself
+ would have done under these circumstances had he been the guardian responsible for
+ Germany's fate?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Belgium's Alleged Neutrality.</b></p>
+ <p>But then the violation of Belgian neutrality! How with the aid of this bugaboo the
+ entire neutral world has been stirred up against us, after England made it the
+ hypocritical excuse for her declaration of war! We knew very well that England and
+ France were determined to violate this neutrality; but, then, we ought to have been
+ very good; we ought to have waited until they did so. Waited until their armies would
+ break into our country across our unprotected Belgian frontier! In other words, we
+ ought to have committed national suicide. Whoever, even up until now, has doubted the
+ German assertion that Belgium was under one roof with England and France, and had
+ herself thrown away her neutrality, must have his eyes opened by the latest official
+ developments. The documents of the Belgian General Staff which have fallen into our
+ hands contain an agreement according to which the march through Belgium of British
+ troops in the case of a Franco-German war was provided for in every detail. Whosoever
+ in the face of these documents repeats the assertion that we have committed a
+ violation of innocent Belgium gives aid to a historical forgery.</p>
+ <p>We have violated the alleged neutrality of Belgium in self-defense. On the other
+ hand, the Japanese, egged on and supported by England, have violated the real
+ neutrality of China from pure lust for robbery. For the three great powers allied
+ against Germany and Austria have not been satisfied with their own nominal
+ superiority of 220 millions against 110 millions! In addition to this they have urged
+ on into war against us a Mongolian people, the most dangerous enemy of the white race
+ and its culture. They have supplemented their armies by a motley collection of all
+ the African negro tribes. They lead into battle against us Indian troops, and the
+ Christian Germanic King of England prays to God for the victory of the heathen Hindus
+ over his coreligionists and blood relatives. Americans, does your racial feeling, at
+ other times so sensitive, remain silent in view of this unexampled shame? Do you
+ accord to the English and the French, who are attacking us in co-operation with the
+ Russians, the Servians, and the Montenegrins, who are dirtying themselves with a
+ brotherhood in arms with the yellow skins, the brown skins, and the blacks, the right
+ to declare themselves the representatives of civilization and us to be
+ barbarians?</p>
+ <p>In order to drive home such evident absurdities, they were, of course, obliged to
+ carry on the poisoning of the spring of information to the utmost, they had to
+ suppress the news of the vile deeds of guerrillas and "snipers" in Belgium and of the
+ Russian ghouls in East Prussia, that were crying to heaven, and to send out into the
+ world instead fables of German brutality. Our national army, permeated with ethical
+ seriousness and iron discipline, the scientist standing beside the farmer, the
+ workman beside the artist, should be guilty of unnecessary severity, uncontrollable
+ brutality, brutality against people unable to defend themselves? Do you believe that,
+ Americans?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Charge of Vandalism.</b></p>
+ <p>The climax of absurdity, however, is reached when the Germans, who in their love
+ and appreciation of art are not surpassed by any people in the world, are accused of
+ having raged as vandals against works of art. Even now these accusations, which the
+ French Government itself had the pitiful courage to support, have proved totally
+ groundless. The City Hall at Louvain stands uninjured; while the populace fired at
+ them, our soldiers had, risking their own lives, <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page184" id="page184"></a>{184}</span>saved it from the flames. An imperial art
+ commission followed at the heels of our victorious troops in Belgium, in order to
+ take charge of the guarding and administration of the treasures of art. The cathedral
+ at Rheims has received but slight damage, and would not have been damaged at all had
+ its tower not been misused by the French as an observation station. I should like to
+ see the commander of an army who, for the sake of the safety of a historical
+ monument, would forget the safety of the troops intrusted into his care!</p>
+ <p>Enough of it! What I have stated is sufficient to show what low weapons our
+ enemies are using behind the battlefield to sully Germany's shield of honor. It is
+ enough for those who care to listen at all. But, also, wherever the weak voice of one
+ rebounds from ears stubbornly closed, the more powerful voice of truth eventually
+ will force a more just verdict.</p>
+ <p>Justice&mdash;that is all that we expect from America. We respect its neutrality;
+ we do not ask from it an ideal partisanship for our benefit. If it does not have for
+ us the sympathy which we have already extended to it and, after a century and a half
+ of unclouded intercourse between the two nations, have anticipated there, then we
+ cannot imbue it with that spirit by reasoning. Furthermore, in the existence of
+ nations sympathy is not the deciding factor, and every nation should be rebuked which
+ out of regard for sympathy would in decisive matters act against its own interests.
+ But just for that very reason one more question must be raised. In the present
+ conflict, which momentarily almost splits the entire world into two camps, where do
+ the interests of America lie?</p>
+ <p>That they are not lying on the side of Russia probably is self-evident. No free
+ American can find desirable a further extension of the Russian world empire and of
+ Russian despotism at the expense of Germany. But how about a country from which once
+ America had to wrest its own liberty in bloody battle? How about England? Where, if
+ England should succeed in downing Germany, would her eyes next be pointed? Has she
+ not herself admitted that she is making war on us principally because she sees in us
+ an uncomfortable competitor in trade? And which competitor would be the next one
+ after us that would become awkward to the trust on the Thames? Yes, have they not
+ already hauled off for the smash against America, when Japan is given opportunity to
+ increase her power&mdash;the same Japan with whom America sooner or later will be
+ bound to have an accounting and whose victory over us would make that accounting a
+ great deal more difficult for the United States?</p>
+ <p>Germany's fate certainly does not depend upon the friendly or unfriendly feeling
+ of America. It will be decided solely upon the European battlefields. But because we
+ are looking out from the night to a future dawn, because in the midst of our national
+ need the cause of humanity is close to our heart, for these reasons it is not
+ immaterial to us how the greatest neutral nation of culture thinks of us. Americans,
+ the cable between us has been cut. It is our wish and our hope that the stronger band
+ that unites American ideals with German ideals shall not also be cut.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id="page185"></a>{185}</span><b>To the
+ Civilized World</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Professors of Germany.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>As representatives of German science and art, we hereby protest to the civilized
+ world against the lies and calumnies with which our enemies are endeavoring to stain
+ the honor of Germany in her hard struggle for existence&mdash;in a struggle which has
+ been forced upon her.</p>
+ <p>The iron mouth of events has proved the untruth of the fictitious German defeats,
+ consequently misrepresentation and calumny are all the more eagerly at work. As
+ heralds of truth we raise our voices against these.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that Germany is guilty of having caused this war. Neither
+ the people, the Government, nor the Kaiser wanted war. Germany did her utmost to
+ prevent it; for this assertion the world has documental proof. Often enough during
+ the twenty-six years of his reign has Wilhelm II. shown himself to be the upholder of
+ peace, and often enough has this fact been acknowledged by our opponents. Nay, even
+ the Kaiser they now dare to call an Attila has been ridiculed by them for years,
+ because of his steadfast endeavors to maintain universal peace. Not till a numerical
+ superiority which had been lying in wait on the frontiers assailed us did the whole
+ nation rise to a man.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that we trespassed in neutral Belgium. It has been proved
+ that France and England had resolved on such a trespass, and it has likewise been
+ proved that Belgium had agreed to their doing so. It would have been suicide on our
+ part not to have been beforehand.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that the life and property of a single Belgian citizen was
+ injured by our soldiers without the bitterest self-defense having made it necessary;
+ for again and again, notwithstanding repeated threats, the citizens lay in ambush,
+ shooting at the troops out of the houses, mutilating the wounded, and murdering in
+ cold blood the medical men while they were doing their Samaritan work. There can be
+ no baser abuse than the suppression of these crimes with the view of letting the
+ Germans appear to be criminals, only for having justly punished these assassins for
+ their wicked deeds.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that our troops treated Louvain brutally. Furious
+ inhabitants having treacherously fallen upon them in their quarters, our troops with
+ aching hearts were obliged to fire a part of the town as a punishment. The greatest
+ part of Louvain has been preserved. The famous Town Hall stands quite intact; for at
+ great self-sacrifice our soldiers saved it from destruction by the flames. Every
+ German would of course greatly regret if in the course of this terrible war any works
+ of art should already have been destroyed or be destroyed at some future time, but
+ inasmuch as in our great love for art we cannot be surpassed by any other nation, in
+ the same degree we must decidedly refuse to buy a German defeat at the cost of saving
+ a work of art.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that our warfare pays no respect to international laws. It
+ knows no indisciplined cruelty. But in the east the earth is saturated with the blood
+ of women and children unmercifully butchered by the wild Russian troops, and in the
+ west dumdum bullets mutilate the breasts of our soldiers. Those who have allied
+ themselves with Russians and Servians, and present such a shameful scene to the world
+ as that of inciting Mongolians and negroes against the white race, have no right
+ whatever to call themselves upholders of civilization.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that the combat against our so-called militarism is not a
+ combat against our civilization, as our enemies hypocritically pretend it is. Were it
+ not <span class="pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>{186}</span>for German
+ militarism German civilization would long since have been extirpated. For its
+ protection it arose in a land which for centuries had been plagued by bands of
+ robbers as no other land had been. The German Army and the German people are one and
+ today this consciousness fraternizes 70,000,000 of Germans, all ranks, positions, and
+ parties being one.</p>
+ <p>We cannot wrest the poisonous weapon&mdash;the lie&mdash;out of the hands of our
+ enemies. All we can do is to proclaim to all the world that our enemies are giving
+ false witness against us. You, who know us, who with us have protected the most holy
+ possessions of man, we call to you:</p>
+ <p>Have faith in us! Believe that we shall carry on this war to the end as a
+ civilized nation, to whom the legacy of a Goethe, a Beethoven, and a Kant is just as
+ sacred as its own hearths and homes.</p>
+ <p>For this we pledge you our names and our honor:</p>
+ <p>ADOLF VON BAEYER, Professor of Chemistry, Munich.</p>
+ <p>Prof. PETER BEHRENS, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>EMIL VON BEHRING, Professor of Medicine, Marburg.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM VON BODE, General Director of the Royal Museums, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ALOIS BRANDL, Professor, President of the Shakespeare Society, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>LUJU BRENTANO, Professor of National Economy, Munich.</p>
+ <p>Prof. JUSTUS BRINKMANN, Museum Director, Hamburg.</p>
+ <p>JOHANNES CONRAD, Professor of National Economy, Halle.</p>
+ <p>FRANZ VON DEFREGGER, Munich.</p>
+ <p>RICHARD DEHMEL, Hamburg.</p>
+ <p>ADOLF DEITZMANN, Professor of Theology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>Prof. WILHELM DOERPFELD, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRIEDRICH VON DUHN, Professor of Archaeology, Heidelberg.</p>
+ <p>Prof. PAUL EHRLICH, Frankfort on the Main.</p>
+ <p>ALBERT EHRHARD, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Strassburg.</p>
+ <p>KARL ENGLER, Professor of Chemistry, Karlsruhe.</p>
+ <p>GERHARD ESSER, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Bonn.</p>
+ <p>RUDOLF EUCKEN, Professor of Philosophy, Jena.</p>
+ <p>HERBERT EULENBERG, Kaiserswerth.</p>
+ <p>HEINRICH FINKE, Professor of History, Freiburg.</p>
+ <p>EMIL FISCHER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM FOERSTER, Professor of Astronomy, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>LUDWIG FULDA, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>EDUARD VON GEBHARDT, Dusseldorf.</p>
+ <p>J.J. DE GROOT, Professor of Ethnography, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRITZ HABER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ERNST HAECKEL, Professor of Zoology, Jena.</p>
+ <p>MAX HALBE, Munich.</p>
+ <p>Prof. ADOLF VON HARNACK, General Director of the Royal Library, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>GERHART HAUPTMANN, Agnetendorf.</p>
+ <p>KARL, HAUPTMANN, Schreiberhau.</p>
+ <p>GUSTAV HELLMANN, Professor of Meteorology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM HERRMANN, Professor of Protestant Theology, Marburg.</p>
+ <p>ANDREAS HEUSLER, Professor of Northern Philology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ADOLF VON HILDEBRAND, Munich.</p>
+ <p>LUDWIG HOFFMANN, City Architect. Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>LEOPOLD GRAF KALCKREUTH, President of the German Confederation of Artists,
+ Eddelsen.</p>
+ <p>ARTHUR KAMPF, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRITZ AUG. VON KAULBACH, Munich.</p>
+ <p>THEODOR KIPP, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FELIX KLEIN, Professor of Mathematics, Goettingen.</p>
+ <p>MAX KLINGER, Leipsic.</p>
+ <p>ALOIS KNOEPFLER, Professor of History of Art, Munich.</p>
+ <p>ANTON KOCH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, M&uuml;nster.</p>
+ <p>PAUL LABAND, Professor of Jurisprudence, Strassburg.</p>
+ <p>KARL LEMPRECHT, Professor of History, Leipsic.</p>
+ <p>PHILIPP LENARD, Professor of Physics, Heidelberg.</p>
+ <p>MAX LENZ, Professor of History, Hamburg.</p>
+ <p>MAX LIEBERMANN, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRANZ VON LISZT, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>LUDWIG MANZEL, President of the Academy of Arts, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>JOSEF MAUSBACH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, M&uuml;nster.</p>
+ <p>GEORG VON MAYR, Professor of Political Sciences, Munich.</p>
+ <p>SEBASTIAN MERKLE, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Wurzburg.</p>
+ <p>EDUARD MEYER, Professor of History, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>HEINRICH MORF, Professor of Roman Philology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRIEDRICH NAUMANN, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ALBERT NEISSER, Professor of Medicine, Breslau.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>{187}</span>
+ <p>WALTER NERNST, Professor of Physics, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM OSTWALD, Professor of Chemistry, Leipsic.</p>
+ <p>BRUNO PAUL, Director of School for Applied Arts, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>MAX PLANCK, Professor of Physics, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ALBERT PLEHN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>GEORG REICKE, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>Prof. MAX REINHARDT, Director of the German Theatre, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ALOIS RIEHL, Professor of Philosophy, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>KARL ROBERT, Professor of Archaeology, Halle.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM ROENTGEN, Professor of Physics, Munich.</p>
+ <p>MAX RUBNER, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRITZ SCHAPER, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ADOLF VON SCHLATTER, Professor of Protestant Theology, Tubingen.</p>
+ <p>AUGUST SCHMIDLIN, Professor of Sacred History, M&uuml;nster.</p>
+ <p>GUSTAV VON SCHMOLLER, Professor of National Economy, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRANZ VON STUCK, Munich.</p>
+ <p>REINHOLD SEEBERG, Professor of Protestant Theology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>MARTIN SPAHN, Professor of History, Strassburg.</p>
+ <p>HERMANN SUDERMANN, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>HANS THOMA, Karlsruhe.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM TRUEBNER, Karlsruhe.</p>
+ <p>KARL VOLLMOELLER, Stuttgart.</p>
+ <p>RICHARD VOTZ, Berchtesgaden.</p>
+ <p>KARL VOTZLER, Professor of Roman Philology, Munich.</p>
+ <p>SIEGFRIED WAGNER, Baireuth.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM WALDEYER, Professor of Anatomy, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>AUGUST VON WASSERMANN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FELIX VON WEINGARTNER.</p>
+ <p>THEODOR WIEGAND, Museum Director, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM WIEN, Professor of Physics, Wurzburg.</p>
+ <p>ULRICH VON WILAMOWITZ-MOELLEN-DORFF, Professor of Philology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>RICHARD WILLSTAETTER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM WINDELBAND, Professor of Philosophy, Heidelberg.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM WUNDT, Professor of Philosophy, Leipsic,</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Appeal of the German Universities</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The campaign of systematic lies and slander which has been carried on against the
+ German people and empire for years has since the outbreak of the war surpassed
+ everything with which one might have credited even the most unscrupulous press. To
+ repudiate any charges raised against our Kaiser and his Government rests with the
+ authorities in question. They have done so, and their defense is substantiated by
+ striking proofs. He who wants to know the truth can learn it, and we trust that truth
+ will prevail. But if we are to look on, when our enemies, guided by envy and malice,
+ are shameless enough to charge our army and with it our whole nation with barbarous
+ atrocities and senseless vandalism, and when their statements appear to be believed,
+ to a certain extent, among neutrals and in places which, at other times, were well
+ disposed toward us; if we are quietly to look on when all this happens, we, the
+ appointed trustees of culture and education in our Fatherland, feel in duty bound to
+ break the reserve which our calling and position impose on us with a strong
+ expression of protest. Hence we now appeal to the learned bodies with whom we
+ hitherto worked in common in the interests of the highest ideals of the human race
+ and with whom, even at this time, when hatred and passion rule the world and confuse
+ the minds of men, we hope to remain of the same mind, in the same service of truth.
+ We appeal to them in the confident belief that our voice will find hearing, and that
+ the expression of our honest indignation will meet with credence. Moreover, we appeal
+ to the love of truth and to the sense of justice of the many thousands all over the
+ world who, being welcome guests in our educational institutions, have taken part in
+ the inheritance of German culture, and who thus have had an opportunity of watching
+ and appreciating the German people in peaceful labor, their industry and uprightness,
+ their sense of order and discipline, their reverence for intellectual work of every
+ kind, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id="page188"></a>{188}</span>and their
+ profound love for sciences and arts. All of you who know that our army is no
+ mercenary host but embraces the entire nation from first to last, that it is led by
+ the country's best sons, and that, at this very hour, thousands from our midst,
+ teachers as well as students, are shedding their life's blood as officers and
+ soldiers on the battlefields of Russia and France; you who have seen and heard for
+ yourselves in what spirit and with what success our youths are treated and taught,
+ and that nothing is stamped upon their minds more deeply than reverence and
+ admiration for artistic, scientific and technical creations of the human mind, no
+ matter what country and nation brought them forth; we call upon you who know all this
+ as witnesses, whether it can be true what our enemies report that the German Army is
+ a horde of barbarians and a band of incendiaries who take pleasure in leveling
+ defenseless cities to the ground and in destroying venerable monuments of history and
+ art. If you wish to pay honor to the cause of truth you will be as firmly convinced
+ as we are that German troops, wherever they had to do destructive work, could only
+ have done so in the bitterness of defensive warfare. But we appeal to all those whom
+ the slanderous reports of our enemies reach and who are not yet altogether blinded by
+ passion, in the name of truth and justice, to shut their ears to such insults to the
+ German people, and not allow themselves to be prejudiced by those who prove ever anew
+ that they hope to be victorious by the instrumentality of lies. Now, if in this
+ fearful war, in which our nation is compelled to fight not only for its power, but
+ for its very existence and its entire civilization, the work of destruction should be
+ greater than in former wars, and if many a precious achievement of culture falls to
+ ruin, the responsibility for all this entirely rests with those who were not content
+ with letting loose this ruthless war, nay, who did not even shrink from pressing
+ murderous weapons upon a peaceful population for them to fall surreptitiously upon
+ our troops who trusted in the observance of the military usages of all civilized
+ peoples. They alone are the guilty authors of everything which happens here. Upon
+ their heads the verdict of history will fall for the lasting injury which culture
+ suffers.</p>
+ <p>September, 1914.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>UNIVERSITIES.</p>
+ <p>Tuebingen, Berlin, Bonn, Breslau, Erlangen, Frankfurt, Freiburg, Giessen,
+ Goettingen, Greifswald, Halle, Heidelberg, Jena, Kiel, K&ouml;nigsberg, Leipzig,
+ Marburg, Muenchen, M&uuml;nster, Rostock, Strassburg, Wuerzburg.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Reply to the German Professors</b></h2>
+ <h3>By British Scholars.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>We see with regret the names of many German professors and men of science, whom we
+ regard with respect and, in some cases, with personal friendship, appended to a
+ denunciation of Great Britain so utterly baseless that we can hardly believe that it
+ expresses their spontaneous or considered opinion. We do not question for a moment
+ their personal sincerity when they express their horror of war and their zeal for
+ "the achievements of culture." Yet we are bound to point out that a very different
+ view of war, and of national aggrandizement based on the threat of war, has been
+ advocated by such influential writers as Nietzsche, von Treitschke, von B&uuml;low,
+ and von Bernhardi, and has received widespread support from the press and from public
+ opinion in Germany. This has not occurred, and in our judgment would scarcely be
+ possible, in any other civilized country. We must also remark that it is German
+ armies alone which <span class="pagenum"><a name="page189"
+ id="page189"></a>{189}</span>have, at the present time, deliberately destroyed or
+ bombarded such monuments of human culture as the Library at Louvain and the
+ Cathedrals at Rheims and Malines.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Diplomatic Papers.</b></p>
+ <p>No doubt it is hard for human beings to weigh justly their country's quarrels;
+ perhaps particularly hard for Germans, who have been reared in an atmosphere of
+ devotion to their Kaiser and his army; who are feeling acutely at the present hour,
+ and who live under a Government which, we believe, does not allow them to know the
+ truth. Yet it is the duty of learned men to make sure of their facts. The German
+ "White Book" contains only some scanty and carefully explained selections from the
+ diplomatic correspondence which preceded this war. And we venture to hope that our
+ German colleagues will sooner or later do their best to get access to the full
+ correspondence, and will form therefrom an independent judgment.</p>
+ <p>They will then see that, from the issue of the Austrian note to Servia onward,
+ Great Britain, whom they accuse of causing this war, strove incessantly for peace,
+ Her successive proposals were supported by France, Russia, and Italy, but,
+ unfortunately, not by the one power which could by a single word at Vienna have made
+ peace certain. Germany, in her own official defense&mdash;incomplete as that document
+ is&mdash;does not pretend that she strove for peace; she only strove for "the
+ localization of the conflict." She claimed that Austria should be left free to
+ "chastise" Servia in whatever way she chose. At most she proposed that Austria should
+ not annex a portion of Servian territory&mdash;a futile provision, since the
+ execution of Austria's demand would have made the whole of Servia subject to her
+ will.</p>
+ <p>Great Britain, like the rest of Europe, recognized that, whatever just grounds of
+ complaint Austria may have had, the unprecedented terms of her note to Servia
+ constituted a challenge to Russia and a provocation to war. The Austrian Emperor in
+ his proclamation admitted that war was likely to ensue. The German "White Book"
+ states in so many words: "We were perfectly aware that a possible warlike attitude of
+ Austria-Hungary against Servia might bring Russia upon the field and therefore
+ involve us in war. * * * We could not, however, * * * advise our ally to take a
+ yielding attitude not compatible with his dignity." The German Government admits
+ having known the tenor of the Austrian note beforehand, when it was concealed from
+ all the other powers; admits backing it up after it was issued; admits that it knew
+ the note was likely to precipitate war; and admits that, whatever professions it made
+ to the other powers, in private it did not advise Austria to abate one jot of her
+ demands. This, to our minds, is tantamount to admitting that Germany has, together
+ with her unfortunate ally, deliberately provoked the present war.</p>
+ <p>One point we freely admit. Germany would very likely have preferred not to fight
+ Great Britain at this moment. She would have preferred to weaken and humiliate
+ Russia; to make Servia a dependent of Austria; to render France innocuous and Belgium
+ subservient; and then, having established an overwhelming advantage, to settle
+ accounts with Great Britain. Her grievance against us is that we did not allow her to
+ do this.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Britain's Love of Peace.</b></p>
+ <p>So deeply rooted is Great Britain's love of peace, so influential among us are
+ those who have labored through many difficult years to promote good feeling between
+ this country and Germany, that, in spite of our ties of friendship with France, in
+ spite of the manifest danger threatening ourselves, there was still, up to the last
+ moment, a strong desire to preserve British neutrality, if it could be preserved
+ without dishonor. But Germany herself made this impossible.</p>
+ <p>Great Britain, together with France, Russia, Prussia, and Austria, had solemnly
+ guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium. In the preservation of this neutrality our
+ deepest sentiments and our most vital interests are alike involved. Its violation
+ would not only shatter the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page190"
+ id="page190"></a>{190}</span>independence of Belgium itself: it would undermine the
+ whole basis which renders possible the neutrality of any State and the very existence
+ of such States as are much weaker than their neighbors. We acted in 1914 just as we
+ acted in 1870. We sought from both France and Germany assurances that they would
+ respect Belgian neutrality. In 1870 both powers assured us of their good intentions,
+ and both kept their promises. In 1914 France gave immediately, on July 31, the
+ required assurance; Germany refused to answer. When, after this sinister silence,
+ Germany proceeded to break under our eyes the treaty which we and she had both
+ signed, evidently expecting Great Britain to be her timid accomplice, then even to
+ the most peace-loving Englishman hesitation became impossible. Belgium had appealed
+ to Great Britain to keep her word, and she kept it.</p>
+ <p>The German professors appear to think that Germany has in this matter some
+ considerable body of sympathizers in the universities of Great Britain. They are
+ gravely mistaken. Never within our lifetime has this country been so united on any
+ great political issue. We ourselves have a real and deep admiration for German
+ scholarship and science. We have many ties with Germany, ties of comradeship, of
+ respect, and of affection. We grieve profoundly that, under the baleful influence of
+ a military system and its lawless dreams of conquest, she whom we once honored now
+ stands revealed as the common enemy of Europe and of all peoples which respect the
+ law of nations. We must carry on the war on which we have entered. For us, as for
+ Belgium, it is a war of defense, waged for liberty and peace.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Sir CLIFFORD ALLBUTT, Regius Professor of Physics, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>T.W. ALLEN, Reader in Greek, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>E. ARMSTRONG, Pro-Provost of Queen's College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>E.V. ARNOLD, Professor of Latin, University College of North Wales.</p>
+ <p>Sir C.B. BALL, Regius Professor of Surgery, Dublin.</p>
+ <p>Sir THOMAS BARLOW, President of the Royal College of Physicians, London.</p>
+ <p>BERNARD BOSANQUET, formerly Professor of Moral Philosophy, St. Andrews.</p>
+ <p>A.C. BRADLEY, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>W.H. BRAGG, Cavendish Professor of Physics, Leeds.</p>
+ <p>Sir THOMAS BROCK, Membre d'honneur de la Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des Artistes
+ Francais.</p>
+ <p>A.J. BROWN, Professor of Biology and Chemistry of Fermentation, University of
+ Birmingham.</p>
+ <p>JOHN BURNET, Professor of Greek, St. Andrews.</p>
+ <p>J.B. BURY, Regius Professor of Modern History, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir W.W. CHEYNE, Professor of Clinical Surgery, King's College, London, President
+ of the Royal College of Surgeons.</p>
+ <p>J. NORMAN COLLIE, Professor of Organic Chemistry and Director of the Chemical
+ Laboratories, University College, London.</p>
+ <p>F.C. CONYBEARE, Honorary Fellow of University College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir HENRY CRAIK, M.P. for Glasgow and Aberdeen Universities.</p>
+ <p>Sir JAMES CRICHTON-BROWNE, Vice President and Treasurer, Royal Institution.</p>
+ <p>Sir WILLIAM CROOKES, President of the Royal Society.</p>
+ <p>Sir FOSTER CUNLIFFE, Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir FRANCIS DARWIN, late Reader in Botany, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>A.V. DICEY, Fellow of All Souls College and formerly Vinerian Professor of English
+ Law, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir S. DILL, Hon. Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir JAMES DONALDSON, Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of St.
+ Andrews.</p>
+ <p>F.W. DYSON, Astronomer Royal.</p>
+ <p>Sir EDWARD ELGAR.</p>
+ <p>Sir ARTHUR EVANS, Extraordinary Professor of Prehistoric Arch&aelig;ology,
+ Oxford.</p>
+ <p>L.R. FARNELL, Rector of Exeter College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>C.H. FIRTH, Regius Professor of Modern History, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>H.A.L. FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University.</p>
+ <p>J.A. FLEMING, Professor of Electrical Engineering in the University of London.</p>
+ <p>H.S. FOXWELL, Professor of Political Economy in the University of London.</p>
+ <p>Sir EDWARD FRY, Ambassador Extraordinary and First British Plenipotentiary to The
+ Hague Peace Conference in 1907.</p>
+ <p>Sir ARCHIBALD GEIKIE, Past President of the Royal Society.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>{191}</span>W.M. GELDART,
+ Fellow of All Souls and Vinerian Professor of English Law, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir RICKMAN GODLEE, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Surgery, University College,
+ London.</p>
+ <p>B.P. GRENFELL, late Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>E.H. GRIFFITHS, Principal of the University College of South Wales and
+ Monmouthshire.</p>
+ <p>W.H. HADOW, Principal of Armstrong College, Newcastle.</p>
+ <p>J.S. HALDANE, late Reader in Physiology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>MARCUS HARTOG, Professor of Zoology in University College, Cork.</p>
+ <p>F.J. HAVERFIELD, Camden Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>W.A. HERDMAN, Professor of Zoology at Liverpool, General Secretary of the British
+ Association.</p>
+ <p>Sir W.P. HERRINGHAM, Vice Chancellor of the University of London.</p>
+ <p>E.W. HOBSON, Sadleirian Professor of Pure Mathematics, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>D.G. HOGARTH, Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir ALFRED HOPKINSON, late Vice Chancellor of Manchester University.</p>
+ <p>A.S. HUNT, Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>HENRY JACKSON, Regius Professor of Greek, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir THOMAS G. JACKSON, R.A.</p>
+ <p>F.B. JEVONS, Professor of Philosophy, Durham.</p>
+ <p>H.H. JOACHIM, Fellow of Merton College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>J. JOLLY, Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Dublin.</p>
+ <p>COURTNEY KENNY, Downing Professor of the Laws of England, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir F.G. KENYON, Director and Principal Librarian, British Museum.</p>
+ <p>HORACE LAMB, Professor of Mathematics, Manchester University.</p>
+ <p>J.N. LANGLEY, Professor of Physiology, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>WALTER LEAF, Fellow of London University, President of the Hellenic Society.</p>
+ <p>Sir SIDNEY LEE, Editor of the Dictionary of National Biography, Professor of the
+ English Language and Literature in the University of London.</p>
+ <p>Sir OLIVER LODGE, Principal of Birmingham University.</p>
+ <p>Sir DONALD MACALISTER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Glasgow.</p>
+ <p>R.W. MACAN, Master of University College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir WILLIAM MACEWEN, Professor of Surgery, Glasgow.</p>
+ <p>J.W. MACKAIL, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir PATRICK MANSON.</p>
+ <p>R.R. MARETT, Reader in Social Anthropology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>D.S. MARGOLIOUTH, Laudian Professor of Arabic, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir H.A. MIERS, Principal of the University of London.</p>
+ <p>FREDERICK W. MOTT, Fullerian Professor of Physiology, Royal Institution.</p>
+ <p>LORD MOULTON OF BANK, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary.</p>
+ <p>J.E.H. MURPHY, Professor of Irish, Dublin.</p>
+ <p>GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>J.L. MYRES, Wykeham Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>G.H.F. NUTTALL, Quick Professor of Biology, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir W. OSLER, Regius Professor of Medicine, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir ISAMBARD OWEN, Vice Chancellor of the University of Bristol.</p>
+ <p>Sir WALTER PARRATT, Professor of Music, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir HUBERT PARRY, Director of Royal College of Music.</p>
+ <p>W.H. PERKIN, Waynflete Professor of Chemistry, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>W.M. FLINDERS PETRIE EDWARDS, Professor of Egyptology, University College,
+ London.</p>
+ <p>A.F. POLLARD, Professor of English History, London.</p>
+ <p>Sir F. POLLOCK, formerly Corpus Professor of Jurisprudence, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>EDWARD B. POULTON, Hope Professor of Zoology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir E.J. POYNTER, President of the Royal Academy of Arts.</p>
+ <p>Sir A. QUILLER-COUCH, King Edward VII. Professor of English Literature,
+ Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir WALTER RALEIGH, Professor of English Literature, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir W. RAMSAY, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, London.</p>
+ <p>Lord RAYLEIGH, Past President Royal Society, Nobel Laureate, Chancellor of
+ Cambridge University.</p>
+ <p>Lord REAY, First President British Academy.</p>
+ <p>JAMES REID, Professor of Ancient History, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>WILLIAM RIDGEWAY, Disney Professor of Archaeology, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>T.F. ROBERTS, Principal of the University College of Wales, Aberystwith.</p>
+ <p>J. HOLLAND ROSE, Reader in Modern History, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir RONALD ROSS, formerly Professor of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, Nobel
+ Laureate.</p>
+ <p>M.E. SADLER, Vice Chancellor of Leeds.</p>
+ <p>W. SANDAY, Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir J.E. SANDYS, Public Orator, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id="page192"></a>{192}</span>Sir ERNEST
+ SATOW, Second British Delegate to The Hague Peace Conference in 1907.</p>
+ <p>A.H. SAYCE, Professor of Assyriology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>ARTHUR SCHUSTER, late Professor of Physics, Manchester.</p>
+ <p>D.H. SCOTT, Foreign Secretary, Royal Society.</p>
+ <p>C.S. SHERRINGTON, Waynflete Professor of Physiology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>GEORGE ADAM SMITH, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Aberdeen.</p>
+ <p>G.C. MOORE SMITH, Professor of English Language and Literature, Sheffield.</p>
+ <p>E.A. SONNENSCHEIN, Professor of Latin and Greek, Birmingham.</p>
+ <p>W.R. SORLEY, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir C.V. STANFORD, Profesor of Music, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>V.H. STANTON, Ely Professor of Divinity, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>J. ARTHUR THOMSON, Regius Professor of Natural History, Aberdeen.</p>
+ <p>Sir J.J. THOMSON, Professor of Experimental Physics, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>T.F. TOUT, Professor of Medi&aelig;val and Modern History, Manchester.</p>
+ <p>Sir W. TURNER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Edinburgh.</p>
+ <p>Sir C. WALDSTEIN, late Reader in Classical Arch&aelig;ology and Slade Professor of
+ Fine Art, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir J. WOLFE-BARRY.</p>
+ <p>Sir ALMROTH WRIGHT, formerly Professor of Pathology, Netley.</p>
+ <p>C.T. HAGBERG WRIGHT, Librarian, London Library.</p>
+ <p>JOSEPH WRIGHT, Professor of Comparative Philology, Oxford.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Concerning the German Professors</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Frederic Harrison.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of the London Morning Post</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: I was not invited to join the reply of our distinguished scholars and
+ professors, perhaps because it is so many years since I was the colleague of James
+ Bryce as Professor of Jurisprudence to the Inns of Court. And, indeed, I do not care
+ to bandy recriminations with these German defenders of the attack on civilization by
+ the whole imperial, military, and bureaucratic order. It seems to me waste of time
+ and loss of self-respect to notice these pedants.</p>
+ <p>The whole German press and the entire academic class seem to be banded together as
+ an official bureau in order to spread mendacious insults and spiteful slanders. Not a
+ word comes from them to excuse or deny the defiance of public law and the mockery of
+ public faith by the German Emperor, his Ministers, and his armies. These professors
+ seem to exult in serving the new Attila&mdash;rather let us say the new Caligula, for
+ Attila at least was an open soldier and did not skulk under the Red Cross behind
+ barbed wire fences.</p>
+ <p>We have long known that all German academic and scholastic officials are the
+ creatures of the Government, as obedient to orders as any Drill Sergeant. They seem
+ to have sold their consciences for place. Not a word comes from them even of regret
+ for the massacre of civilians on false charges, for the wanton murder of children,
+ for the wholesale rape of women, the showering of bombs upon sleeping towns in sheer
+ cruelty of destruction. The intellectual energies of Kultur seem concentrated on
+ distorting the meaning of our dispatches and the speeches of our statesmen, and in
+ manufacturing for their people and neutrals venomous falsehoods. German Geist today
+ is a huge machine to cram lies upon their own people, and to insinuate lies to the
+ world around. Their system of war is based upon lying at home and abroad, on
+ treachery and terrorism. They think that murdering a few civilians would terrify
+ France into surrender, and will drive England to betray the Allies. Their poor
+ conscripts are told that we kill and torture prisoners; their monuments at home are
+ bedizened with mock laurels; and neutrals are poisoned with wild inventions.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/vonharnack.jpg"><img src='images/vonharnack_thumb.jpg' width='253'
+ height='400' alt='ADOLF VON HARNACK. See Page 198' title='ADOLF VON HARNACK' /></a>
+ <a href="images/niemeyer.jpg"><img src='images/niemeyer_thumb.jpg' width='250'
+ height='400' alt='THEODORE NIEMEYER. See Page 206' title='THEODORE NIEMEYER' />
+ </a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>ADOLF VON HARNACK. See <a href="#page198">Page 198</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>THEODORE NIEMEYER. See <a href="#page206">Page 206</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <p>For years past their public men, have <span class="pagenum"><a name="page193"
+ id="page193"></a>{193}</span>been tricking our politicians, journalists, and
+ professors to accept them as peaceful leaders of a higher civilization&mdash;- while
+ all the while their soldiers, diplomats, and spies (the three are really but one
+ class) were secretly courting our own royalties and society, studying our naval and
+ military defenses, filling our homes with tens of thousands of reservists having
+ secret orders to spy, to destroy our arsenals and roads, and even planting out bogus
+ industries and laying concrete bases for cannon, to bombard the open towns of
+ friendly nations. We have been living unsuspectingly with a nation of assassins
+ plotting to destroy us. Did these professors of Kultur not know of this elaborate
+ conspiracy of Kaisertum, which unites the stealthy treachery of a Mohawk or a thug to
+ the miracles of modern science? For years past the ideal of Kultur has been to lay
+ down secret mines to destroy their peaceful neighbors. Did these professors of the
+ Fatheland not know this? Then they are unable to grasp the most obvious
+ facts&mdash;the life work of their own masters under their own eyes. And, if they did
+ know it, and must at least know it now, and yet approve and glory in it, they must be
+ beneath contempt. Why argue with such hypocrites?</p>
+ <p>Not a few of us have known and watched this conspiracy for years. I have preached
+ this ever since the advent of Bismarckism and the new Europe that was formed forty
+ years ago. Not a few of us have foretold not only the tremendous attack on the
+ British Empire designed by German sea power but the precise steps of the war upon
+ France, through Belgium, and to be executed by an overwhelming force of sudden shock
+ in the midst of peace. For my part, nothing in this war since July 30 has at all
+ surprised me, unless it be the foul cruelty with which Belgian civilians have been
+ treated. Indeed, in January, 1913, I wrote a warning which reads now like a summary
+ of events that have since happened. I was denounced as a senile alarmist by some who
+ are now the loudest in calling to arms. Alas! too late is their repentance.</p>
+ <p>May I ask why our eminent academicians and scholars who still profess "friendship
+ and admiration" for their German confr&egrave;res never even suspected the huge
+ conspiracy of which civilization has been the victim? Why did they accept the stars
+ and crosses of Caligula-Attila? Why hob-nob with the docile creatures of his
+ chancery, and spread at home and abroad the worship of Geist and Kultur? Are they fit
+ to instruct us about politics, public law, and international relations, when they
+ were so egregiously mistaken, so blind, so befooled, with regard to the most
+ portentous catastrophe in the memory of living men? I am glad that they see their
+ blindness now&mdash;but why this sentimental friendliness for those who hoodwinked
+ them?</p>
+ <p>Surely this should open their eyes to the mountains of pretentious clouds on which
+ the claims of Kultur rest. I am myself a student of German learning, and quite aware
+ of the enormous industry, subtlety, and ingenuity of German scholarship. We owe deep
+ gratitude to the older race of the Savignys, Rankes, Mommsens. Since 1851 I have been
+ five times in Germany on different occasions down to 1900. I read and speak the
+ language, and twice I lived in Germany for months together, even in the house of a
+ distinguished man of science. I study their theology, their sociology, economics,
+ history, and their classics. I am quite aware of the supremacy of German scholars in
+ ancient literature, in many branches of science, in the record of the past in art,
+ manners, and civilization. But to have edited a Greek play or to have discovered a
+ new explosive, a new comet, another microbe, does not qualify a savant to dogmatize
+ on international morals and the hegemony of the world. Sixty years ago in Leipzig the
+ editor of a famous journal undertook to prove to me that Shakespeare was a German.
+ Our poet, he said, was the grandest output of the Teutonic mind; nine-tenths of the
+ Teutonic mind was German-argal, Shakespeare was a German, Q.E.D.</p>
+ <p>With the vast accumulation of solid <span class="pagenum"><a name="page194"
+ id="page194"></a>{194}</span>knowledge of provable facts there is too often in the
+ German mind a sudden bounding up into a cloudland of crude and unproved guesswork. In
+ the logic of Kultur there seems to be a huge gap in the reasoning of the middle
+ terms. A savant unearths a manuscript in Syria, which he deciphers with marvelous
+ industry, learning, and ingenuity. Straightway he cries, "Eureka, behold the original
+ Gospel&mdash;the true Gospel!" and he proceeds to turn Christianity upside down. He
+ may have experimented on cultures of microbes for a generation; and then he calls on
+ earth and heaven to acknowledge the mystery of the self-creation of the universe. We
+ hear much of Treitschke today&mdash;no doubt a man of genius with a gift for
+ research&mdash;but what ferocious pyrotechnics were poured forth by this apostle of
+ mendacious swagger. And as to Nietzsche, he was anticipated by Shakespeare in
+ Timon&mdash;a diseased cynic&mdash;</p>
+ henceforth hated be<br />
+ Of Timon, man and all humanity.<br />
+
+ <p>They seem to think that to have put the critics right about a few lines in
+ Sophocles, or to have discovered a new chemical dye, dispenses the German Superman
+ from being bound to humanity, truthfulness, and honor. Charge them with the
+ mutilation of little girls and the violation of nuns in Belgium, and they reply: Yes!
+ but think of Kant and Hegel! It is treason to philosophy, they say, that a man who
+ has translated Schopenhauer should condemn Germans for burning Malines and making
+ captive women a screen for troops in battle. Kultur, it seems, has its own "higher
+ law," which its professors expound to the decadent nations of Europe.</p>
+ <p>Let us hold no parley with these arrogant sophists. Let all intellectual commerce
+ be suspended until these official professors have unlearned the infernal code of
+ "military necessity" and "world policy" which, to the indignation of the civilized
+ world, they are ordered by the Vicegerent of God at Potsdam to teach to the great
+ Teutonic Super-race. Yours, &amp;c.,</p>
+ <p>FREDERIC HARRISON.</p>
+ <p>Bath, Oct. 29.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Reply From France</b></h2>
+ <h3>By M. Yves Guyot and Prof. Bellet.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>The following is the text of an open lettert addressed by M. Yves Guyot,
+ Editor-in-Chief of the Journal des Economistes, and M. Bellet, Professor at the
+ Schools of Political Science and Commercial Studies, to Prof. Brentano of the
+ University of Munich, the communication being a reply to the recent German Appeal
+ to Civilized Nations on the subject of the war</i>:</p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>PARIS, Oct. 15, 1914.</p>
+ <p><i>To Prof. Brentano of the University of Munich</i>:</p>
+ <p>Very Learned Professor and Colleague: On reading the Appeal to Civilized Nations,
+ (among which France is evidently not included,) which has just been sent forth by
+ ninety-three persons declaring themselves to be representatives of German science and
+ art, we were not surprised to find Prof. Schmoller's signature. He had already shown
+ his hatred for France by refusing to assist at the gatherings organized, a little
+ more than two years ago, to celebrate the seventieth anniversary of the Paris Society
+ of Political Economy, (gatherings at which we were happy to enjoy your presence and
+ that of your colleague, Mr. Lotz.) In his Rector's speech at the Berlin University,
+ in 1897, he declared that German science had no other object than to celebrate the
+ imperial messages of 1880 and 1890; and he pointed out that every disciple of Adam
+ Smith who was not willing to make it a servant of that policy "should resign his
+ seat." But we <span class="pagenum"><a name="page195"
+ id="page195"></a>{195}</span>felt painful surprise when, at the foot of the said
+ factum, we found your name side by side with his.</p>
+ <p>You and the other representatives of German science and art accuse France, Great
+ Britain, Belgium, and Russia of falsehood. Would you have submitted, on the part of
+ one of your pupils, to so grave an imputation, so lightly bandied? Admitting you to
+ be in absolute ignorance of the documents published since the war declaration, you
+ have certainly been acquainted with the ultimatum pronounced by Austria to Servia. It
+ must have struck you with surprise; for it stands as a unique diplomatic document in
+ all history. Did you not ask yourselves whether the demands of Austria did not go
+ beyond all bounds, seeing that they insisted on the abdication of an independent
+ State? You learned that, in spite of Servia's humble reply, because it contained a
+ reservation, immediately, without discussion, the Ambassador of Austria-Hungary left
+ Belgrade, and that the following day Austria declared war. You do not ignore the
+ steps taken by Great Britain and France, the demand for delay made by Russia, and the
+ reply of the German Chancellor "that none should intervene between Austria and
+ Servia." He elegantly qualified the attitude thus adopted as "localizing the
+ conflict."</p>
+ <p>Is there a single member among those who signed the document of Intellectuals who
+ has been able to believe&mdash;have you been able to believe, Mr. Brentano, with your
+ quick and perspicacious mind?&mdash;that this reply from Berlin did not imply war as
+ a fatal consequence; for any nation accepting it was certain to be treated in future,
+ by Germany, as the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy treated Servia? How, then, knowing the
+ initial pretext of the war, are you able to realize that there was no other relation
+ between this cause and the effect produced than the will of those who made use of it
+ to provoke either a dishonoring humiliation for the countries accepting such a
+ situation, or a general conflagration? How, then, do you, and the signatories of your
+ appeal, dare to state: "It is not true that Germany provoked the war"? You dare to
+ speak of proofs taken from authentic documents. Those published by Great Britain,
+ Russia, and Belgium are known. All agree; and they give clear proof that the
+ Austro-Hungarian ultimatum was pronounced with full complicity of the Berlin
+ Chancellery. They prove, moreover, that the German Ambassador at Petrograd, fearing a
+ withdrawal on the part of Hungary, precipitated events while your Emperor kept
+ himself out of the way. Meanwhile, your General Staff had, in underhanded manner,
+ mobilized a portion of its troops, by individual call, while in France we waited,
+ unable to imagine that the German Government had resolved to engage in European war
+ without motives. In the pocketbooks of your reservists have been found forms calling
+ them to the army long before the end of July. Our friend and colleague,
+ Courcelle-Seneuil, has seen the military book of a German living in Switzerland, at
+ Bex, containing this call.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Bismarckian Loyalty.</b></p>
+ <p>Correspondence of official nature has been stopped at the Cape, which should have
+ reached in full time officers of the German Navy, warning them to prepare for
+ mid-July. Such advance taken by your troops has rendered the task the more difficult
+ for ours. We were very simple, for we believed in the affirmations of your statesmen.
+ You state that these are loyal war methods; so be it. That belongs to the diplomatic
+ rules of loyalty bequeathed by Bismarck to his successors. But to attempt to carry on
+ this falsehood, you have no longer the excuse of its utility. It is clear to all,
+ except, it seems, the representatives of science and art in Germany, who are
+ sufficiently devoid of perspicacity to ignore it.</p>
+ <p>They affirm, moreover, that Germany has not violated the neutrality of Belgium;
+ she merely contented herself with "taking the first step." Beyond the authentic
+ proofs which have been published, we would draw your attention to an undeniable fact.
+ Trusting in the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page196"
+ id="page196"></a>{196}</span>treaty which guaranteed Belgium neutrality&mdash;and at
+ the foot of which figured Germany's signature&mdash;in the promise made a short while
+ ago to the King of the Belgians by your Emperor, we unfortunately left our northern
+ frontier unguarded. You must be aware, professor, that the English did not move until
+ Belgian soil had been effectively violated. It is true that we knew the plan of
+ campaign set forth by Gen. Bernhardi, but we na&iuml;vely believed that, whatever
+ might be the opinion of a General, the Chancellor of the Empire would consider a
+ treaty bearing the imperial signature as something more than a mere "bit of paper."
+ Germany has also been untrue to her signature by violating the treaty of neutrality
+ of Luxembourg. You forgot to state that there also you only "took the first step."
+ Your appeal echoes the German papers, which declare that it was the Belgians, and
+ particularly the women, who "began against your troops." An American paper replied by
+ stating that if it was the Belgian women who attacked German soldiers on Belgian
+ soil, what were the soldiers doing there? The truth is that your troops, obeying
+ their officers, as is proved by papers which have been seized and which you would
+ find quoted in the report presented by the Belgian Commission to President Wilson,
+ have executed orders which seem inspired by the ferocious inscriptions of Assyrian
+ Kings, no doubt exhumed on the Bagdad railway line; and you think it quite natural
+ that massacre and arson should have been perpetrated at Louvain because the civil
+ population fired on your soldiers; but an inquiry made together with the
+ representatives of the United States (whom you deign to consider sufficiently to ask
+ them to represent your defenses) proved that the civil population was unarmed. If you
+ today approve of the burning of the Louvain Library, have you until now approved of
+ the destruction of the library at Alexandria? It is true there was no Deutsch Kultur
+ there. The result of German culture as regards military matters is to place your
+ soldiers on a stratum of civilization anterior to that of the Vandals, who, when
+ taking Hippone, spared the library.</p>
+ <p>In Paris, if one of us passing, on Friday, Oct. 9, in the Rue d'Edimbourg, to an
+ office of the Societe d'Economie Politique, situated at No. 14, had passed near to
+ that address, he might have been murdered by a bomb thrown from one of your Taubes on
+ the civil population of a town whose bombarding had not been notified. Another Taube
+ caused, through the throwing of a bomb, a fire at the Cathedral of Notre Dame. You
+ cannot, to excuse such an assault, invoke the pretext put forward to excuse the
+ destruction of the Cathedral of Rheims. No observer could have caught sight of a
+ German soldier from the top of the towers.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Barbarian Soldiery.</b></p>
+ <p>Your co-signatories and you express indignation because the civilized world
+ describes your soldiers as barbarians. Do you therefore consider such deeds as those
+ specified to be a high expression of civilization? And here is the dilemma: either
+ you are in ignorance of these deeds, then you are indeed very careless, or you
+ approve of them, in which case you must make the defense of them enter into your
+ works on right and ethics. In doing so you would only be following the theories of
+ your military authors who have insisted on the necessity of striking terror into the
+ hearts of the civil population, in order that it may weigh on its Government and its
+ army so strongly that they may be forced to ask for peace. But those of your
+ colleagues who profess psychology must, if they have approved such a theory, confess
+ today that they made a great mistake; for such deeds, far from forcing the people to
+ cowardly action, awaken indignation in all hearts and fire the courage of our
+ soldiers. Nevertheless, your military authors have not stated that theft was a means
+ of assuring victory. And yet the Crown Prince, your Emperor of tomorrow, gathered
+ together at the castle of the Count of Baye articles in precious metals, belonging to
+ a collection, which he had carefully packed up and sent off. Some of your officers'
+ trunks have been found stuffed with <span class="pagenum"><a name="page197"
+ id="page197"></a>{197}</span>goods which would constitute the stock of a second-hand
+ clothes seller. Do you and your co-signatories include in German science and art the
+ science and art of housebreaking? Are the law professors and the economists willing
+ to defend such a manner of acquiring property? And, if so, what becomes of your penal
+ code?</p>
+ <p>You and your co-signatories affirm that the present struggle is directed against
+ "German culture." If such culture teaches that the rights of men include contempt of
+ treaties, contempt of private property, contempt of the lives of non-combatants, you
+ cannot be surprised that the other nations show no desire to preserve it for your
+ benefit and their detriment.</p>
+ <p>It is not by arms but by arguments and facts that economists like us, faithful to
+ the teachings of the physiocrats and of Adam Smith, have sought to protect ourselves
+ against it. On the eve of the war, at the inauguration of Turgot's Monument, we set
+ forth his ideas of liberty and humanity in opposition to the German realpolitik. We
+ hope that the present events will cure those among our professors whom it had
+ contaminated, and that they will cease to constitute themselves accomplices of that,
+ form of Pan-Germanism which they introduced to public opinion and to our legislation.
+ The acts of your diplomatists and of your Generals, and the approbation given them by
+ you and other representatives of German science, are a terrible demonstration, but
+ conclusive, of the dangers and vanity of German culture. You are its true
+ destroyers.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Militarism and Civilization.</b></p>
+ <p>"Without our miltarism," say you, "our civilization would have been annihilated
+ long ago." And you invoke the inheritance of Goethe, Beethoven, Kant. But Goethe,
+ born in the free city of Frankfort, lived at the Court of Charles Augustus, which was
+ a liberal and artistic centre ever threatened by Prussia. But Beethoven was of
+ Flemish origin, and lived in Holland until the age of twenty-four, spending the rest
+ of his life in Vienna, and he has nothing in common with Prussian militarism, so
+ redoubtable for Austria. But Kant, if he was born and lived at K&ouml;nisberg, the
+ true capital of the Prussian Kingdom, welcomed the French Revolution, and when he
+ died in 1804 it was not Prussian militarism which had recommended his writings to the
+ world.</p>
+ <p>But the solidarity which you establish between German militarism and German
+ culture, of which you and your colleagues claim to be the representatives, is a proof
+ of the confusion of German conceptions.</p>
+ <p>To present Goethe, Beethoven, and Kant to the world you surround them with
+ bayonets. In the same manner every tradesman and every merchant throughout Germany
+ has got into the habit of saying: "I have four million bayonets behind me!" Your
+ Emperor said to some tradesmen who complained of bad business: "I must travel!" And
+ he went to Constantinople; he went to Tangier, after the speech at Bremen. In every
+ one of his words, in each of his gestures, he affirmed the subordination of economic
+ civilization to military civilization. He considered that it was his duty to open up
+ markets and assert the value of German products with cannon and sword. Hence his
+ formidable armaments, his perpetual threats which held all nations in a constant
+ state of anxiety.</p>
+ <p>There is the deep and true cause of the war. And it is due entirely to your
+ Emperor and his environment. We readily understand that the greater number of
+ "representatives of German science and art" who signed the appeal are incapable of
+ fathoming this fact; but this is not your case, you who denounced the abuses and
+ consequences of German protectionism, and we remember that at the Antwerp Congress
+ you agreed with us in recognizing its aggressive nature.</p>
+ <p>In conclusion, we beg to express the deep consideration which we feel for your
+ science, hitherto so unerring.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page198" id="page198"></a>{198}</span><b>To
+ Americans In Germany</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Prof. Adolf von Harnack.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Citizens of the United States, ladies and gentlemen: It is my pleasure and my
+ privilege to address to you today a few words.</p>
+ <p>Let me begin with a personal recollection. Ten years ago I was in the United
+ States and I came away with some unforgettable memories. What impression was the
+ strongest? Not the thundering fall of Niagara, not the wonderful entrance into New
+ York Harbor with its skyscrapers, not the tremendous World's Fair of St. Louis in all
+ its proud grandeur, not the splendid universities of Harvard and Columbia or the
+ Congressional Library in Washington&mdash;these are all works of technique or of
+ nature and cannot arouse our deepest admiration and make the deepest impression. What
+ was the deepest impression? It was two-fold: first, the great work of the American
+ Nation, and next, American hospitality.</p>
+ <p>The great work of the American Nation, that is, the nation itself! From the
+ smallest beginning the American Nation has in 200 years developed itself to a world
+ power of more than 100,000,000 souls, and has not only settled but civilized the
+ whole section of the world from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from the great lakes to
+ the West Indies. And not only civilized: everything which has drifted to it has been
+ welded together by this nation with an indescribable power, welded together to the
+ unity of a great, noble nation of educated men&mdash;such a thing as has never before
+ happened in all history. After two or at the most, three generations, all are welded
+ together in the American body and the American spirit, and this without petty rules,
+ without political pressure. In the definite frame of this people every individual
+ character fits in without coercion, becomes American and yet retains its own quality.
+ The world has never witnessed such a spectacle but it is witnessing it continually
+ now. On the one side it hears and sees the fact that every alien after a short time
+ announces, "America is now my Fatherland!" and on the other hand the old country
+ still continues undisturbed the bond between them. Yes, here is at once a national
+ strength and freedom which another could not copy from you very easily.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Spirit of America.</b></p>
+ <p>But, further: Among those who have wandered to your shores are millions of
+ Germans&mdash;several millions! For more than two years&mdash;where shall I begin to
+ relate&mdash;since the days of Steuben and of Carl Schurz&mdash;but how can I name
+ names?&mdash;they have been all received as brothers, bringing their best; and their
+ best was not lost. More I cannot say.</p>
+ <p>Furthermore, what sort was the spirit which received them? Upon each one, without
+ and within, that spirit has imprinted its seal. Concerning this spirit I shall speak
+ later, but for the present I will only say, it is the spirit of common courage and
+ common freedom! And from this unity I saw had developed a tremendous contribution as
+ the work of this nation, a contribution to agriculture, to technology, and, as we of
+ the German universities have known for several decades, an extraordinary contribution
+ to science. And this contribution has been derived from a combination such as we in
+ Europe cannot effect, of the good old traditional wisdom which has been brought down
+ out of the history of Europe and a youthful courage, I might almost say, a childlike
+ spirit. These two combined, this circumspection and at the same time this courage of
+ youth, which I met everywhere and which has stamped itself upon all American work, is
+ what I have admired.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>{199}</span>And the
+ second was the American hospitality!</p>
+ <p>Like a warm breeze, this hospitality surrounded me and my friends. Wherever we
+ went we breathed the air of this friendship, indeed, it almost took away our powers
+ of will, so thoroughly did it anticipate every plan and every need. Like parcels of
+ friendship, we were sent from place to place, always the feeling that we had all
+ known each other forever. That was an experience for which all of us&mdash;for who of
+ us Germans who have come over here has not experienced it?&mdash;will be perpetually
+ thankful. That will never be forgotten.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Friendship for Germany.</b></p>
+ <p>But beautiful and noble as that was, your nation has furnished ours with something
+ still more unforgettable. In those horrible days of 1870, when a great number of
+ Germans were shut up in unfortunate Paris, the American Ambassador assumed the care
+ of them, and what America did at that time she is again doing for all of our
+ country&mdash;men who, surprised in the enemy's country by the war, have been
+ detained there. They are intrusted to the special care of the American Ambassador,
+ and we know with as much certainty as though it were an actual fact already that that
+ care will be the best and the most loyal. That, my friends, is true service of
+ friendship, which is not mere convention but such as it is in the Catechism: "Give us
+ our daily bread and good friends." They belong together.</p>
+ <p>But to answer the question why you are our good friends we must reflect a little
+ for the answer which we might have given a few days ago&mdash;"You are our good
+ friends as our blood relations"&mdash;alas! that answer no longer holds. That is
+ over! God grant that in later days we may again be able to say it, but by a
+ circumstance which has torn our very heartstrings it has been proved that blood is
+ not thicker than water. But where then is the deep-lying reason for this friendship?
+ Does it rest in the fact that we have so many Germans over there; that they have been
+ received so cordially; that they have done so much for the building up of America,
+ soul and body, or that we find friends in so many Americans on this side of the
+ water? This is an important consideration, but it is not the ultimate cause we are
+ seeking.</p>
+ <p>My friends, when it is a powerful relationship, imbedded in rock as it were, which
+ is under consideration, then the matter is more than superficial, and that which is
+ at the bottom of this deeper fact, history is at this very moment showing us as she
+ writes in characters of bronze before our eyes; because we have a common spirit which
+ springs from the very depths of our hearts, for that reason are we friends!</p>
+ <p>And what is that spirit? It is the spirit of the deep religious and moral culture
+ which has possessed us through a succession of centuries and out of which this
+ powerful American offshoot has sprung. To this culture belong three things, or,
+ rather, it rests upon three pillars. The first pillar is the recognition of the
+ eternal value of every human soul, consequently the recognition of personality and
+ individuality. These are respected, nourished, striven for. Second is the recognition
+ of the duty at any time to risk this human soul, which is to each one of us so dear,
+ for that great ideal&mdash;"God, freedom, and the Fatherland." The dearer that human
+ soul, that life, is prized by us, Germans and Americans, the more surely do we give
+ it up willingly and joyously when a high cause demands it. And the third pillar is
+ respect for law and therewith the capability for powerful organization in all lines
+ and in all manner of communities.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Different Culture.</b></p>
+ <p>But now before my eyes I see rising up against the culture which rests upon these
+ three pillars&mdash;personality, duty to sacrifice all for ideals, law and
+ organization&mdash;another culture, a culture of the horde whose Government is
+ patriarchal, a civilization of the mob which is brought together and held together by
+ despots, the Byzantine&mdash;I must extend it further&mdash;Mongolian-Muscovite
+ culture.</p>
+ <p>My friends, this was once a true cul<span class="pagenum"><a name="page200"
+ id="page200"></a>{200}</span>ture, but it is no longer. This culture was not able to
+ bear the light of the eighteenth century, still less that of the nineteenth, and now,
+ in this twentieth century, it breaks out and threatens us&mdash;this unorganized mob,
+ this mob of Asia; like the sands of the desert it would sweep down over our harvest
+ fields. That we already know; we are already experiencing it. That, too, the
+ Americans know, for every one who has stood upon the ground of our civilization and
+ who with a keen glance regards the present situation knows that the word must be:
+ "Peoples of Europe, save your most hallowed possessions!"</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"I Cover My Head!"</b></p>
+ <p>This, our culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in large part, yes, almost
+ wholly, intrusted to three peoples: to us, to the Americans, and&mdash;to the
+ English. I will say no more! I cover my head! Two still remain, and must stand all
+ the more firmly together where this culture is menaced. It is a question of our
+ spiritual existence, and Americans will realize that it is also their existence. We
+ have a common culture, and a common duty to protect it!</p>
+ <p>To you, American citizens, we give the holy pledge that we shall offer our last
+ drop of blood in the cause of this culture. May I in addition say to you, since I
+ have made this pledge, that we shall as a matter of course protect those of you here
+ in our land and care for you and do everything for you? If we have made the greater
+ pledge, surely we can manage these trifles.</p>
+ <p>But you, my dear fellow-countrymen, we are all thinking with one mind on what is
+ now going on about us. It is a very grave but a splendid time. Whatever in the last
+ analysis we shall go through, at present there is no longer any one of us who any
+ longer regards life in the r&ocirc;le of a blas&eacute; or critical spectator, but
+ each one of us stands in the very midst of life, and, indeed, in the very midst of a
+ higher life. God has of a sudden brought us out of the wretchedness of the day to a
+ high place to which we have never before spiritually attained. But always where life
+ emerges, a higher life or merely life itself, wherever there is a thirst for life,
+ there is it set close around by death, as at every birth when something new comes to
+ the light of day, and so if the most precious thing is to be gained, then death will
+ stand close by life. But this we also know, that when death and life intertwine in
+ this fashion, the fear of death vanishes away; in the intertwining, life only appears
+ and full of life man goes through death and into death. It brings to my mind an old
+ song, the powerful song of victory of our fathers:</p>
+ It was a famous battle,<br />
+ Fought 'twixt Life and Death;<br />
+ Life came out the victor,<br />
+ Triumphant over Death;<br />
+ Already it was written<br />
+ How one Death killed the other,<br />
+ So making mock of Death!<br />
+
+ <p>Death which is willingly met kills the great death and secures the higher life.
+ Death makes us free. Thus spake Luther.</p>
+ <p>Let me say a few words in closing. Before all of us there stands in time of crisis
+ an image under which are the plain words: "He was faithful unto death, yea, even to
+ death on the cross." Now the time for great faithfulness has come for us, for this
+ obedience for which our neighbors in former times have ridiculed us, saying: "See,
+ these are the faithful Germans, the men who do all on command and are so obedient!"
+ Now they shall see that this great obedience was not mere discipline, but a matter of
+ will. It was and still is discipline, but it is also will. They shall see that this
+ great obedience is not pettiness and death, but power and life.</p>
+ <p>From the east&mdash;I say it once more&mdash;the desert sands are sweeping down
+ upon us; on the west we are opposed by old enemies and treacherous friends. When will
+ the German be able to pray again, confessing:</p>
+ God is the Orient,<br />
+ God is the Occident;<br />
+ Northernmost and Southern lands<br />
+ Rest in peace beneath His hands.<br />
+
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id="page201"></a>{201}</span>We shall hope
+ that God may give us strength to make this true, not only for us but for all
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p>Until then, since we see the very springs of our higher life and our existence
+ threatened, we shout: "Father, protect our springs of life and save us from the
+ Huns."</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>A Reply to Prof. Harnack</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Some British Theologians.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Prof. Harnack.</p>
+ <p>Honored Sir: We, the undersigned, a group of theologians who owe more than we can
+ express to you personally and to the great host of German teachers and leaders of
+ thought, have noticed with pain a report of a speech recently delivered by you, in
+ which you are said to have described the conduct of Great Britain in the present war
+ as that of a traitor to civilization.</p>
+ <p>We are quite sure that you could never have been betrayed into such a statement if
+ you had been acquainted with the real motives which actuate the British Nation in the
+ present crisis.</p>
+ <p>Permit us, in the interests of a better understanding now and subsequently, to
+ state to you the grounds on which we, whose obligations to Germany, personal and
+ professional, are simply incalculable, have felt it our duty to support the British
+ Government in its declaration of war against the land and people we love so well.</p>
+ <p>We are not actuated by any preference for France over Germany&mdash;still less by
+ any preference for Russia over Germany. The preference lies entirely the other way.
+ Next to the peoples that speak the English tongue, there is no people in the world
+ that stands so high in our affection and admiration as the people of Germany. Several
+ of us have studied in German universities. Many of us have enjoyed warm personal
+ friendship with your fellow-countrymen. All of us owe an immeasurable debt to German
+ theology, philosophy, and literature. Our sympathies are in matters of the spirit so
+ largely German that nothing but the very strongest reasons could ever lead us to
+ contemplate the possibility of hostile relations between Great Britain and
+ Germany.</p>
+ <p>Nor have we the remotest sympathy with any desire to isolate Germany, or to
+ restrict her legitimate expansion, commercial and colonial. We have borne resolute
+ witness against the endeavor made by foes of Germany to foment anti-German suspicion
+ and ill-will in the minds of our fellow-countrymen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Sanctity of Treaties.</b></p>
+ <p>But we recognize that all hopes of settled peace between the nations, and indeed
+ of any civilized relations between the nations, rest on the maintenance inviolate of
+ the sanctity of treaty obligations. We can never hope to put law for war if solemn
+ international compacts can be torn up at the will of any power involved. These
+ obligations are felt by us to be the more stringently binding in the case of
+ guaranteed neutrality. For the steady extension of neutralization appears to us to be
+ one of the surest ways of the progressive elimination of war from the face of the
+ earth. All these considerations take on a more imperative cogency when the treaty
+ rights of a small people are threatened by a great world power. We therefore believe
+ that when Germany refused to respect the neutrality of Belgium, which she herself had
+ guaranteed, Great Britain had no option, either in international law or in Christian
+ ethics, but to defend the people of Belgium. The Imperial Chancellor of Germany has
+ himself admitted, on Aug. 4, that the protest of the Luxembourg and Belgian
+ Governments was "just," and that Germany was doing "wrong" and acting "contrary to
+ the dictates of international law." His only <span class="pagenum"><a name="page202"
+ id="page202"></a>{202}</span>excuse was "necessity"&mdash;which recalls our Milton's
+ phrase, "necessity, the tyrant's plea." It has cost us all the deepest pain to find
+ the Germany which we love so intensely committing this act of lawless aggression on a
+ weak people, and a Christian nation becoming a mere army with army ethics. We loathe
+ war of any kind. A war with Germany cuts us to the very quick. But we sincerely
+ believe that Great Britain in this conflict is fighting for conscience, justice,
+ Europe, humanity, and lasting peace.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Dictated Terms.</b></p>
+ <p>This conviction is deepened by the antecedents of the present unhappy war. In
+ allowing her ally Austria to dictate terms to Servia which were quite incompatible
+ with the independence of that little State, Germany gave proof of her disregard for
+ the rights of smaller States. A similar disregard for the sovereign rights of greater
+ States was shown in the demand that Russia should demobilize her forces. It was quite
+ open to Germany to have answered Russia's mobilization with a counter-mobilization
+ without resorting to war. Many other nations have mobilized to defend their frontiers
+ without declaring war. Alike indirectly in regard to Servia and directly in regard to
+ Russia, Germany was indisputably the aggressor. And this policy of lawless aggression
+ became more nakedly manifest in the invasion of Belgium. Great Britain is not bound
+ by any treaty rights to defend either Servia or Russia. But she is bound by the most
+ sacred obligations to defend Belgium, obligations which France undertook to observe.
+ We have been grieved to the heart to see in the successive acts of German policy a
+ disregard of the liberties of States, small or great, which is the very negation of
+ civilization. It is not our country that has incurred the odium of being a traitor to
+ civilization or to the conscience of humanity.</p>
+ <p>Doubtless you read the facts of the situation quite differently. You may think us
+ entirely mistaken. But we desire to assure you, as fellow-Christians and
+ fellow-theologians, that our motives are not open to the charge which has been
+ made.</p>
+ <p>We have been moved to approach you on this matter by our deep reverence for you
+ and our high appreciation of the great services you have rendered to Christendom in
+ general. We trust that you will receive what we have said in the spirit in which it
+ was sent.</p>
+ <p>We have the honor to be,</p>
+ <p>Yours very sincerely,</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>P.J. FORSYTH, M.A., D.D., Aberdeen University. Principal of Hackney College
+ (Divinity School: University of London).</p>
+ <p>HERBERT T. ANDREWS, B.A. Oxon. Professor of New Testament, Exegesis, Introduction
+ and Criticism. New College, London (Divinity School: University of London).</p>
+ <p>J. HERBERT DARLOW, M.A. Cambridge. Literary Superintendent of the British and
+ Foreign Bible Society.</p>
+ <p>JAMES R. GILLIES, M.A. Edinburgh, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of England.
+ Pastor of Hampstead Presbyterian Church, London.</p>
+ <p>R. MACLEOD, Pastor of Frognal Presbyterian Church, London.</p>
+ <p>W.M. MACPHAIL, M.A. Glasgow. General Secretary of the Presbyterian Church of
+ England.</p>
+ <p>RICHARD ROBERTS, Pastor of Crouch Hill Presbyterian Church, London.</p>
+ <p>H.H. SCULLARD, M.A. Cambridge, M.A., D.D. London. Professor of Ecclesiastical
+ History, Christian Ethics, and the History of Religions in New College (Divinity
+ School: University of London).</p>
+ <p>ALEX RAMSAY, M.A., B.D. Pastor of the Highgate Presbyterian Church, London.</p>
+ <p>W.B. SELBIE, M.A., D.D. Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford. Chairman of the
+ Congregational Union of England and Wales.</p>
+ <p>J. HERBERT STEAD, M.A. Glasgow. Warden of the Robert Browning Settlement,
+ London.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>{203}</span><b>Prof.
+ Harnack in Rebuttal</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>BERLIN, Sept. 10, 1914.</p>
+ <p>Gentlemen: The words, "The conduct of Great Britain is that of a traitor to
+ civilization," were not used by me, but you have expressed my general judgment of
+ this conduct correctly. The sentence in question in my speech reads: "This, our
+ culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in large part, yes, almost wholly,
+ intrusted to three peoples: To us, to the Americans, and&mdash;to the English, I will
+ say no more. I cover my head." To my deep sorrow I must, even after your
+ communication, maintain this judgment.</p>
+ <p>You claim that England has drawn and must draw the sword purely for the protection
+ of the small nations of Servia and Belgium and for the sake of an international
+ treaty. In this claim I see at the very least a fearful self-delusion.</p>
+ <p>It is an actual fact that what Servia desired was that her Government should in no
+ wise be mixed up with the shameful crime of Serajevo, and it is also an established
+ fact that for years Servia, with the support of Russia, has attempted by the most
+ despicable means to incite to rebellion the Austrian South Slavs. When Austria
+ finally issued to her a decided ultimatum without making any actual attack on her
+ territory, it was the duty of every civilized land&mdash;England as well&mdash;to
+ keep hands off, for Austria's royal house, Austria's honor, and Austria's existence
+ were attacked. Austria's yielding to Servia would mean the sovereignty of Russia in
+ the eastern half of the Balkans, for Servia is nothing more than a Russian satrapy,
+ and the Balkan federation brought about by Russia had for its ultimate purpose
+ opposition to Austria. This is as well known in England as in Germany. If, gentlemen,
+ in spite of this, you can presume to judge that in this circumstance it was purely a
+ case of protecting the right of a small nation against a large one, I shall find
+ great difficulty in believing in your good faith.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Against Pan-Slavism.</b></p>
+ <p>It was not a question of little Servia but of Austria's battle for life and the
+ struggle of Western culture against Pan-Slavism. Servia is, after all, only an
+ outpost of Russia and as opposed to this nation, Servia's "sovereignty" is less than
+ a mere shadow; in fact it can hardly be protected by England, for in reality it does
+ not exist. For in addition Servia, through the most dastardly murder known to
+ history, struck her name from the list of the nations with which one does business as
+ equals. What would England have done had the Prince of Wales been assassinated by the
+ emissary of a little nation which had continually been inciting the Irish to revolt?
+ Would it have issued a milder ultimatum than Austria's? But of all this you say not a
+ word in your communication, but instead persist on seeing in the situation into which
+ Servia and Russia have brought Austria, only the necessity of an oppressed little
+ country to whose help haste must be made! Thus to judge would be more than blindness,
+ indeed, it would be a crime that cries unto heaven, were it not known that the life
+ problems of other great powers do not exist for Great Britain, because she is only
+ concerned about her own life problems and those of little nations whose support can
+ be useful to her.</p>
+ <p>At bottom Servia is of as little consequence to you as to us. Austria, too, is of
+ no consequence to you; and you realize that Austria had the right to punish Servia.
+ But because Germany, who stands behind Austria, is to be struck; therefore Servia is
+ the guiltless little State which must be spared! What is the result? Great Britain
+ sides with Russia against Germany. What does that mean? That means that Great <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id="page204"></a>{204}</span>Britain has torn down
+ the dike which has protected West Europe and its culture from the desert sands of the
+ Asiatic barbarism of Russia and of Pan-Slavism. Now we Germans are forced to stop up
+ the breach with our bodies. We shall do it amid streams of blood, and we shall hold
+ out there. We must hold out, for we are protecting the labor of thousands of years
+ for all of Europe, and for Great Britain! But that day when Great Britain tore down
+ the dam will never be forgotten in the history of the world, and history's judgment
+ shall read: On that day when Russian-Asiatic power rushed down upon the culture of
+ Europe Great Britain declared that she must side with Russia because "the sovereignty
+ of the murderer-nation Servia had been violated!"</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>As to Neutrality.</b></p>
+ <p>But no, the maintenance of Servians sovereignty is not according to your
+ communication the first, but only the second reason for Great Britain's declaration
+ of war against us. The first reason is our violation of Belgian neutrality; "Germany
+ broke a treaty which she herself had guaranteed." Shall I remind you how Great
+ Britain has disported herself in the matter of treaties and pleasant promises? How
+ about Egypt for example? But I do not need to go into these flagrant and repeated
+ violations of treaty rights, for a still more serious violation of the rights of a
+ people stands today on your books against you; it has been proved that your army is
+ making use of dumdum bullets and thereby turning a decent war into the most bloody
+ butchery. In this Great Britain has severed herself from every right to complain
+ about the violation of the rights of a people.</p>
+ <p>But aside from that&mdash;in your communication you have again emphasized the main
+ point. We did not declare war against Belgium, but we declared that since Russia and
+ France compelled us to wage a war with two fronts (190,000,000 against 68,000,000) we
+ had then to suffer defeat if we could not march through Belgium; that we should do
+ that but that we should carefully keep from harming Belgium in any way and would
+ indemnify all damage incurred&mdash;our hand upon it! Would Great Britain, had she
+ been in our position, have hesitated a moment to do likewise? And would Great Britain
+ have drawn the sword for us if France had violated the neutrality of Belgium by
+ marching through it? You know well enough that both these questions must be answered
+ in the negative.</p>
+ <p>Our Imperial Chancellor has with his characteristic conscientiousness declared
+ that we have on our side committed a certain wrong. I cannot agree with him in this
+ judgment, and I cannot even recognize the commission of a formal wrong, for we were
+ in a situation where formalities no longer obtain, and where moral duties only
+ prevail. When David, in the extremity of his need, took the show-bread from the Table
+ of the Lord, he was in every sense of the word justified, for the letter of the law
+ ceased at that moment to exist. It is as well known to you as to me that there is a
+ law of necessity which breaks iron asunder, to say nothing of treaties.</p>
+ <p>Appreciate our position! Prove to me that Germany has flippantly constructed a law
+ of necessity; prove it to me in this hour, when your country has gone over to our
+ enemies, and we have half the world to fight. You cannot do that; you could not do it
+ on the 4th of August, and consequently you have assumed the most miserable of
+ pretexts, because you wished to destroy us. From your letter, gentlemen, I must
+ believe that you are far from holding this view; but do you believe, and would you
+ really try to make me believe, that your statesmen would have declared war against us
+ only because we were determined to march through Belgium? You could not consider them
+ so foolish and so flippant.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>An Earlier Treachery.</b></p>
+ <p>But I am not yet at an end. It is not we who have first violated the neutrality of
+ Belgium. Belgium, as we feared and as we now, informed by the actual facts, see still
+ more clearly, was for a long time in alliance with France and&mdash;with you.
+ France's airmen were flying over <span class="pagenum"><a name="page205"
+ id="page205"></a>{205}</span>Belgium before we marched in; negotiations with France
+ had already taken place, and in Maubeuge there was found an arsenal full of English
+ munitions which had been stationed there before the declaration of war. This
+ arsenal&mdash;you know where Maubeuge is situated!&mdash;points to agreements which
+ Great Britain had made with France, and to which Belgium was also party. These
+ agreements are before the whole world today, for the chain of evidence is complete
+ and the treacherous plot of Great Britain is revealed. She has encouraged and pledged
+ the Belgians against us, and therefore it is she who must answer for all the misery
+ which has been visited upon that poor country. Had it been our responsibility, not a
+ single hair of a Belgian's head should have been harmed. If, then, the Belgian wrongs
+ like those of Servia are only the flimsiest pretexts for Great Britain's declaration
+ of war against us, there remains, unfortunately, no other reason for this declaration
+ of war save the intention of your statesmen either to destroy us or so to weaken us
+ that Great Britain will rule supreme on the seas and in all distant parts of the
+ world. This intention you personally deny and thus far I must take your word for it.
+ But do you deny it also for your Government? That you cannot do, for the facts have
+ been brought to light; when Great Britain determined to join the coalition of Russia
+ with France, which is ruled by Russia, when it put aside all the differences that
+ stood between her and Russia, when it set upon us not only the hordes of Russia but
+ the scrupulous Japanese, "the yellow peril," and called upon all Europe, when it also
+ sunk in the ocean its duties to European culture&mdash;for all of that there is but
+ one explanation: England believes that the hour for our destruction has struck. Why
+ does she wish to destroy us? Because she will not endure our power, our zeal, our
+ perfection of growth! There is no other explanation!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Lifting Humanity.</b></p>
+ <p>We and Great Britain in alliance with America were able in peaceful co-operation
+ to lift humanity to a higher plane, and to lead the world in peace, allowing to each
+ his rights. We Germans, now know no, and have never known any, higher ideal than
+ this. In order to realize this ideal the German Kaiser and the German people have
+ made many sacrifices in the past 43 years. In proportion to the development of our
+ strength, we should be able to lay claim to more territory than we now possess in the
+ world. But we have never attempted to force this claim. We held that the strength of
+ our nation should be in its zeal and in the peaceful fruits of that zeal. Great
+ Britain has begrudged us that; she has been jealous of our powers, jealous of our
+ fleet, jealous of our industries and our commerce, and jealousy is the root of all
+ evil. Jealousy it is which has driven Great Britain into the most fearful war which
+ history knows and the end of which is unforseen.</p>
+ <p>What course is open to you, gentlemen, once you are enlightened as to the policy
+ of your country? In the name of our Christian culture, which your Government has
+ frivolously placed in jeopardy, I can offer you but one counsel: To burden your
+ consciences no longer with Servia and Belgium, which you must protect, but to face
+ about and stop your Government in its headlong course; it may not be too late. As far
+ as we Germans are concerned, our way is clearly indicated, though not so our fate.
+ Should we fall, which God and our strong arm prevent, then there sinks with us to its
+ grave all the higher culture of our part of the world, whose defenders we were called
+ to be; for neither with Russia nor against Russia will Great Britain be able longer
+ to maintain that culture in Europe. Should we conquer&mdash;and victory is for us
+ something more than mere hope&mdash;then shall we feel ourselves responsible, as
+ formerly, for this culture, for the learning and the peace of Europe, and shall put
+ from us any idea of setting up a hegemony in Europe. We shall stand by the one who,
+ together in fraternal union with us, will create and maintain such a peaceful
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p>For the continuation of your cordial <span class="pagenum"><a name="page206"
+ id="page206"></a>{206}</span>attitude toward me I am personally grateful. I would not
+ unnecessarily sever the bond which holds me to the upright Christians and the
+ learning of your country, but at the present moment this bond has no value for
+ me.</p>
+ <p>PROF. VON HARNACK.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>P.S.&mdash;It is in your power now to wage a battle which would be of honor to
+ you. As a fourth great power arrayed against Germany, the lying international press
+ has raised itself up, flooded the world with lies about our splendid and upright
+ army, and slandered everything that is German. We have been almost entirely cut off
+ from any possibility of protecting ourselves against this "beast of the pit." Do not
+ believe the lies, and spread abroad the truth about us. We are today no different
+ than Carlyle pictured us to you. HARNACK.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Causes of the War</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Theodore Niemeyer</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Theodore Niemeyer, Kaiser Wilhelm Exchange Professor at Columbia University
+ for 1914-15, and well-known Professor of Kiel University, has addressed the
+ following letter to the editor of The New Yorker Staats-Zeitung.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>KIEL, 14th August, 1914.</p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of the New Yorker Staats-Zeitung</i>:</p>
+ <p>Dear Sir: English papers publish a telegram from Mr. Andrew Carnegie, in which the
+ view is expressed that the German Emperor, "in declining to take part In the peace
+ conference proposed by Sir Edward Grey, an advocate of peace," proved unfaithful to
+ that love of peace which he has shown during the past twenty-five years&mdash;that
+ he, on the contrary, has taken up the r&ocirc;le of a disturber of the peace of
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p>To the best of my knowledge, the German press has only referred to this telegram
+ with the simple remark that intelligence of the real state of affairs has evidently
+ not yet reached the ears of the sender of the telegram.</p>
+ <p>This attitude of the German press is in conformity with its firm consciousness of
+ the justice of its cause and its confidence in the ultimate triumph of truth. Both in
+ this consciousness and in this confidence I will not be surpassed by any one, but to
+ observe silence in the face of such accusations is beyond my power. To allow such a
+ misconstruction to pass unchallenged through the world seems to me (and doubtless to
+ many thousands besides me) unbearable.</p>
+ <p>The misunderstanding about the Peace Conference is easily put right. Sir Edward
+ Grey did not propose any peace conference at all, but a conference of the Ambassadors
+ of those four powers which were at that time not directly concerned, namely Germany,
+ England, France, and Italy. These powers were to attempt to exert their influence on
+ Austria-Hungary and Russia in the same way as the Ambassador's Conference (or rather
+ Ambassadorial Reunion) in London had done, in 1912 and 1913, on the Balkan States and
+ Turkey. What the united six powers at that time undertook toward the Balkan States
+ was now to be done by four&mdash;discordant&mdash;powers upon two others who are in a
+ state of highest political tension. To this proposal Germany replied that the
+ apparatus of an Ambassadorial Conference does not work quickly or effectually enough
+ for the emergency of the moment, or to be able to ease the tense political
+ situation.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Kaiser's Efforts.</b></p>
+ <p>In place of this, however, the German Emperor undertook to negotiate in person
+ with the Russian and Austrian monarch and was overwhelmed with grief when the leaders
+ of Muscovite policy frustrated all his exertions by completely ignoring his efforts
+ for peace, (made at the express desire of the Czar,) and then in <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>{207}</span>real earnest amassing
+ Russian forces on the German frontier, evidently resolved to force on a war under any
+ circumstances&mdash;even against the will of the Czar.</p>
+ <p>It is here that the clue to all the terrible events of the present day is to be
+ found.</p>
+ <p>The incessant intriguing of the Russian military party for many years past has at
+ last succeeded in drawing first France and then England to their cause, by turning
+ the mistrust, the dread of competition, the hopes of revenge, and the ever-increasing
+ armaments to their use with incomparable skill. The task was facilitated by Germany's
+ industrial up-growth, which&mdash;in willful misconstruction of the truths of the
+ laws of international communities&mdash;has been represented as a calamity for other
+ States.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>England's Growing Friendship.</b></p>
+ <p>In quite recent times people in England began to recognize this misconstruction of
+ facts as such. They began to understand that friendship with Germany might be a
+ blessing and that in this way peace would be possible. This, however, meant the
+ possibility of the Muscovite policy being completely frustrated. An Anglo-German
+ understanding seemed already to be shaking the very foundations of the Triple
+ Entente. Russia had been obliged during the two Balkan wars (the London Ambassadorial
+ Conference was in fact the clearing house for this) to make important concessions to
+ the detriment of her prot&eacute;g&eacute;s, Servia and Montenegro, in order to
+ retain the friendship of England, which ardently strove for peace. Now, however, it
+ was highest time for Russia to pocket her gains; for the English people were slowly
+ beginning to realize that in St. Petersburg they were trying to engage England in the
+ cause of Pan-Slavism. The unnatural alliance was becoming more and more unpopular
+ from day to day. How long would it be before Russia lost England's help forever?</p>
+ <p>Before this took place Russia must bring about a European war. The iron, which had
+ been prepared with the help of the English military party, had to be forged, for
+ never again would there be a moment so favorable for the complete destruction of
+ Austria and the humiliation of Germany. Servia was thrust to the front. Russia's
+ Ambassador managed that wonderfully. The fire was set in so skillful a manner that
+ the incendiaries knew in advance there was no possibility of extinguishing it. The
+ conflagration must spread and soon blaze in all corners of Europe.</p>
+ <p>What was the use of a Peace Conference in such circumstances? Conscious of the
+ irresistible consequences of their action the real rulers of Russia sent forward
+ their armies; it was now or never, if the work was to be done with the help of
+ England. And without England perhaps even France would not consent to join.</p>
+ <p>Thus it came about, and thus we have seen the peaceful policy of the German
+ Emperor, which he has upheld for twenty-five years, completely wrecked.</p>
+ <p>We are now fighting not only for our Fatherland, but also for the emancipation of
+ our culture from a menace that has become insupportable.</p>
+ <p>Yours faithfully,</p>
+ <p>TH. NIEMEYER,</p>
+ <p>Kaiser Wilhelm Professor, Columbia University.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page208" id="page208"></a>{208}</span><b>Comment
+ by Dr. Max Walter</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>To the letter addressed by Prof. Th. Niemeyer to the editor of The New Yorker
+ Staats-Zeitung (see No. 237, 3, 2, of Frankfurter Zeitung) I should like to add the
+ following remarks: During my activity as Professor of the Methodics of Foreign
+ Language Teaching at Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, (January-June,
+ 1911,) I was introduced to Mr. Andrew Carnegie, with whom I had a long interview. He
+ expressed his views upon the peace question and arbitration, and spoke for a long
+ time about the German Emperor who had repeatedly received him during his visits to
+ Germany. He expressed his great appreciation of the important services rendered by
+ our Emperor for the maintenance of peace, and declared that he, above all others,
+ deserved the title of the Peace-loving Monarch, (Friedensf&uuml;rst.) To him it was
+ chiefly due that, during the various crises which had repeatedly brought Europe to
+ the brink of war, the disaster had again and again been averted. The German Emperor,
+ he considered, looked upon it as his chief pride that no war should take place during
+ his reign, that Germany should develop and prosper in peaceful emulation with other
+ countries, and his greatest desire was that other nations should recognize
+ ungrudgingly that all Germany did to raise the moral and ethical standard of mankind
+ was for the benefit of all.</p>
+ <p>If now Carnegie has really declared, as this letter maintains, that he considers
+ the German Emperor the "Disturber of Peace," it shows clearly how baleful the
+ influence of the English press has been&mdash;that it could shake such a firm
+ conviction in our Emperor's love of peace. Let us hope that this letter of Prof.
+ Niemeyer's and other explanations to the same effect will induce him to recognize the
+ horrible misrepresentations of English papers and to return to his former
+ conviction.</p>
+ <p>It was on this occasion, too, that Andrew Carnegie indorsed Prof. Burgess's view,
+ that the three nations&mdash;America, Germany, and England&mdash;should unite, and
+ then they would be able to keep the peace of the world. When I expressed my doubts in
+ the real friendship of England, he replied, then America and Germany, at least, must
+ hold together to secure universal peace. Hitherto I have refrained from publishing
+ this interview, but now I consider it my duty to make known the views that Carnegie
+ once held, and to which, if he has really changed them, we may hope he, who has done
+ so much in his noble striving after peace, will return right away.</p>
+ <p>If there should remain the least doubt in Mr. Andrew Carnegie's mind, he has only
+ to read the telegrams exchanged between the Emperor William and the Czar on the one
+ hand, and King George and the Emperor on the other.</p>
+
+ <div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13635 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #13635 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13635)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of New York Times, Current History, Vol 1,
+Issue 1, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: New York Times, Current History, Vol 1, Issue 1
+ From the Beginning to March, 1915 With Index
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 5, 2004 [EBook #13635]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEW YORK TIMES, CURRENT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Miranda van de Heijning and the PG
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW YORK TIMES
+
+CURRENT HISTORY
+
+A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
+
+THE EUROPEAN WAR
+
+VOLUME I.
+
+From the Beginning to March, 1915 With Index
+
+[Illustration]
+
+NEW YORK THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY 1915
+
+Copyright 1914, 1915, By The New York Times Company
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ NUMBER I.
+
+ WHAT MEN OF LETTERS SAY
+ Page
+
+ COMMON SENSE ABOUT THE WAR 11
+ _By George Bernard Shaw_
+
+ SHAW'S NONSENSE ABOUT BELGIUM 60
+ _By Arnold Bennett_
+
+ BENNETT STATES THE GERMAN CASE 63
+ _By George Bernard Shaw_
+
+ FLAWS IN SHAW'S LOGIC 65
+ _By Cunninghame Graham_
+
+ EDITORIAL COMMENT ON SHAW 66
+
+ SHAW EMPTY OF GOOD SENSE 68
+ _By Christabel Pankhurst_
+
+ COMMENT BY READING OF SHAW 73
+
+ OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT WILSON 76
+ _By George Bernard Shaw_
+
+ A GERMAN LETTER TO G. BERNARD SHAW 80
+ _By Herbert Eulenberg_
+
+ BRITISH AUTHORS DEFEND ENGLAND'S WAR 82
+ _With Facsimile Signatures_
+
+ THE FOURTH OF AUGUST--EUROPE AT WAR 87
+ _By H.G. Wells_
+
+ IF THE GERMANS RAID ENGLAND 89
+ _By H.G. Wells_
+
+ SIR OLIVER LODGE'S COMMENT 92
+
+ WHAT THE GERMAN CONSCRIPT THINKS 93
+ _By Arnold Bennett_
+
+ FELIX ADLER'S COMMENT 95
+
+ WHEN PEACE IS SERIOUSLY DESIRED 97
+ _By Arnold Bennett_
+
+ BARRIE AT BAY: WHICH WAS BROWN? 100
+ _An Interview on the War_
+
+ A CREDO FOR KEEPING FAITH 102
+ _By John Galsworthy_
+
+ HARD BLOWS, NOT HARD WORDS 103
+ _By Jerome K. Jerome_
+
+ "AS THEY TESTED OUR FATHERS" 106
+ _By Rudyard Kipling_
+
+ KIPLING AND "THE TRUCE OF THE BEAR" 107
+
+ ON THE IMPENDING CRISIS 107
+ _By Norman Angell_
+
+ WHY ENGLAND CAME TO BE IN IT 108
+ _By Gilbert K. Chesterton_
+
+ SOUTH AFRICA'S BOERS AND BRITONS 125
+ _By H. Rider Haggard_
+
+ CAPT. MARK HAGGARD'S DEATH IN BATTLE 128
+ _By H. Rider Haggard_
+
+ AN ANTI-CHRISTIAN WAR 129
+ _By Robert Bridges_
+
+ ENGLISH ARTISTS' PROTEST 130
+
+ TO ARMS! 132
+ _By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle_
+
+ CONAN DOYLE ON BRITISH MILITARISM 140
+
+ THE NEED OF BEING MERCILESS 144
+ _By Maurice Maeterlinck_
+
+ LETTERS TO DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER 146
+ _By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant_
+
+ THE VITAL ENERGIES OF FRANCE 153
+ _By Henri Bergson_
+
+ FRANCE THROUGH ENGLISH EYES 153
+ _With Rene Bazin's Appreciation_
+
+ THE SOLDIER OF 1914 156
+ _By Rene Doumic_
+
+ GERMANY'S CIVILIZED BARBARISM 160
+ _By Emile Boutroux_
+
+ THE GERMAN RELIGION OF DUTY 170
+ _By Gabriele Reuter_
+
+ A LETTER TO GERHART HAUPTMANN 174
+ _By Romain Rolland_
+
+ A REPLY TO ROLLAND 175
+ _By Gerhart Hauptmann_
+
+ ANOTHER REPLY TO ROLLAND 176
+ _By Karl Wolfskehl_
+
+ ARE WE BARBARIANS? 178
+ _By Gerhart Hauptmann_
+
+ TO AMERICANS FROM A GERMAN FRIEND 180
+ _By Ludwig Fulda_
+
+ APPEAL TO THE CIVILIZED WORLD 185
+ _By Professors of Germany_
+
+ APPEAL OF THE GERMAN UNIVERSITIES 187
+
+ REPLY TO THE GERMAN PROFESSORS 188
+ _By British Scholars_
+
+ CONCERNING THE GERMAN PROFESSORS 192
+ _By Frederic Harrison_
+
+ THE REPLY FROM FRANCE 194
+ _By M. Yves Guyot and Prof Bellet_
+
+ TO AMERICANS IN GERMANY 198
+ _By Prof. Adolf von Harnack_
+
+ A REPLY TO PROF. HARNACK 201
+ _By Some British Theologians_
+
+ PROF. HARNACK IN REBUTTAL 203
+
+ THE CAUSES OF THE WAR 206
+ _By Theodore Niemeyer_
+
+ COMMENT BY DR. MAX WALTER 208
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER II.
+
+ WHO BEGAN THE WAR AND WHY?
+
+
+ SPEECHES BY KAISER WILHELM II. 210
+
+ THE MIGHTY FATE OF EUROPE 219
+ _As Interpreted by Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg,
+ German Imperial Chancellor._
+
+ AUSTRIA-HUNGARY'S VERSION OF THE WAR 226
+ _By Kaiser Frawz Josef and Count Berchtold_
+
+ A GERMAN REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE 228
+ _Certified by Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, German ex-Colonial
+ Secretary_
+
+ "TRUTH ABOUT GERMANY" 244
+ _Attested by Thirty-four German Dignitaries_
+
+ SPECULATIONS ABOUT PEACE, SEPTEMBER, 1914 273
+ _Report by James W. Gerard, American Ambassador at Berlin, to
+ President Wilson._
+
+ FIRST WARNINGS OF EUROPE'S PERIL 277
+ _Speeches by British Ministers_
+
+ GREAT BRITAIN'S MOBILIZATION 294
+ _Measures Taken Throughout the Empire Upon the Outbreak of War_
+
+ SUMMONS OF THE NATION TO ARMS 308
+ _British People Roused by Their Leaders_
+
+ TEACHINGS OF GEN. VON BERNHARDI 343
+ _By Viscount Bryce_
+
+ ENTRANCE OF FRANCE INTO THE WAR 350
+ _By President Poincare and Premier Viviani_
+
+ RUSSIA TO HER ENEMY 358
+
+ "THE FACTS ABOUT BELGIUM" 365
+ _Statement Issued by the Belgian Legation at Washington_
+
+ BELGO-BRITISH PLOT ALLEGED BY GERMANY 369
+ _Statement Issued by German Embassy at Washington, Oct. 13._
+
+ ATROCITIES OF THE WAR 374
+
+ BOMBARDMENT OF RHEIMS CATHEDRAL 392
+ _Protest Issued to Neutral Powers from French Foreign Office,
+ Bordeaux, Sept. 21._
+
+ THE SOCIALISTS' PART 397
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER III.
+
+ WHAT AMERICANS SAY TO EUROPE
+
+
+ IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CIVILIZATION 413
+ _Argued by James M. Beck_
+
+ CRITICS DISPUTE MR. BECK 431
+
+ DEFENSE OF THE DUAL ALLIANCE--REPLY 438
+ _By Dr. Edmund von Mach_
+
+ WHAT GLADSTONE SAID ABOUT BELGIUM 448
+ _By George Louis Beer_
+
+ FIGHT TO THE BITTER END 451
+ _An Interview with Andrew Carnegie_
+
+ WOMAN AND WAR--"Shot, Tell His Mother" (Poem) 458
+ _By W.E.P. French, Captain, U.S. Army_
+
+ THE WAY TO PEACE 459
+ _An Interview with Jacob H. Schiff_
+
+ PROF. MATHER ON MR. SCHIFF 464
+
+ THE ELIOT-SCHIFF LETTERS 465
+ _By Jacob H. Schiff and Charles W. Eliot_
+
+ LA CATHEDRALE (Poem Translated by Frances C. Fay) 472
+ _By Edmond Rostand_
+
+ PROBABLE CAUSES AND OUTCOME OF THE WAR 473
+ _Series of Five Letters by Charles W. Eliot,
+ with Related Correspondence_
+
+ THE LORD OF HOSTS (Poem) 501
+ _By Joseph B. Gilder_
+
+ A WAR OF DISHONOR 502
+ _By David Starr Jordan_
+
+ MIGHT OR RIGHT 503
+ _By John Grier Hibben_
+
+ JEANNE D'ARC--1914 (Poem) 506
+ _By Alma Durant Nicholson_
+
+ THE KAISER AND BELGIUM (With controversial letters) 507
+ _By John W. Burgess_
+
+ AMERICA'S PERIL IN JUDGING GERMANY 515
+ _By William M. Sloane_
+
+ POSSIBLE PROFITS FROM WAR 526
+ _Interview with Franklin H. Giddings_
+
+ "TO AMERICANS LEAVING GERMANY" 533
+ _A German Circular_
+
+ GERMAN DECLARATIONS 534
+ _By Rudolf Eucken and Ernst Haeckel_
+
+ THE EUCKEN AND HAECKEL CHARGES 537
+ _By John Warbeke_
+
+ CONCERNING GERMAN CULTURE 541
+ _By Brander Matthews_
+
+ CULTURE VS. KULTUR 543
+ _By Frank Jewett Mather, Jr._
+
+ THE TRESPASS IN BELGIUM 545
+ _By John Grier Hibben_
+
+ APPORTIONING THE BLAME 548
+ _By Arthur v. Briesen_
+
+ PARTING (Poem) 553
+ _By Louise von Wetter_
+
+ FRENCH HATE AND ENGLISH JEALOUSY 554
+ _By Kuno Francke_
+
+ IN DEFENSE OF AUSTRIA 559
+ _By Baron L. Hengelmuller_
+
+ RUSSIAN ATROCITIES 563
+ _By George Haven Putnam_
+
+ "THE UNITED STATES OF EUROPE" 565
+ _Interview with Nicholas Murray Butler_
+
+ A NEW WORLD MAP 571
+ _By Wilhelm Ostwald_
+
+ THE VERDICT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE 573
+ _By Newell Dwight Hillis_
+
+ TIPPERARY (Poem) 581
+ _By John B. Kennedy_
+
+ AS AMERICA SEES THE WAR 582
+ _By Harold Begbie_
+
+ TO MELOS, POMEGRANATE ISLE (Poem) 587
+ _By Grace Harriet Macurdy_
+
+ WHAT AMERICA CAN DO 588
+ _By Lord Channing of Wellingborough_
+
+ TO A COUSIN GERMAN (Poem) 593
+ _By Adeline Adams_
+
+ WHAT THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS MAY BE 594
+ _By Irving Fisher_
+
+ EFFECTS OF WAR ON AMERICA 600
+ _By Roland G. Usher_
+
+ GERMANY OF THE FUTURE 605
+ _Interview with M. de Lapredelle_
+
+ GERMANY THE AGGRESSOR 609
+ _By Albert Sauveur_
+
+ MILITARISM AND CHRISTIANITY 610
+ _By Lyman Abbott_
+
+ VIGIL (Poem) 612
+ _By Hortense Flexner_
+
+ NIETZSCHE AND GERMAN CULTURE 613
+ _By Abraham Solomon_
+
+ BELGIUM'S BITTER NEED 614
+ _By Sir Gilbert Parker_
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER IV.
+
+ THE WAR AT CLOSE QUARTERS
+
+
+ SIR JOHN FRENCH'S OWN STORY 619
+ _Famous Dispatches of the
+ British Commander in Chief to Lord Kitchener_
+
+ STORY OF THE "EYE WITNESS" 650
+ _By Col. E.D. Swinton of the Intelligence
+ Department of the British General Staff_
+
+ THE DAWN OF A NEW DAY (Poem) 678
+ _By Edward Neville Vose_
+
+ THE GERMAN ENTRY INTO BRUSSELS (With Map) 679
+ _By John Boon_
+
+ THE FALL OF ANTWERP 682
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ AS THE FRENCH FELL BACK ON PARIS 689
+ _By G.H. Perris_
+
+ THE RETREAT TO PARIS 691
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ A ZOUAVE'S STORY 704
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ WHEN WAR BURST ON ARRAS 707
+ _By a Special Correspondent_
+
+ THE BATTLES IN BELGIUM (With Map) 711
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ SEEKING WOUNDED ON BATTLE FRONT 714
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ AT THE KAISER'S HEADQUARTERS 718
+ _By Cyril Brown of The New York Times_
+
+ HOW THE BELGIANS FIGHT 725
+ _By a Correspondent of The London Daily News_
+
+ A VISIT TO THE FIRING LINE IN FRANCE 727
+ _By a Correspondent of The New York Times_
+
+ UNBURIED DEAD STREW LORRAINE (With Map) 729
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ ALONG THE GERMAN LINES NEAR METZ 731
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ THE SLAUGHTER IN ALSACE 736
+ _By John H. Cox_
+
+ RENNENKAMPF ON THE RUSSIAN BORDER 738
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ THE FIRST FIGHT AT LODZ (With Map) 740
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ THE FIRST INVASION OF SERBIA (With Map) 742
+ _By a Correspondent of The London Standard_
+
+ THE ATTACK ON TSING-TAU 745
+ _By Jefferson Jones_
+
+ THE GERMAN ATTACK ON TAHITI 748
+ _As Told by Miss Geni La France, an Eyewitness_
+
+ THE BLOODLESS CAPTURE OF GERMAN SAMOA 749
+ _By Malcolm Ross, F.R.G.S._
+
+ HOW THE CRESSY SANK 752
+ _By Edgar Rowan_
+
+ GERMAN STORY OF THE HELIGOLAND FIGHT 754
+ _By a Special Correspondent of The New York Times_
+
+ THE SINKING OF THE CRESSY AND THE HOGUE 755
+ _By the Senior Surviving Officers,
+ Commander Bertram W.L. Nicholson and
+ Commander Reginald A. Norton_
+
+ THE SINKING OF THE HAWKE 757
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ THE EMDEN'S LAST FIGHT 758
+ _By the Cable Operator at Cocos Islands_
+
+ CROWDS SEE THE NIGER SINK 760
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ LIEUTENANT WEDDIGEN'S OWN STORY 762
+ _By Herbert B. Swope and Capt. Lieut. Otto
+ Weddigen_
+
+ THE SOLILOQUY OF AN OLD SOLDIER (Poem) 764
+ _By O.C.A. Child_
+
+ THE EFFECTS OF WAR IN FOUR COUNTRIES 765
+ _By Irvin S. Cobb_
+
+ HOW PARIS DROPPED GAYETY 767
+ _By Anne Rittenhouse_
+
+ PARIS IN OCTOBER 770
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ FRANCE AND ENGLAND AS SEEN IN WAR TIME 772
+ _Interview with F. Hopkinson Smith_
+
+ THE HELPLESS VICTIMS 776
+ _By Mrs. Nina Larrey Duryee_
+
+ A NEW RUSSIA MEETS GERMANY 777
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ BELGIAN CITIES GERMANIZED 780
+ _By Cyril Brown of The New York Times_
+
+ THE BELGIAN RUIN 786
+ _By J.H. Whitehouse, M.P._
+
+ THE WOUNDED SERB 788
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ SPY ORGANIZATION IN ENGLAND 790
+ _British Home Office Communication_
+
+ CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 793
+
+ THE MEN OF THE EMDEN (Poem) 816
+ _By Thomas R. Ybarra_
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER V.
+
+ THE NEW RUSSIA SPEAKS
+
+
+ AN APPEAL BY RUSSIAN AUTHORS, ARTISTS AND ACTORS 817
+ _With Their Signatures_
+
+ RUSSIA IN LITERATURE 819
+ _By British Men of Letters_
+
+ RUSSIA AND EUROPE'S WAR 821
+ _By Paul Vinogradoff_
+
+ RUSSIAN APPEAL FOR THE POLES 825
+ _By A. Konovalov of the Russian Duma_
+
+ I AM FOR PEACE (Poem) 826
+ _By Lurana Sheldon_
+
+ UNITED RUSSIA 827
+ _By Peter Struve_
+
+ PRINCE TRUBETSKOI'S APPEAL TO RUSSIANS 830
+ _To Help the Polish Victims of War_
+
+ HOW PROHIBITION CAME TO RUSSIA 831
+ _An Interview with the Reformer Tchelisheff_
+
+ INFLUENCE OF THE WAR UPON RUSSIAN INDUSTRY 834
+ _By the Russian Ministry of Commerce_
+
+ DECLARATION OF THE RUSSIAN INDUSTRIAL INTERESTS 835
+
+ A RUSSIAN FINANCIAL AUTHORITY ON THE WAR 836
+ _By Prof. Migoulin_
+
+ PROPOSED INTERNAL LOANS OF RUSSIA 837
+ (_Prof. Migoulin's Plan_)
+
+ HOW RUSSIAN MANUFACTURERS FEEL 838
+ _Digested from Russkia Vedomosti_
+
+ NEW SOURCES OF REVENUE NEEDED 839
+ _By A. Sokolov_
+
+ OUR RUSSIAN ALLY 840
+ _By Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace_
+
+ CONFISCATION OF GERMAN PATENTS 849
+ _By the Russian Ministry of Commerce_
+
+ A RUSSIAN INCOME TAX 850
+ _Proposed by the Ministry of Finance_
+
+ TOOLS OF THE RUSSIAN JUGGERNAUT 851
+ _By M.J. Bonn_
+
+ FATE OF THE JEWS IN POLAND 854
+ _By Georg Brandes_
+
+ COMMERCIAL TREATIES AFTER THE WAR 863
+ _By P. Maslov_
+
+ PHOTOGRAPHIC REVIEW OF THE WAR 865
+ _48 War Pictures Printed in Rotogravure_
+
+ PATRIOTISM AND ENDURANCE 913
+ _The Pastoral Letter of Cardinal D.J. Mercier,
+ Archbishop of Malines_
+
+ APPEAL TO AMERICA FOR BELGIUM (Poem) 924
+ _By Thomas Hardy_
+
+ WITH THE GERMAN ARMY 925
+ _By Cyril Brown_
+
+ STORY OF THE MAN WHO FIRED ON RHEIMS CATHEDRAL 928
+
+ RICHARD HARDING DAVIS'S COMMENT 931
+
+ THE GERMAN AIRMEN 932
+
+ GERMAN GENERALS TALK OF THE WAR 934
+
+ SWIFT REVERSAL TO BARBARISM 939
+ _By Vance Thompson_
+
+ CIVIL LIFE IN BERLIN 943
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ BELGIAN BOY TELLS STORY OF AERSCHOT 945
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ THE NEUTRALS (Poem) 948
+ _By Beatrice Barry_
+
+ FIFTEEN MINUTES ON THE YSER 949
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ SEEING NIEUPORT UNDER SHELL FIRE 951
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ RAID ON SCARBOROUGH SEEN FROM A WINDOW 954
+ _By Ruth Kauffmann_
+
+ HOW THE BARONESS HID HER HUSBAND ON A VESSEL 956
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ WARSAW SWAMPED WITH REFUGEES 957
+ _By H.W. Bodkinson_
+
+ AFTER THE RUSSIAN ADVANCE IN GALICIA 958
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ OFFICER IN BATTLE HAD LITTLE FEELING 959
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ THE BATTLE OF NEW YEAR'S DAY 961
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ BASS'S STORY 963
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ THE WASTE OF GERMAN LIVES 964
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ THE FLIGHT INTO SWITZERLAND 966
+ _By Ethel Therese Hugh_
+
+ ONCE FAIR BELGRADE IS A SKELETON CITY 969
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ LETTERS AND DIARIES 971
+ _A Group of Soldiers' Letters_
+
+ "CHANT OF HATE AGAINST ENGLAND" 984
+ _How Ernst Lissauer's Lines were
+ "Sung to Pieces" in Germany_
+
+ ANSWERING THE "CHANT OF HATE" 988
+ _By Beatrice M. Barry_
+
+ ENGLAND CAUSED THE WAR 989
+ _By T. von Bethmann-Hollweg, German
+ Imperial Chancellor_
+
+ A SONG OF THE SIEGE GUN (Poem) 992
+ _By Katharine Drayton Mayrant Simons, Jr._
+
+ WHY ENGLAND FIGHTS GERMANY 993
+ _By Hilaire Belloc_
+
+ AT THE VILLA ACHILLEION, CORFU (Poem) 999
+ _By H.T. Sudduth_
+
+ GERMANY'S STRATEGIC RAILWAYS (With Map) 1000
+ _By Walter Littlefield_
+
+ GLORY OF WAR (Poem) 1004
+ _By Adeline Adams_
+
+ CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 1007
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER VI.
+
+ THE CALDRON OF THE BALKANS
+
+
+ HOW TURKEY WENT TO WAR 1025
+
+ SERBIA AND HER NEIGHBORS 1036
+
+ LITTLE MONTENEGRO SPEAKS 1043
+
+ BULGARIA'S ATTITUDE 1044
+
+ GREECE'S WATCHFUL WAITING 1050
+
+ WHERE RUMANIA STANDS IN THE CRISIS 1054
+
+ EXIT ALBANIA? 1062
+
+ THE WAR IN THE BALKANS 1068
+ _By A.T. Polyzoides_
+
+ THE EUROPEAN WAR AS SEEN BY CARTOONISTS 1073
+
+ GERMANY VS. BELGIUM 1101
+ _Case of the Secret Military Documents
+ Presented by Both Sides_
+
+ THE BIG AND THE GREAT (Poem) 1114
+ _By William Archer_
+
+ "FROM THE BODY OF THIS DEATH" (Poem) 1119
+ _By Sidney Low_
+
+ "A SCRAP OF PAPER" 1120
+ _By Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg
+ and Sir Edward Grey_
+
+ THE KAISER AT DONCHERY 1125
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ HAIL! A HYMN TO BELGIUM (Music by F.H. Cowen) 1126
+ _By John Galsworthy_
+
+ HOLLAND'S FUTURE (With Map) 1128
+ _By H.G. Wells_
+
+ FRENCH OFFICIAL REPORT ON GERMAN ATROCITIES 1133
+
+ A FRENCH MAYOR'S PUNISHMENT 1163
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ WE WILL FIGHT TO THE END 1164
+ _By Premier Viviani of France_
+
+ _NUITS BLANCHES_ 1166
+ _By H.S. Haskins_
+
+ UNCONQUERED FRANCE 1167
+ _From the Bulletin Francais_
+
+ FOUR MONTHS OF WAR (With Map) 1169
+ _From the Bulletin des Armees_
+
+ LONG LIVE THE ALLIES! 1174
+ _By Claude Monet_
+
+ UNITED STATES FAIR TO ALL 1175
+ _By William J. Bryan,
+ American Secretary of State_
+
+ THE HOUSE WITH SEALED DOORS (Poem) 1183
+ _By Edith M. Thomas_
+
+ SEIZURES OF AMERICAN CARGOES 1184
+ _By William J. Bryan,
+ American Secretary of State_
+
+ GERMAN CROWN PRINCE TO AMERICA 1187
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ THE OFFICIAL BRITISH EXPLANATION 1188
+ _By Sir Edward Grey_
+
+ ITALY AND THE WAR (With Map) 1192
+ _By William Roscoe Thayer_
+
+ HE HEARD THE BUGLES CALLING (Poem) 1198
+ _By Carey C.D. Briggs_
+
+ GERMAN SOLDIERS WRITE HOME 1199
+
+ WAR CORRESPONDENCE 1207
+
+ THE BROKEN ROSE (TO KING ALBERT) 1210
+ _By Annie Vivanti Chartres_
+
+ THE HEROIC LANGUAGE (Poem) 1216
+ _By Alice Meynell_
+
+ CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 1224
+
+ TO HIS MAJESTY KING ALBERT (Poem) 1228
+ _By William Watson_
+
+[Illustration: GEORGE BERNARD SHAW]
+
+[Illustration: ARNOLD BENNETT. _See Page_ 60]
+
+
+
+
+"Common Sense About the War"
+
+By George Bernard Shaw.
+
+
+I.
+
+ "_Let a European war break out--the war, perhaps, between the
+ Triple Alliance and the Triple Entente, which so many journalists
+ and politicians in England and Germany contemplate with criminal
+ levity. If the combatants prove to be equally balanced, it may,
+ after the first battles, smoulder on for thirty years. What will be
+ the population of London, or Manchester, or Chemnitz, or Bremen, or
+ Milan, at the end of it_?" ("The Great Society," by Graham Wallas.
+ June, 1914.)
+
+ (_Copyright, 1914, By The New York Times Company._)
+
+
+The time has now come to pluck up courage and begin to talk and write
+soberly about the war. At first the mere horror of it stunned the more
+thoughtful of us; and even now only those who are not in actual contact
+with or bereaved relation to its heartbreaking wreckage can think sanely
+about it, or endure to hear others discuss it coolly. As to the
+thoughtless, well, not for a moment dare I suggest that for the first
+few weeks they were all scared out of their wits; for I know too well
+that the British civilian does not allow his perfect courage to be
+questioned; only experienced soldiers and foreigners are allowed the
+infirmity of fear. But they certainly were--shall I say a little upset?
+They felt in that solemn hour that England was lost if only one single
+traitor in their midst let slip the truth about anything in the
+universe. It was a perilous time for me. I do not hold my tongue easily;
+and my inborn dramatic faculty and professional habit as a playwright
+prevent me from taking a one-sided view even when the most probable
+result of taking a many-sided one is prompt lynching. Besides, until
+Home Rule emerges from its present suspended animation, I shall retain
+my Irish capacity for criticising England with something of the
+detachment of a foreigner, and perhaps with a certain slightly malicious
+taste for taking the conceit out of her. Lord Kitchener made a mistake
+the other day in rebuking the Irish volunteers for not rallying faster
+to the defense of "their country." They do not regard it as their
+country yet. He should have asked them to come forward as usual and help
+poor old England through a stiff fight. Then it would have been all
+right.
+
+Having thus frankly confessed my bias, which you can allow for as a
+rifleman allows for the wind, I give my views for what they are worth.
+They will be of some use; because, however blinded I may be by prejudice
+or perversity, my prejudices in this matter are not those which blind
+the British patriot, and therefore I am fairly sure to see some things
+that have not yet struck him.
+
+And first, I do not see this war as one which has welded Governments and
+peoples into complete and sympathetic solidarity as against the common
+enemy. I see the people of England united in a fierce detestation and
+defiance of the views and acts of Prussian Junkerism. And I see the
+German people stirred to the depths by a similar antipathy to English
+Junkerism, and anger at the apparent treachery and duplicity of the
+attack made on them by us in their extremest peril from France and
+Russia. I see both nations duped, but alas! not quite unwillingly duped,
+by their Junkers and Militarists into wreaking on one another the wrath
+they should have spent in destroying Junkerism and Militarism in their
+own country. And I see the Junkers and Militarists of England and
+Germany jumping at the chance they have longed for in vain for many
+years of smashing one another and establishing their own oligarchy as
+the dominant military power in the world. No doubt the heroic remedy for
+this tragic misunderstanding is that both armies should shoot their
+officers and go home to gather in their harvests in the villages and
+make a revolution in the towns; and though this is not at present a
+practicable solution, it must be frankly mentioned, because it or
+something like it is always a possibility in a defeated conscript army
+if its commanders push it beyond human endurance when its eyes are
+opening to the fact that in murdering its neighbours it is biting off
+its nose to vex its face, besides riveting the intolerable yoke of
+Militarism and Junkerism more tightly than ever on its own neck. But
+there is no chance--or, as our Junkers would put it, no danger--of our
+soldiers yielding to such an ecstasy of common sense. They have enlisted
+voluntarily; they are not defeated nor likely to be; their
+communications are intact and their meals reasonably punctual; they are
+as pugnacious as their officers; and in fighting Prussia they are
+fighting a more deliberate, conscious, tyrannical, personally insolent,
+and dangerous Militarism than their own. Still, even for a voluntary
+professional army, that possibility exists, just as for the civilian
+there is a limit beyond which taxation, bankruptcy, privation, terror,
+and inconvenience cannot be pushed without revolution or a social
+dissolution more ruinous than submission to conquest. I mention all
+this, not to make myself wantonly disagreeable, but because military
+persons, thinking naturally that there is nothing like leather, are now
+talking of this war as likely to become a permanent institution like the
+Chamber of Horrors at Madame Tussaud's, forgetting, I think, that the
+rate of consumption maintained by modern military operations is much
+greater relatively to the highest possible rate of production
+maintainable under the restrictions of war time than it has ever been
+before.
+
+
+*The Day of Judgment.*
+
+The European settlement at the end of the war will be effected, let us
+hope, not by a regimental mess of fire-eaters sitting around an up-ended
+drum in a vanquished Berlin or Vienna, but by some sort of Congress in
+which all the Powers (including, very importantly, the United States of
+America) will be represented. Now I foresee a certain danger of our
+being taken by surprise at that Congress, and making ourselves
+unnecessarily difficult and unreasonable, by presenting ourselves to it
+in the character of Injured Innocence. We shall not be accepted in that
+character. Such a Congress will most certainly regard us as being, next
+to the Prussians (if it makes even that exception), the most quarrelsome
+people in the universe. I am quite conscious of the surprise and scandal
+this anticipation may cause among my more highminded (_hochnaesig_, the
+Germans call it) readers. Let me therefore break it gently by
+expatiating for a while on the subject of Junkerism and Militarism
+generally, and on the history of the literary propaganda of war between
+England and Potsdam which has been going on openly for the last forty
+years on both sides. I beg the patience of my readers during this
+painful operation. If it becomes unbearable, they can always put the
+paper down and relieve themselves by calling the Kaiser Attila and Mr.
+Keir Hardie a traitor twenty times or so. Then they will feel, I hope,
+refreshed enough to resume. For, after all, abusing the Kaiser or Keir
+Hardie or me will not hurt the Germans, whereas a clearer view of the
+political situation will certainly help us. Besides, I do not believe
+that the trueborn Englishman in his secret soul relishes the pose of
+Injured Innocence any more than I do myself. He puts it on only because
+he is told that it is respectable.
+
+
+*Junkers All.*
+
+What is a Junker? Is it a German officer of twenty-three, with offensive
+manners, and a habit of cutting down innocent civilians with his sabre?
+Sometimes; but not at all exclusively that or anything like that. Let us
+resort to the dictionary. I turn to the _Encyclopaedisches Woerterbuch_
+of Muret Sanders. Excuse its quaint German-English.
+
+*Junker* = Young nobleman, younker, lording, country squire, country
+gentleman, squirearch. *Junkerberrschaft* = squirearchy, landocracy.
+*Junkerleben* = life of a country gentleman, (_figuratively_) a jolly
+life. *Junkerpartei* = country party. *Junkerwirtschaft* = doings of the
+country party.
+
+Thus we see that the Junker is by no means peculiar to Prussia. We may
+claim to produce the article in a perfection that may well make Germany
+despair of ever surpassing us in that line. Sir Edward Grey is a Junker
+from his topmost hair to the tips of his toes; and Sir Edward is a
+charming man, incapable of cutting down even an Opposition front
+bencher, or of telling a German he intends to have him shot. Lord Cromer
+is a Junker. Mr. Winston Churchill is an odd and not disagreeable
+compound of Junker and Yankee: his frank anti-German pugnacity is
+enormously more popular than the moral babble (Milton's phrase) of his
+sanctimonious colleagues. He is a bumptious and jolly Junker, just as
+Lord Curzon is an uppish Junker. I need not string out the list. In
+these islands the Junker is literally all over the shop.
+
+It is very difficult for anyone who is not either a Junker or a
+successful barrister to get into an English Cabinet, no matter which
+party is in power, or to avoid resigning when we strike up the drum. The
+Foreign Office is a Junker Club. Our governing classes are
+overwhelmingly Junker: all who are not Junkers are riff-raff whose only
+claim to their position is the possession of ability of some sort:
+mostly ability to make money. And, of course, the Kaiser is a Junker,
+though less true-blue than the Crown Prince, and much less autocratic
+than Sir Edward Grey, who, without consulting us, sends us to war by a
+word to an ambassador and pledges all our wealth to his foreign allies
+by a stroke of his pen.
+
+
+*What Is a Militarist?*
+
+Now that we know what a Junker is, let us have a look at the
+Militarists. A Militarist is a person who believes that all real power
+is the power to kill, and that Providence is on the side of the big
+battalions. The most famous Militarist at present, thanks to the zeal
+with which we have bought and quoted his book, is General Friedrich von
+Bernhardi. But we cannot allow the General to take precedence of our own
+writers as a Militarist propagandist. I am old enough to remember the
+beginning of the anti-German phase of that very ancient propaganda in
+England. The Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left Europe very much
+taken aback. Up to that date nobody was afraid of Prussia, though
+everybody was a little afraid of France; and we were keeping "buffer
+States" between ourselves and Russia in the east. Germany had indeed
+beaten Denmark; but then Denmark was a little State, and was abandoned
+in her hour of need by those who should have helped her, to the great
+indignation of Ibsen. Germany had also beaten Austria; but somehow
+everybody seems able to beat Austria, though nobody seems able to draw
+the moral that defeats do not matter as much as the Militarists think,
+Austria being as important as ever. Suddenly Germany beat France right
+down into the dust, by the exercise of an organized efficiency in war of
+which nobody up to then had any conception. There was not a State in
+Europe that did not say to itself: "Good Heavens! what would happen if
+she attacked _us_?" We in England thought of our old-fashioned army and
+our old-fashioned commander George Ranger (of Cambridge), and our War
+Office with its Crimean tradition of imbecility; and we shook in our
+shoes. But we were not such fools as to leave it at that. We soon
+produced the first page of the Bernhardian literature: an anonymous
+booklet entitled _The Battle of Dorking_. It was not the first page of
+English Militarist literature: you have only to turn back to the burst
+of glorification of war which heralded the silly Crimean campaign
+(Tennyson's _Maud_ is a surviving sample) to find paeans to Mars which
+would have made Treitschke blush (perhaps they did); but it was the
+first page in which it was assumed as a matter of course that Germany
+and not France or Russia was England's natural enemy. _The Battle of
+Dorking_ had an enormous sale; and the wildest guesses were current as
+to its authorship. And its moral was "To arms; or the Germans will
+besiege London as they besieged Paris." From that time until the
+present, the British propaganda of war with Germany has never ceased.
+The lead given by _The Battle of Dorking_ was taken up by articles in
+the daily press and the magazines. Later on came the Jingo fever
+(anti-Russian, by the way; but let us not mention that just now),
+Stead's _Truth About the Navy_, Mr. Spenser Wilkinson, the suppression
+of the Channel Tunnel, Mr. Robert Blatchford, Mr. Garvin, Admiral Maxse,
+Mr. Newbolt, Mr. Rudyard Kipling, _The National Review_, Lord Roberts,
+the Navy League, the imposition of an Imperialist Foreign Secretary on
+the Liberal Cabinet, Mr. Wells's _War in the Air_ (well worth re-reading
+just now), and the Dreadnoughts. Throughout all these agitations the
+enemy, the villain of the piece, the White Peril, was Prussia and her
+millions of German conscripts. At first, in _The Battle of Dorking_
+phase, the note was mainly defensive. But from the moment when the
+Kaiser began to copy our Armada policy by building a big fleet, the
+anti-German agitation became openly aggressive; and the cry that the
+German fleet or ours must sink, and that a war between England and
+Germany was bound to come some day, speedily ceased to be merely a cry
+with our Militarists and became an axiom with them. And what our
+Militarists said our Junkers echoed; and our Junker diplomatists played
+for. The story of how they manoeuvred to hem Germany and Austria in with
+an Anglo-Franco-Russian combination will be found told with soldierly
+directness and with the proud candor of a man who can see things from
+his own side only in the article by Lord Roberts in the current number
+of _The Hibbert Journal_ (October, 1914). There you shall see also,
+after the usual nonsense about Nietzsche, the vision of "British
+administrators bearing the White Man's Burden," of "young men, fresh
+from the public schools of Britain, coming eagerly forward to carry on
+the high traditions of Imperial Britain in each new dependency which
+comes under our care," of "our fitness as an Imperial race," of "a great
+task committed to us by Providence," of "the will to conquer that has
+never failed us," of our task of "assuming control of one-fifth of the
+earth's surface and the care of one in five of all the inhabitants of
+the world." Not a suggestion that the inhabitants of the world are
+perhaps able to take care of themselves. Not even a passing recollection
+when that White Man's Burden is in question that the men outside the
+British Empire, and even inside the German Empire, are by no means
+exclusively black. Only the _sancta simplicitas_ that glories in "the
+proud position of England," the "sympathy, tolerance, prudence and
+benevolence of our rule" in the east (as shown, the Kaiser is no doubt
+sarcastically remarking, in the Delhi sedition trial), the chivalrous
+feeling that it is our highest duty to save the world from the horrible
+misfortune of being governed by anybody but those young men fresh from
+the public schools of Britain. Change the words Britain and British to
+Germany and German, and the Kaiser will sign the article with
+enthusiasm. _His_ opinion, _his_ attitude (subject to that merely verbal
+change) word for word.
+
+
+*Six of One: Half-a-Dozen of The Other.*
+
+Now, please observe that I do not say that the agitation was
+unreasonable. I myself steadily advocated the formation of a formidable
+armament, and ridiculed the notion that, we, who are wasting hundreds of
+millions annually on idlers and wasters, could not easily afford double,
+treble, quadruple our military and naval expenditure. I advocated the
+compulsion of every man to serve his country, both in war and peace. The
+idlers and wasters perceiving dimly that I meant the cost to come out of
+their pockets and meant to use the admission that riches should not
+exempt a man from military service as an illustration of how absurd it
+is to allow them to exempt him from civil service, did not embrace my
+advocacy with enthusiasm; so I must reaffirm it now lest it should be
+supposed that I am condemning those whose proceedings I am describing.
+Though often horribly wrong in principle, they were quite right in
+practice as far as they went. But they must stand to their guns now that
+the guns are going off. They must not pretend that they were harmless
+Radical lovers of peace, and that the propaganda of Militarism and of
+inevitable war between England and Germany is a Prussian infamy for
+which the Kaiser must be severely punished. That is not fair, not true,
+not gentlemanly. We began it; and if they met us half-way, as they
+certainly did, it is not for us to reproach them. When the German
+fire-eaters drank to The Day (of Armageddon) they were drinking to the
+day of which our Navy League fire-eaters had first said "It's bound to
+come." Therefore, let us have no more nonsense about the Prussian Wolf
+and the British Lamb, the Prussian Machiavelli and the English
+Evangelist. We cannot shout for years that we are boys of the bulldog
+breed, and then suddenly pose as gazelles. No. When Europe and America
+come to settle the treaty that will end this business (for America is
+concerned in it as much as we are), they will not deal with us as the
+lovable and innocent victims of a treacherous tyrant and a savage
+soldiery. They will have to consider how these two incorrigibly
+pugnacious and inveterately snobbish peoples, who have snarled at one
+another for forty years with bristling hair and grinning fangs, and are
+now rolling over with their teeth in one another's throats, are to be
+tamed into trusty watch-dogs of the peace of the world. I am sorry to
+spoil the saintly image with a halo which the British Jingo journalist
+sees just now when he looks in the glass; but it must be done if we are
+to behave reasonably in the imminent day of reckoning.
+
+And now back to Friedrich von Bernhardi.
+
+
+*General Von Bernhardi.*
+
+Like many soldier-authors, Friedrich is very readable; and he maintains
+the good and formidable part of the Bismarck tradition: that is, he is
+not a humbug. He looks facts in the face; he deceives neither himself
+nor his readers; and if he were to tell lies--as he would no doubt do as
+stoutly as any British, French, or Russian officer if his country's
+safety were at stake--he would know that he was telling them. Which last
+we think very bad taste on his part, if not downright wickedness.
+
+It is true that he cites Frederick the Great as an exemplary master of
+war and of _Weltpolitik_. But his chief praise in this department is
+reserved for England. It is from our foreign policy, he says, that he
+has learnt what our journalists denounce as "the doctrine of the bully,
+of the materialist, of the man with gross ideals: a doctrine of
+diabolical evil." He frankly accepts that doctrine from us (as if our
+poor, honest muddle-heads had ever formulated anything so intellectual
+as a doctrine), and blames us for nothing but for allowing the United
+States to achieve their solidarity and become formidable to us when we
+might have divided them by backing up the South in the Civil War. He
+shows in the clearest way that if Germany does not smash England,
+England will smash Germany by springing at her the moment she can catch
+her at a disadvantage. In a word he prophesies that we, his great
+masters in _Realpolitik_, will do precisely what our Junkers have just
+made us do, It is we who have carried out the Bernhardi programme: it is
+Germany who has neglected it. He warned Germany to make an alliance with
+Italy, Austria, Turkey, and America, before undertaking the subjugation,
+first of France, then of England. But a prophet is not without honour
+save in his own country; and Germany has allowed herself to be caught
+with no ally but Austria between France and Russia, and thereby given
+the English Junkers their opportunity. They have seized it with a
+punctuality that must flatter Von Bernhardi, even though the compliment
+be at the expense of his own country. The Kaiser did not give them
+credit for being keener Junkers than his own. It was an unpleasant,
+indeed an infuriating surprise. All that a Kaiser could do without
+unbearable ignominy to induce them to keep their bulldogs off and give
+him fair play with his two redoubtable foes, he did. But they laughed
+Frederick the Great's laugh and hurled all our forces at him, as he
+might have done to us, on Bernhardian principles, if he had caught us at
+the same disadvantage. Officially, the war is Junker-cut-Junker,
+militarist-cut-Militarist; and we must fight it out, not
+_Heuchler_-cut-Hypocrite, but hammer and tongs.
+
+
+*Militarist Myopia.*
+
+Unofficially, it is quite another matter. Democracy, even
+Social-Democracy, though as hostile to British Junkers as to German
+ones, and under no illusion as to the obsolescence and colossal
+stupidity of modern war, need not lack enthusiasm for the combat, which
+may serve their own ends better than those of their political opponents.
+For Bernhardi the Brilliant and our own very dull Militarists are alike
+mad: the war will not do any of the things for which they rushed into
+it. It is much more likely to do the things they most dread and
+deprecate: in fact, it has already swept them into the very kind of
+organization they founded an Anti-Socialist League to suppress. To shew
+how mad they are, let us suppose the war carries out their western
+program to the last item. Suppose France rises from the war victorious,
+happy and glorious, with Alsace and Lorraine regained, Rheims cathedral
+repaired in the best modern trade style, and a prodigious indemnity in
+her pocket! Suppose we tow the German fleet into Portsmouth, and leave
+Hohenzollern metaphorically under the heel of Romanoff and actually in a
+comfortable villa in Chislehurst, the hero of all its tea parties and
+the judge of all its gymkhanas! Well, cry the Militarists, suppose it by
+all means: could we desire anything better? Now I happen to have a
+somewhat active imagination; and it flatly refuses to stop at this
+convenient point. I must go on supposing. Suppose France, with its
+military prestige raised once more to the Napoleonic point, spends its
+indemnity in building an invincible Armada, stronger and nearer to us
+than the German one we are now out to destroy! Suppose Sir Edward Grey
+remonstrates, and Monsieur Delcasse replies, "Russia and France have
+humbled one Imperial Bully, and are prepared to humble another. I have
+not forgotten Fashoda. Stop us if you can; or turn, if you like, for
+help to the Germany we have smashed and disarmed!" Of what use will all
+this bloodshed be then, with the old situation reproduced in an
+aggravated form, the enemy closer to our shores, a raid far more
+feasible, the tradition of "natural enmity" to steel the foe, and
+Waterloo to be wiped out like Sedan? A child in arms should be able to
+see that this idiotic notion of relaxing the military pressure on us by
+smashing this or that particular Power is like trying to alter the
+pressure of the ocean by dipping up a bucket of water from the North Sea
+and pouring it into the Bay of Biscay.
+
+I purposely omit more easterly supposings as to what victorious Russia
+might do. But a noble emancipation of Poland and Finland at her own
+expense, and of Bosnia and Harzegovina at Austria's, might easily
+suggest to our nervous Militarists that a passion for the freedom of
+Egypt and India might seize her, and remind her that we were Japan's
+ally in the day of Russia's humiliation in Manchuria. So there at once
+is your Balance of Power problem in Asia enormously aggravated by
+throwing Germany out of the anti-Russian scale and grinding her to
+powder. Even in North Africa--but enough is enough. You can _durchhauen_
+your way out of the frying pan, but only into the fire. Better take
+Nietzsche's brave advice, and make it your point of honour to "live
+dangerously." History shews that it is often the way to live long.
+
+
+*Learning Nothing: Forgetting Everything.*
+
+But let me test the Militarist theory, not by a hypothetical future, but
+by the accomplished and irrevocable past. Is it true that nations must
+conquer or go under, and that military conquest means prosperity and
+power for the victor and annihilation for the vanquished? I have already
+alluded in passing to the fact that Austria has been beaten repeatedly:
+by France, by Italy, by Germany, almost by everybody who has thought it
+worth while to have a whack at her; and yet she is one of the Great
+Powers; and her alliance has been sought by invincible Germany. France
+was beaten by Germany in 1870 with a completeness that seemed
+impossible; yet France has since enlarged her territory whilst Germany
+is still pleading in vain for a place in the sun. Russia was beaten by
+the Japanese in Manchuria on a scale that made an end forever of the old
+notion that the West is the natural military superior of the East; yet
+it is the terror of Russia that has driven Germany into her present
+desperate onslaught on France; and it is the Russian alliance on which
+France and England are depending for their assurance of ultimate
+success. We ourselves confess that the military efficiency with which we
+have so astonished the Germans is the effect, not of Waterloo and
+Inkerman, but of the drubbing we got from the Boers, who we aid probably
+have beaten us if we had been anything like their own size. Greece has
+lately distinguished herself in war within a few years by a most
+disgraceful beating of the Turks. It would be easy to multiply instances
+from remoter history: for example, the effect on England's position of
+the repeated defeats of our troops by the French under Luxembourg in the
+Balance of Power War at the end of the seventeenth century differed
+surprisingly little, if at all, from the effect of our subsequent
+victories under Marlborough. And the inference from the Militarist
+theory that the States which at present count for nothing as military
+Powers necessarily count for nothing at all is absurd on the face of it.
+Monaco seems to be, on the whole, the most prosperous and comfortable
+State in Europe.
+
+In short, Militarism must be classed as one of the most inconsiderately
+foolish of the bogus "sciences" which the last half century has produced
+in such profusion, and which have the common characteristic of revolting
+all sane souls, and being stared out of countenance by the broad facts
+of human experience. The only rule of thumb that can be hazarded on the
+strength of actual practice is that wars to maintain or upset the
+Balance of Power between States, called by inaccurate people Balance of
+Power wars, and by accurate people Jealousy of Power wars, never
+establish the desired peaceful and secure equilibrium. They may exercise
+pugnacity, gratify spite, assuage a wound to national pride, or enhance
+or dim a military reputation; but that is all. And the reason is, as I
+shall shew very conclusively later on, that there is only one way in
+which one nation can really disable another, and that is a way which no
+civilized nation dare even discuss.
+
+*Are We Hypocrites?*
+
+And now I proceed from general considerations to the diplomatic history
+of the present case, as I must in order to make our moral position
+clear. But first, lest I should lose all credit by the startling
+incompatibility between the familiar personal character of our statesmen
+and the proceedings for which they are officially responsible, I must
+say a word about the peculiar psychology of English statesmanship, not
+only for the benefit of my English readers (who do not know that it is
+peculiar just as they do not know that water has any taste because it is
+always in their mouths), but as a plea for a more charitable
+construction from the wider world.
+
+We know by report, however unjust it may seem to us, that there is an
+opinion abroad, even in the quarters most friendly to us, that our
+excellent qualities are marred by an incorrigible hypocrisy. To France
+we have always been Perfidious Albion. In Germany, at this moment, that
+epithet would be scorned as far too flattering to us. Victor Hugo
+explained the relative unpopularity of _Measure for Measure_ among
+Shakespeare's plays on the ground that the character of the hypocrite
+Angelo was a too faithful dramatization of our national character.
+Pecksniff is not considered so exceptional an English gentleman in
+America as he is in England.
+
+Now we have not acquired this reputation for nothing. The world has no
+greater interest in branding England with this particular vice of
+hypocrisy than in branding France with it; yet the world does not cite
+Tartuffe as a typical Frenchman as it cites Angelo and Pecksniff as
+typical Englishmen. We may protest against it as indignantly as the
+Prussian soldiers protest against their equally universal reputation for
+ferocity in plunder and pillage, sack and rapine; but there is something
+in it. If you judge an English statesman, by his conscious intentions,
+his professions, and his personal charm, you will often find him an
+amiable, upright, humane, anxiously truthful man. If you judge him, as a
+foreigner must, solely on the official acts for which he is responsible,
+and which he has to defend in the House of Commons for the sake of his
+party, you will often be driven to conclude that this estimable
+gentleman is, in point of being an unscrupulous superprig and fool,
+worse than Caesar Borgia and General Von Bernhardi rolled into one, and
+in foreign affairs a Bismarck in everything except commanding ability,
+blunt common sense, and freedom from illusion as to the nature and
+object of his own diplomacy. And the permanent officials in whose hands
+he is will probably deserve all that and something to spare. Thus you
+will get that amazing contrast that confronts us now between the
+Machiavellian Sir Edward Grey of the Berlin newspapers and the amiable
+and popular Sir Edward Grey we know in England. In England we are all
+prepared to face any World Congress and say, "We know that Sir Edward
+Grey is an honest English gentleman, who meant well as a true patriot
+and friend of peace; we are quite sure that what he did was fair and
+right; and we will not listen to any nonsense to the contrary." The
+Congress will reply, "We know nothing about Sir Edward Grey except what
+he did; and as there is no secret and no question as to what he did, the
+whole story being recorded by himself, we must hold England responsible
+for his conduct, whilst taking your word for the fact, which has no
+importance for us, that his conduct has nothing to do with his
+character."
+
+
+*Our Intellectual Laziness.*
+
+The general truth of the situation is, as I have spent so much of my
+life in trying to make the English understand, that we are cursed with a
+fatal intellectual laziness, an evil inheritance from the time when our
+monopoly of coal and iron made it possible for us to become rich and
+powerful without thinking or knowing how; a laziness which is becoming
+highly dangerous to us now that our monopoly is gone or superseded by
+new sources of mechanical energy. We got rich by pursuing our own
+immediate advantage instinctively; that is, with a natural childish
+selfishness; and when any question of our justification arose, we found
+it easy to silence it with any sort of plausible twaddle (provided it
+flattered us, and did not imply any trouble or sacrifice) provided by
+our curates at £70 a year, or our journalists at a penny a line, or
+commercial moralists with axes to grind. In the end we became fatheaded,
+and not only lost all intellectual consciousness of what we were doing,
+and with it all power of objective self-criticism, but stacked up a
+lumber of pious praises for ourselves which not only satisfied our
+corrupted and half atrophied consciences, but gave us a sense that there
+is something extraordinarily ungentlemanly and politically dangerous in
+bringing these pious phrases to the test of conduct. We carried Luther's
+doctrine of Justification by Faith to the insane point of believing that
+as long as a man says what we have agreed to accept as the right thing
+it does not matter in the least what he actually does. In fact, we do
+not clearly see why a man need introduce the subject of morals at all,
+unless there is something questionable to be whitewashed. The
+unprejudiced foreigner calls this hypocrisy: that is why we call him
+prejudiced. But I, who have been a poor man in a poor country,
+understand the foreigner better.
+
+Now from the general to the particular. In describing the course of the
+diplomatic negotiations by which our Foreign Office achieved its design
+of at last settling accounts with Germany at the most favourable moment
+from the Militarist point of view, I shall have to exhibit our Secretary
+of State for Foreign Affairs as behaving almost exactly as we have
+accused the Kaiser of behaving. Yet I see him throughout as an honest
+gentleman, "perplexed in the extreme," meaning well, revolted at the
+last moment by the horror of war, clinging to the hope that in some
+vague way he could persuade everybody to be reasonable if they would
+only come and talk to him as they did when the big Powers were kept out
+of the Balkan war, but hopelessly destitute of a positive policy of any
+kind, and therefore unable to resist those who had positive business in
+hand. And do not for a moment imagine that I think that the conscious
+Sir Edward Grey was Othello, and the subconscious, Iago. I do think that
+the Foreign Office, of which Sir Edward is merely the figure head, was
+as deliberately and consciously bent on a long deferred Militarist war
+with Germany as the Admiralty was; and that is saying a good deal. If
+Sir Edward Grey did not know what he wanted, Mr. Winston Churchill was
+in no such perplexity. He was not an "ist" of any sort, but a
+straightforward holder of the popular opinion that if you are threatened
+you should hit out, unless you are afraid to. Had he had the conduct of
+the affair he might quite possibly have averted the war (and thereby
+greatly disappointed himself and the British public) by simply
+frightening the Kaiser. As it was, he had arranged for the co-operation
+of the French and British fleets; was spoiling for the fight; and must
+have restrained himself with great difficulty from taking off his coat
+in public whilst Mr. Asquith and Sir Edward Grey were giving the country
+the assurances which were misunderstood to mean that we were not bound
+to go to war, and not more likely to do so than usual. But though Sir
+Edward did not clear up the misunderstanding, I think he went to war
+with the heavy heart of a Junker Liberal (such centaurs exist) and not
+with the exultation of a Junker Jingo.
+
+I may now, without more than the irreducible minimum of injustice to Sir
+Edward Grey, proceed to tell the story of the diplomatic negotiations as
+they will appear to the Congress which, I am assuming, will settle the
+terms on which Europe is to live more or less happily ever after.
+
+*Diplomatic History of the War.*
+
+The evidence of how the Junker diplomatists of our Foreign Office let us
+in for the war is in the White Paper, Miscellaneous No. 6 (1914),
+containing correspondence respecting the European crisis, and since
+reissued, with a later White Paper and some extra matter, as a penny
+bluebook in miniature. In these much-cited and little-read documents we
+see the Junkers of all the nations, the men who have been saying for
+years "It's bound to come," and clamouring in England for compulsory
+military service and expeditionary forces, momentarily staggered and not
+a little frightened by the sudden realization that it has come at last.
+They rush round from foreign office to embassy, and from embassy to
+palace, twittering "This is awful. Can't you stop it? Won't you be
+reasonable? Think of the consequences," etc., etc. One man among them
+keeps his head and looks the facts in the face. That man is Sazonoff,
+the Russian Secretary for Foreign Affairs. He keeps steadily trying to
+make Sir Edward Grey face the inevitable. He says and reiterates, in
+effect, "You know very well that you cannot keep out of a European war.
+You know you are pledged to fight Germany if Germany attacks France. You
+know that your arrangments for the fight are actually made; that already
+the British army is commanded by a Franco-British Council of War; that
+there is no possible honourable retreat for you. You know that this old
+man in Austria, who would have been superannuated years ago if he had
+been an exciseman, is resolved to make war on Servia, and sent that
+silly forty-eight hours ultimatum when we were all out of town so that
+he could begin fighting before we could get back to sit on his head. You
+know that he has the Jingo mob of Vienna behind him. You know that if he
+makes war, Russia must mobilize. You know that France is bound to come
+in with us as you are with France. You know that the moment we mobilize,
+Germany, the old man's ally, will have only one desperate chance of
+victory, and that is to overwhelm our ally, France, with one superb rush
+of her millions, and then sweep back and meet us on the Vistula. You
+know that nothing can stop this except Germany remonstrating with
+Austria, and insisting on the Servian case being dealt with by an
+international tribunal and not by war. You know that Germany dares not
+do this, because her alliance with Austria is her defence against the
+Franco-Russian alliance, and that she does not want to do it in any
+case, because the Kaiser naturally has a strong class prejudice against
+the blowing up of Royal personages by irresponsible revolutionists, and
+thinks nothing too bad for Servia after the assassination of the
+Archduke. There is just one chance of avoiding Armageddon: a slender
+one, but worth trying. You averted war in the Algeciras crisis, and
+again in the Agadir crisis, by saying you would fight. Try it again. The
+Kaiser is stiffnecked because he does not believe you are going to fight
+this time. Well, convince him that you are. The odds against him will
+then be so terrible that he may not dare to support the Austrian
+ultimatum to Servia at such a price. And if Austria is thus forced to
+proceed judicially against Servia, we Russians will be satisfied; and
+there will be no war."
+
+Sir Edward could not see it. He is a member of a Liberal Government, in
+a country where there is no political career for the man who does not
+put his party's tenure of office before every other consideration. What
+would _The Daily News_ and _The Manchester Guardian_ have said had he,
+Bismarck-like, said bluntly: "If war once breaks out, the old score
+between England and Prussia will be settled, not by ambassadors' tea
+parties and Areopaguses, but by blood and iron?" In vain did Sazonoff
+repeat, "But if you are going to fight, as you know you are, why not say
+so?" Sir Edward, being Sir Edward and not Winston Churchill or Lloyd
+George, could not admit that he was going to fight. He might have
+forestalled the dying Pope and his noble Christian "I bless peace" by a
+noble, if heathen, "I fight war." Instead, he persuaded us all that he
+was under no obligation whatever to fight. He persuaded Germany that he
+had not the slightest serious intention of fighting. Sir Owen Seaman
+wrote in _Punch_ an amusing and witty No-Intervention poem. Sporting
+Liberals offered any odds that there would be no war for England. And
+Germany, confident that with Austria's help she could break France with
+one hand and Russia with the other if England held aloof, let Austria
+throw the match into the magazine.
+
+
+*The Battery Unmasked.*
+
+Then the Foreign Office, always acting through its amiable and popular
+but confused instrument Sir Edward, unmasked the Junker-Militarist
+battery. He suddenly announced that England must take a hand in the war,
+though he did not yet tell the English people so, it being against the
+diplomatic tradition to tell them anything until it is too late for them
+to object. But he told the German Ambassador, Prince Lichnowsky, caught
+in a death trap, pleaded desperately for peace with Great Britain. Would
+we promise to spare Germany if Belgium were left untouched? No. Would we
+say on what conditions we would spare Germany? No. Not if the Germans
+promised not to annex French territory? No. Not even if they promised
+not to touch the French colonies? No. Was there no way out? Sir Edward
+Grey was frank. He admitted there was just one chance; that Liberal
+opinion might not stand the war if the neutrality of Belgium were not
+violated. And he provided against that chance by committing England to
+the war the day before he let the cat out of the bag in Parliament.
+
+All this is recorded in the language of diplomacy in the White Paper on
+or between the lines. That language is not so straightforward as my
+language; but at the crucial points it is clear enough. Sazonoff's tone
+is politely diplomatic in No. 6; but in No. 17 he lets himself go. "I do
+not believe that Germany really wants war; but her attitude is decided
+by yours. If you take your stand firmly with France and Russia there
+will be no war. If you fail them now, rivers of blood will flow, and you
+will in the end be dragged into war." He was precisely right; but he did
+not realize that war was exactly what our Junkers wanted. They did not
+dare to tell themselves so; and naturally they did not dare to tell him
+so. And perhaps his own interest in war was too strong to make him
+regret the rejection of his honest advice. To break up the Austrian
+Empire and achieve for Russia the Slav Caliphate of South-East Europe
+whilst defeating Prussia with the help of France and of Russia's old
+enemy and Prussia's old ally England, was a temptation so enormous that
+Sazonoff, in resisting it so far as to shew Sir Edward Grey frankly the
+only chance of preventing it, proved himself the most genuine
+humanitarian in the diplomatic world.
+
+
+*Number 123.*
+
+The decisive communication between Sir Edward Grey and Prince Lichnowsky
+is recorded in the famous No. 123. With the rather childish subsequent
+attempt to minimize No. 123 on the ground that the Prince was merely an
+amiable nincompoop who did not really represent his fiendish sovereign,
+neither I nor any other serious person need be concerned. What is beyond
+all controversy is that after that conversation Prince Lichnowsky could
+do nothing but tell the Kaiser that the _Entente_, having at last got
+his imperial head in chancery, was not going to let him off on any
+terms, and that it was now a fight to a finish between the British and
+German empires. Then the Kaiser said: "We are Germans. God help us!"
+When a crowd of foolish students came cheering for the war under his
+windows, he bade them go to the churches and pray. His telegrams to the
+Tsar (the omission of which from the penny bluebook is, to say the
+least, not chivalrous) were dignified and pathetic. And when the
+Germans, taking a line from the poet they call "unser Shakespeare,"
+said: "Come the four quarters of the world in arms and we shall shock
+them," it was, from the romantic militarist point of view, fine. What
+Junker-led men could do they have since done to make that thrasonical
+brag good. But there is no getting over the fact that, in Tommy Atkins's
+phrase, they had asked for it. Their Junkers, like ours, had drunk to
+The Day; and they should not have let us choose it after riling us for
+so many years. And that is why Sir Edward had a great surprise when he
+at last owned up in Parliament.
+
+
+*How the Nation Took It.*
+
+The moment he said that we could not "stand aside with our arms folded"
+and see our friend and neighbour France "bombarded and battered," the
+whole nation rose to applaud him. All the Foreign Office distrust of
+public opinion, the concealment of the Anglo-French plan of campaign,
+the disguise of the _Entente_ in a quaker's hat, the duping of the
+British public and the Kaiser with one and the same prevarication, had
+been totally unnecessary and unpopular, like most of these ingenuities
+which diplomatists think subtle and Machiavellian. The British Public
+had all along been behind Mr. Winston Churchill. It had wanted Sir
+Edward to do just what Sazonoff wanted him to do, and what I, in the
+columns of _The Daily News_ proposed he should do nine months ago (I
+must really be allowed to claim that I am not merely wise after the
+event), which was to arm to the teeth regardless of an expense which to
+us would have been a mere fleabite, and tell Germany that if she, laid a
+finger on France we would unite with France to defeat her, offering her
+at the same time as consolation for that threat, the assurance that we
+would do as much to France if she wantonly broke the peace in the like
+fashion by attacking Germany. No unofficial Englishman worth his salt
+wanted to snivel hypocritically about our love of peace and our respect
+for treaties and our solemn acceptance of a painful duty, and all the
+rest of the nauseous mixture of school-master's twaddle, parish magazine
+cant, and cinematograph melodrama with which we were deluged. We were
+perfectly ready to knock the Kaiser's head off just to teach him that if
+he thought he was going to ride roughshod over Europe, including our new
+friends the French, and the plucky little Belgians, he was reckoning
+without old England. And in this pugnacious but perfectly
+straightforward and human attitude the nation needed no excuses because
+the nation honestly did not know that we were taking the Kaiser at a
+disadvantage, or that the Franco-Russian alliance had been just as much
+a menace to peace as the Austro-German one. But the Foreign Office knew
+that very well, and therefore began to manufacture superfluous,
+disingenuous, and rather sickening excuses at a great rate. The nation
+had a clean conscience, and was really innocent of any aggressive
+strategy: the Foreign Office was redhanded, and did not want to be found
+out. Hence its sermons.
+
+
+*Mr. H.G. Wells Hoists the Country's Flag.*
+
+It was Mr. H.G. Wells who at the critical moment spoke with the nation's
+voice. When he uttered his electric outburst of wrath against "this
+drilling, trampling foolery in the heart of Europe" he gave expression
+to the pent-up exasperation of years of smouldering revolt against swank
+and domineer, guff and bugaboo, calling itself blood and iron, and
+mailed fist, and God and conscience and anything else that sounded
+superb. Like Nietzsche, we were "fed up" with the Kaiser's imprisonments
+of democratic journalists for _Majestaetsbeleidigung_ (monarch
+disparagement), with his ancestors, and his mission, and his gospel of
+submission and obedience for poor men, and of authority, tempered by
+duelling, for rich men. The world had become sore-headed, and desired
+intensely that they who clatter the sword shall perish by the sword.
+Nobody cared twopence about treaties: indeed, it was not for us, who had
+seen the treaty of Berlin torn up by the brazen seizure of Bosnia and
+Herzegovina by Austria in 1909, and taken that lying down, as Russia
+did, to talk about the sacredness of treaties, even if the wastepaper
+baskets of the Foreign Offices were not full of torn up "scraps of
+paper," and a very good thing too; for General von Bernhardi's
+assumption that circumstances alter treaties is not a page from
+Machiavelli: it is a platitude from the law books. The man in the street
+understood little or nothing about Servia or Russia or any of the cards
+with which the diplomatists were playing their perpetual game of Beggar
+my Neighbour. We were rasped beyond endurance by Prussian Militarism and
+its contempt for us and for human happiness and common sense; and we
+just rose at it and went for it. We have set out to smash the Kaiser
+exactly as we set out to smash the Mahdi. Mr. Wells never mentioned a
+treaty. He said, in effect: "There stands the monster all freedom-loving
+men hate; and at last we are going to fight it." And the public, bored
+by the diplomatists, said: "Now you're talking!" We did not stop to ask
+our consciences whether the Prussian assumption that the dominion of the
+civilized earth belongs to German culture is really any more bumptious
+than the English assumption that the dominion of the sea belongs to
+British commerce. And in our island security we were as little able as
+ever to realize the terrible military danger of Germany's geographical
+position between France and England on her west flank and Russia on her
+east: all three leagued for her destruction; and how unreasonable it was
+to ask Germany to lose the fraction of a second (much less Sir Maurice
+de Runsen's naïve "a few days' delay") in dashing at her Western foe
+when she could obtain no pledge as to Western intentions. "We are now in
+a state of necessity; and Necessity knows no law," said the Imperial
+Chancellor in the Reichstag. "It is a matter of life and death to us,"
+said the German Minister for Foreign Affairs to our Ambassador in
+Berlin, who had suddenly developed an extraordinary sense of the
+sacredness of the Treaty of London, dated 1839, and still, as it
+happened, inviolate among the torn fragments of many subsequent and
+similar "scraps of paper." Our Ambassador seems to have been of Sir
+Maurice's opinion that there could be no such tearing hurry. The Germans
+could enter France through the line of forts between Verdun and Toul if
+they were really too flustered to wait a few days on the chance of Sir
+Edward Grey's persuasive conversation and charming character softening
+Russia and bringing Austria to conviction of sin. Thereupon the Imperial
+Chancellor, not being quite an angel, asked whether we had counted the
+cost of crossing the path of an Empire fighting for its life (for these
+Militarist statesmen do really believe that nations can be killed by
+cannon shot). That was a threat; and as we cared nothing about Germany's
+peril, and wouldn't stand being threatened any more by a Power of which
+we now had the inside grip, the fat remained in the fire, blazing more
+fiercely than ever. There was only one end possible to such a clash of
+high tempers, national egotisms, and reciprocal ignorances.
+
+
+*Delicate Position of Mr. Asquith.*
+
+It seemed a splendid chance for the Government to place itself at the
+head of the nation. But no British Government within my recollection has
+ever understood the nation. Mr. Asquith, true to the Gladstonian
+tradition (hardly just to Gladstone, by the way) that a Liberal Prime
+Minister should know nothing concerning foreign politics and care less,
+and calmly insensible to the real nature of the popular explosion, fell
+back on 1839, picking up the obvious barrister's point about the
+violation of the neutrality of Belgium, and tried the equally obvious
+barrister's claptrap about "an infamous proposal" on the jury. He
+assured us that nobody could have done more for peace than Sir Edward
+Grey, though the rush to smash the Kaiser was the most popular thing Sir
+Edward had ever done.
+
+Besides, there was another difficulty. Mr. Asquith himself, though
+serenely persuaded that he is a Liberal statesman, is, in effect, very
+much what the Kaiser would have been if he had been a Yorkshireman and a
+lawyer, instead of being only half English and the other half
+Hohenzollern, and an anointed emperor to boot. As far as popular
+liberties are concerned, history will make no distinction between Mr.
+Asquith and Metternich. He is forced to keep on the safe academic ground
+of Belgium by the very obvious consideration that if he began to talk of
+the Kaiser's imprisonments of editors and democratic agitators and so
+forth, a Homeric laughter, punctuated with cries of, "How about
+Denshawai?" "What price Tom Mann?" "Votes for women!" "Been in India
+lately?" "Make McKenna Kaiser," "Or dear old Herbert Gladstone," etc.,
+etc., would promptly spoil that pose. The plain fact is that, Militarism
+apart, Germany is in many ways more democratic in practice than England;
+indeed the Kaiser has been openly reviled as a coward by his Junkers
+because he falls short of Mr. Asquith in calm indifference to Liberal
+principles and blank ignorance of working-class sympathies, opinions,
+and interests.
+
+Mr. Asquith had also to distract public attention from the fact that
+three official members of his Government, all men of unquestioned and
+conspicuous patriotism and intellectual honesty, walked straight out
+into private life on the declaration of war. One of them, Mr. John
+Burns, did so at an enormous personal sacrifice, and has since
+maintained a grim silence far more eloquent than the famous speech
+Germany invented for him. It is not generally believed that these three
+statesmen were actuated by a passion for the violation of Belgian
+neutrality.
+
+On the whole, it was impossible for the Government to seize its grand
+chance and put itself at the head of the popular movement that responded
+to Sir Edward Grey's declaration: the very simple reason being that the
+Government does not represent the nation, and is in its sympathies just
+as much a Junker government as the Kaiser's. And so, what the Government
+cannot do has to be done by unofficial persons with clean and brilliant
+anti-Junker records like Mr. Wells, Mr. Arnold Bennett, Mr. Neil Lyons,
+and Mr. Jerome K. Jerome. Neither Mr. Asquith nor Sir Edward Grey can
+grasp, as these real spokesmen of their time do, the fact that we just
+simply want to put an end to Potsdamnation, both at home and abroad.
+Both of them probably think Potsdam a very fine and enviable
+institution, and want England to out-Potsdam Potsdam and to monopolize
+the command of the seas; a monstrous aspiration. We, I take it, want to
+guarantee that command of the sea which is the common heritage of
+mankind to the tiniest State and the humblest fisherman that depends on
+the sea for a livelihood. We want the North Sea to be as safe for
+everybody, English or German, as Portland Place.
+
+
+*The Need for Recrimination.*
+
+And now somebody who would rather I had not said all this (having
+probably talked dreadful nonsense about Belgium and so forth for a month
+past) is sure to ask: "Why all this recrimination? What is done is done.
+Is it not now the duty of every Englishman to sink all differences in
+the face of the common peril?" etc., etc. To all such prayers to be
+shielded from that terrible thing, the truth, I must reply that history
+consists mainly of recrimination, and that I am writing history because
+an accurate knowledge of what has occurred is not only indispensable to
+any sort of reasonable behaviour on our part in the face of Europe when
+the inevitable day of settlement comes, but because it has a practical
+bearing on the most perilously urgent and immediate business before us:
+the business of the appeal to the nation for recruits and for enormous
+sums of money. It has to decide the question whether that appeal shall
+be addressed frankly to our love of freedom, and our tradition (none the
+less noble and moving because it is so hard to reconcile with the
+diplomatic facts) that England is a guardian of the world's liberty, and
+not to bad law about an obsolete treaty, and cant about the diabolical
+personal disposition of the Kaiser, and the wounded propriety of a
+peace-loving England, and all the rest of the slosh and tosh that has
+been making John Bull sick for months past. No doubt at first, when we
+were all clasping one another's hands very hard and begging one another
+not to be afraid, almost anything was excusable. Even the war notes of
+Mr. Garvin, which stood out as the notes of a gentleman amid a welter of
+scurrilous rubbish and a rather blackguardly _Punch_ cartoon mocking the
+agony of Berlin (_Punch_ having turned its non-interventionist coat very
+promptly), had sometimes to run: "We know absolutely nothing of what is
+happening at the front, except that the heroism of the British troops
+will thrill the ages to the last syllable of recorded time," or words to
+that effect. But now it is time to pull ourselves together; to feel our
+muscle; to realize the value of our strength and pluck; and to tell the
+truth unashamed like men of courage and character, not to shirk it like
+the official apologists of a Foreign Office plot.
+
+
+*What Germany Should Have Done.*
+
+And first, as I despise critics who put people in the wrong without
+being able to set them right, I shall, before I go any further with my
+criticism of our official position, do the Government and the Foreign
+Office the service of finding a correct official position for them; for
+I admit that the popular position, though sound as far as it goes, is
+too crude for official use. This correct official position can be found
+only by considering what Germany should have done, and might have done
+had she not been, like our own Junkers, so fascinated by the Militarist
+craze, and obsessed by the chronic Militarist panic, that she was "in
+too great hurry to bid the devil good morning." The matter is simple
+enough: she should have entrusted the security of her western frontier
+to the public opinion of the west of Europe and to America, and fought
+Russia, if attacked, with her rear not otherwise defended. The
+Militarist theory is that we, France and England, would have immediately
+sprung at her from behind; but that is just how the Militarist theory
+gets its votaries into trouble by assuming that Europe is a chess board.
+Europe is not a chess board; but a populous continent in which only a
+very few people are engaged in military chess; and even those few have
+many other things to consider besides capturing their adversary's king.
+Not only would it have been impossible for England to have attacked
+Germany under such circumstances; but if France had done so England
+could not have assisted her, and might even have been compelled by
+public opinion to intervene by way of a joint protest from England and
+America, or even by arms, on her behalf if she were murderously pressed
+on both flanks. Even our Militarists and diplomatists would have had
+reasons for such an intervention. An aggressive Franco-Russian hegemony,
+if it crushed Germany, would be quite as disagreeable to us as a German
+one. Thus Germany would at worst have been fighting Russia and France
+with the sympathy of all the other Powers, and a chance of active
+assistance from some of them, especially those who share her hostility
+to the Russian Government. Had France not attacked her--and though I am
+as ignorant of the terms of the Franco-Russian alliance as Sir Edward
+Grey is strangely content to be, I cannot see how the French Government
+could have justified to its own people a fearfully dangerous attack on
+Germany had Russia been the aggressor--Germany would have secured fair
+play for her fight with Russia. But even the fight with Russia was not
+inevitable. The ultimatum to Servia was the escapade of a dotard: a
+worse crime than the assassination that provoked it. There is no reason
+to doubt the conclusion in Sir Maurice de Bunsen's despatch (No. 161)
+that it could have been got over, and that Russia and Austria would have
+thought better of fighting and come to terms. Peace was really on the
+cards; and the sane game was to play for it.
+
+
+*The Achilles Heel of Militarism.*
+
+Instead, Germany flew at France's throat, and by incidentally invading
+Belgium gave us the excuse our Militarists wanted to attack her with the
+full sympathy of the nation. Why did she do this stupid thing? Not
+because of the counsels of General von Bernhardi. On the contrary, he
+had warned her expressly against allowing herself to be caught between
+Russia and a Franco-British combination until she had formed a
+counterbalancing alliance with America, Italy, and Turkey. And he had
+most certainly not encouraged her to depend on England sparing her: on
+the contrary, he could not sufficiently admire the wily ruthlessness
+with which England watches her opportunity and springs at her foe when
+the foe is down. (He little knew, poor man, how much he was flattering
+our capacity for Realpolitik!) But he had reckoned without his creed's
+fatal and fundamental weakness, which is, that as Junker-Militarism
+promotes only stupid people and snobs, and suppresses genuine realists
+as if they were snakes, it always turns out when a crisis arrives that
+"the silly people don't know their own silly business." The Kaiser and
+his ministers made an appalling mess of their job. They were inflamed by
+Bernhardi; but they did not understand him. They swallowed his flattery,
+but did not take in his strategy or his warnings. They knew that when
+the moment came to face the Franco-Russian alliance, they were to make a
+magnificient dash at France and sweep her pieces off the great chess
+board before the Russians had time to mobilize; and then return and
+crush Russia, leaving the conquest of England for another day. This was
+honestly as much as their heads could hold at one time; and they were
+helplessly unable to consider whether the other conditions postulated by
+Bernhardi were present, or indeed, in the excitement of their
+schoolboyish imaginations, to remember whether he had postulated any at
+all. And so they made their dash and put themselves in the wrong at
+every point morally, besides making victory humanly impossible for
+themselves militarily. That is the nemesis of Militarism: the Militarist
+is thrown into a big game which he is too stupid to be able to play
+successfully. Philip of Spain tried it 300 years ago; and the ruin he
+brought on his empire has lasted to this day. He was so stupid that
+though he believed himself to be the chosen instrument of God (as sure a
+sign of a hopeless fool in a man who cannot see that every other man is
+equally an instrument of that Power as it is a guarantee of wisdom and
+goodwill in the man who respects his neighbor as himself) he attempted
+to fight Drake on the assumption that a cannon was a weapon that no real
+gentleman and good Catholic would condescend to handle. Louis XIV. tried
+again two centuries ago, and, being a more frivolous fool, got beaten by
+Marlborough and sent his great-grandson from the throne to the
+guillotine. Napoleon tried it 100 years ago. He was more dangerous,
+because he had prodigious personal ability and technical military skill;
+and he started with the magnificent credential of the French Revolution.
+All that carried him farther than the Spanish bigot or the French fop;
+but he, too, accreted fools and knaves, and ended defeated in St. Helena
+after pandering for twenty years to the appetite of idiots for glory and
+bloodshed; waging war as "a great game"; and finding in a field strewn
+with corpses "un beau spectacle." In short, as strong a magnet to fools
+as the others, though so much abler.
+
+
+*Our Own True Position*.
+
+Now comes the question, in what position did this result of a mad theory
+and a hopelessly incompetent application of it on the part of Potsdam
+place our own Government? It left us quite clearly in the position of
+the responsible policeman of the west. There was nobody else in Europe
+strong enough to chain "the mad dog." Belgium and Holland, Norway and
+Sweden, Denmark and Switzerland could hardly have been expected to take
+that duty on themselves, even if Norway and Sweden had not good reason
+to be anti-Russian, and the Dutch capitalists were not half convinced
+that their commercial prosperity would be greater under German than
+under native rule. It will not be contended that Spain could have done
+anything; and as to Italy, it was doubtful whether she did not consider
+herself still a member of the Triple Alliance. It was evidently England
+or nobody. For England to have refrained, from hurling herself into the
+fray, horse, foot, and artillery, was impossible from every point of
+view. From the democratic point of view it would have meant an
+acceptance of the pretension of which Potsdam, by attacking the French
+Republic, had made itself the champion: that is, the pretension of the
+Junker class to dispose of the world on Militarist lines at the expense
+of the lives and limbs of the masses. From the international Socialist
+point of view, it would have been the acceptance of the extreme
+nationalist view that the people of other countries are foreigners, and
+that it does not concern us if they choose to cut one another's throats.
+Our Militarist Junkers cried "If we let Germany conquer France it will
+be our turn next." Our romantic Junkers added "and serve us right too:
+what man will pity us when the hour strikes for us, if we skulk now?"
+Even the wise, who loathe war, and regard it as such a dishonour and
+disgrace in itself that all its laurels cannot hide its brand of Cain,
+had to admit that police duty is necessary and that war must be made on
+such war as the Germans had made by attacking France in an avowed
+attempt to substitute a hegemony of cannon for the comity of nations.
+There was no alternative. Had the Foreign Office been the International
+Socialist Bureau, had Sir Edward Grey been Jaures, had Mr. Ramsay
+MacDonald been Prime Minister, had Russia been Germany's ally instead of
+ours, the result would still have been the same: we must have drawn the
+sword to save France and smash Potsdam as we smashed and always must
+smash Philip, Louis, Napoleon, _et hoc genus omne_.
+
+The case for our action is thus as complete as any _casus belli_ is ever
+likely to be. In fact its double character as both a democratic and
+military (if not Militarist) case makes it too complete; for it enables
+our Junkers to claim it entirely for themselves, and to fake it with
+pseudo-legal justifications which destroy nine-tenths of our credit, the
+military and legal cases being hardly a tenth of the whole: indeed, they
+would not by themselves justify the slaughter of a single Pomeranian
+grenadier. For instance, take the Militarist view that we must fight
+Potsdam because if the Kaiser is victorious, it will be our turn next!
+Well: are we not prepared to fight always when our turn comes? Why
+should not we also depend on our navy, on the extreme improbability of
+Germany, however triumphant, making two such terrible calls on her
+people in the same generation as a war involves, on the sympathy of the
+defeated, and on the support of American and European public opinion
+when our turn comes, if there is nothing at stake now but the difference
+between defeat and victory in an otherwise indifferent military
+campaign? If the welfare of the world does not suffer any more by an
+English than by a German defeat who cares whether we are defeated or
+not? As mere competitors in a race of armaments and an Olympic game
+conducted with ball cartridge, or as plaintiffs in a technical case of
+international law (already decided against us in 1870, by the way, when
+Gladstone had to resort to a new treaty made _ad hoc_ and lapsing at the
+end of the war) we might as well be beaten as not, for all the harm that
+will ensue to anyone but ourselves, or even to ourselves apart from our
+national vanity. It is as the special constables of European life that
+we are important, and can send our men to the trenches with the
+assurance that they are fighting in a worthy cause. In short, the Junker
+case is not worth twopence: the Democratic case, the Socialist case, the
+International case is worth all it threatens to cost.
+
+
+*The German Defence to Our Indictment.*
+
+What is the German reply to this case? Or rather, how would the Germans
+reply to it if their official Militarist and Kaiserist panjandrums had
+the wit to find the effective reply? Undoubtedly they would say that our
+Social-Democratic professions are all very fine, but that our conversion
+to them is suspiciously sudden and recent. They would remark that it is
+a little difficult for a nation in deadly peril to trust its existence
+to a foreign public opinion which has not only never been expressed by
+the people who really control England's foreign policy, but is flatly
+opposed to all their known views and prejudices. They would ask why,
+instead of making an _Entente_ with France and Russia and refusing to
+give Germany any assurance concerning its object except that we would
+not pledge ourselves to remain neutral if the Franco-Russian _Entente_
+fell on Germany, we did not say straight out in 1912 (when they put the
+question flatly to us), and again last July when Sazonoff urged us so
+strongly to shew our hand, that if Germany attacked France we should
+fight her, Russia or no Russia (a far less irritating and provocative
+attitude), although we knew full well that an attack on France through
+Belgium would be part of the German program if the Russian peril became
+acute. They would point out that if our own Secretary for Foreign
+Affairs openly disclaimed any knowledge of the terms of the
+Franco-Russian alliance, it was hard for a German to believe that they
+were wholly fit for publication. In short, they would say "If you were
+so jolly wise and well intentioned before the event, why did not your
+Foreign Minister and your ambassadors in Berlin and Vienna and St.
+Petersburg--we beg pardon, Petrograd--invite us to keep the peace and
+rely on western public opinion instead of refusing us every pledge
+except the hostile one to co-operate with France against us in the North
+Sea, and making it only too plain to us that your policy was a Junker
+policy as much as ours, and that we had nothing to hope from your
+goodwill? What evidence had we that you were playing any other game than
+this Militarist chess of our own, which you now so piously renounce, but
+which none of you except a handful of Socialists whom you despise and
+Syndicalists whom you imprison on Militarist pretexts has opposed for
+years past, though it has been all over your Militarist anti-German
+platforms and papers and magazines? Are your Social-Democratic
+principles sincere, or are they only a dagger you keep up your sleeve to
+stab us in the back when our two most formidable foes are trying to
+garotte us? If so, where does your moral superiority come in, hypocrites
+that you are? If not, why, we repeat, did you not make them known to all
+the world, instead of making an ambush for us by your senseless
+silence?"
+
+I see no reply to that except a frank confession that we did not know
+our own minds; that we came to a knowledge of them only when Germany's
+attack on France forced us to make them up at last; that though
+doubtless a chronic state of perfect lucidity and long prevision on our
+part would have been highly convenient, yet there is a good deal to be
+said for the policy of not fording a stream until you come to it; and
+that in any case we must entirely decline to admit that we are more
+likely than other people to do the wrong thing when circumstances at
+last oblige us to think and act. Also that the discussion is idle on the
+shewing of the German case itself; for whether the Germans assumed us to
+be unscrupulous Militarists or conscientious Democrats they were bound
+to come to the same conclusion: namely, that we should attack them if
+they attacked France; consequently their assumption that we would not
+interfere must have been based on the belief that we are simply
+"contemptible," which is the sort of mistake people have to pay for in
+this wicked world.
+
+On the whole, we can hector our way in the Prussian manner out of that
+discussion well enough, provided we hold our own in the field. But the
+Prussian manner hardly satisfies the conscience. True, the fact that our
+diplomatists were not able to discover the right course for Germany does
+not excuse Germany for being unable to find it for herself. Not that it
+was more her business than ours: it was a European question, and should
+have been solved by the united counsels of all the ambassadors and
+Foreign Offices and chanceries. Indeed it could not have been stably
+solved without certain assurances from them. But it was, to say the
+least, as much Germany's business as anyone else's, and terribly urgent
+for her: "a matter of life and death," the Imperial Chancellor thought.
+Still, it is not for us to claim moral superiority to Germany. It was
+for us a matter of the life and death of many Englishmen; and these
+Englishmen are dead because our diplomatists were as blind as the
+Prussians. The war is a failure for secret Junker diplomacy, ours no
+less than the enemy's. Those of us who have still to die must be
+inspired, not by devotion to the diplomatists, but, like the Socialist
+hero of old on the barricade, by the vision of "human solidarity." And
+if he purchases victory for that holy cause with his blood, I submit
+that we cannot decently allow the Foreign Office to hang up his martyr's
+palm over the War Office Mantelpiece.
+
+
+*The First Penalty of Disingenuousness.*
+
+The Foreign Office, however, can at lease shift its ground, and declare
+for the good cause instead of belittling it with quibbling excuses. For
+see what the first effect of the nonsense about Belgium has been! It
+carried with it the inevitable conclusion that when the last German was
+cleared off Belgian soil, peace-loving England, her reluctant work in
+this shocking war done, would calmly retire from the conflict, and leave
+her Allies to finish the deal with Potsdam. Accordingly, after Mr.
+Asquith's oration at the Mansion House, the Allies very properly
+insisted on our signing a solemn treaty between the parties that they
+must all stand together to the very end. A pitifully thin attempt has
+been made to represent that the mistrusted party was France, and that
+the Kaiser was trying to buy her off. All one can say to that is that
+the people who believe that any French Government dare face the French
+people now with anything less than Alsace and Lorraine as the price of
+peace, or that an undefeated and indeed masterfully advancing German
+Kaiser (as he seemed then) dare offer France such a price, would believe
+anything. Of course we had to sign; but if the Prime Minister had not
+been prevented by his own past from taking the popular line, we should
+not have been suspected of a possible backing-out when the demands of
+our sanctimoniousness were satisfied. He would have known that we are
+not vindicating a treaty which by accident remains among the fragments
+of treaties of Paris, of Prague, of Berlin, of all sorts of places and
+dates, as the only European treaty that has hitherto escaped flat
+violation: we are supporting the war as a war on war, on military
+coercion, on domineering, on bullying, on brute force, on military law,
+on caste insolence, on what Mrs. Fawcett called insensable deviltry
+(only to find the papers explaining apologetically that she, as a lady,
+had of course been alluding to war made by foreigners, not by England).
+Some of us, remembering the things we have ourselves said and done, may
+doubt whether Satan can cast out Satan; but as the job is not exactly
+one for an unfallen angel, we may as well let him have a try.
+
+
+*The Blank Cheque.*
+
+In the meantime behold us again hopelessly outwitted by Eastern
+diplomacy as a direct consequence of this ill-starred outburst of
+hypocrisy about treaties! Everybody has said over and over again that
+this war is the most tremendous war ever waged. Nobody has said that
+this new treaty is the most tremendous blank cheque we have ever been
+forced to sign by our Parliamentary party trick of striking moral
+attitudes. It is true that Mr. J.A. Hobson realised the situation at
+once, and was allowed to utter a little croak in a corner; but where was
+the trumpet note of warning that should have rung throughout the whole
+Press? Just consider what the blank cheque means. France's draft on it
+may stop at the cost of recovering Alsace and Lorraine. We shall have to
+be content with a few scraps of German colony and the heavy-weight
+championship. But Russia? When will she say "Hold! Enough!" Suppose she
+wants not only Poland, but Baltic Prussia? Suppose she wants
+Constantinople as her port of access to the unfrozen seas, in addition
+to the dismemberment of Austria? Suppose she has the brilliant idea of
+annexing all Prussia, for which there is really something to be said by
+ethnographical map-makers, Militarist madmen, and Pan-Slavist
+megalomaniacs? It may be a reasonable order; but it is a large one; and
+the fact that we should have been committed to it without the knowledge
+of Parliament, without discussion, without warning, without any sort of
+appeal to public opinion or democratic sanction, by a stroke of Sir
+Edward Grey's pen within five weeks of his having committed us in the
+same fashion to an appalling European war, shews how completely the
+Foreign Office has thrown away all pretence of being any less absolute
+than the Kaiser himself. It simply offers _carte blanche_ to the armies
+of the Allies without a word to the nation until the cheque is signed.
+The only limit there is to the obligation is the certainty that the
+cheque will be dishonoured the moment the draft on it becomes too heavy.
+And that may furnish a virtuous pretext for another war between the
+Allies themselves. In any case no treaty can save each Ally from the
+brute necessity of surrendering and paying up if beaten, whether the
+defeat is shared by the others or not. Did I not say that the sooner we
+made up our minds to the terms of the treaty of peace, so that we might
+know what we were fighting for, and how far we were bound to go, the
+better? Instead of which we sign a ridiculous "scrap of paper" to save
+ourselves the intolerable fatigue of thought.
+
+
+*Belgium Crucified Between the European Powers.*
+
+And now, before I leave the subject of Belgium, what have we done for
+Belgium? Have we saved her soil from invasion? Were we at her side with
+half a million men when the avalanche fell on her? Or were we safe in
+our own country praising her heroism in paragraphs which all contrived
+to convey an idea that the Belgian soldier is about four feet high, but
+immensely plucky for his size? Alas, when the Belgian soldier cried:
+"Where are the English?" the reply was "a mass of concrete as large as a
+big room," blown into the air by a German siege gun, falling back and
+crushing him into the earth we had not succeeded in saving from the
+worst of the horrors of war. We have not protected Belgium: Belgium has
+protected us at the cost of being conquered by Germany. It is now our
+sacred duty to drive the Germans out of Belgium. Meanwhile we might at
+least rescue her refugees by a generous grant of public money from the
+caprices of private charity. We need not press our offer to lend her
+money: German capitalists will do that for her with the greatest
+pleasure when the war is over. I think the Government realizes that now;
+for I note the after-thought that a loan from us need not bear interest.
+
+Now that we begin to see where we really are, what practical morals can
+we draw?
+
+
+*Unpreparedness the Price of Secrecy.*
+
+First, that our autocratic foreign policy, in which the Secretary for
+Foreign Affairs is always a Junker, and makes war and concludes war
+without consulting the nation, or confiding in it, or even refraining
+from deceiving it as to his intentions, leads inevitably to a disastrous
+combination of war and unpreparedness for war. Wars are planned which
+require huge expeditionary armies trained and equipped for war. But as
+such preparation could not be concealed from the public, it is simply
+deferred until the war is actually declared and begun, at the most
+frightful risk of such an annihilation of our little peace army as we
+escaped by the skin of our teeth at Mons and Cambrai. The military
+experts tell us that it takes four months to make an infantry and six to
+make a cavalry soldier. And our way of getting an army able to fight the
+German army is to declare war on Germany just as if we had such an army,
+and then trust to the appalling resultant peril and disaster to drive us
+into wholesale enlistment, voluntary or (better still from the Junker
+point of view) compulsory. It seems to me that a nation which tolerates
+such insensate methods and outrageous risks must shortly perish from
+sheer lunacy. And it is all pure superstition: the retaining of the
+methods of Edward the First in the reign of George the Fifth. I
+therefore suggest that the first lesson of the war is that the Secretary
+of State for Foreign Affairs be reduced to the level of a simple Prime
+Minister, or even of a constitutional monarch, powerless to fire a
+single shot or sign a treaty without the authority of the House of
+Commons, all diplomatic business being conducted in a blaze of
+publicity, and the present regulation which exacts the qualification of
+a private income of at least £400 a year for a position in the
+Diplomatic Service replaced by a new regulation that at least half the
+staff shall consist of persons who have never dined out at the houses of
+hosts of higher rank than unfashionable solicitors or doctors.
+
+In these recommendations I am not forgetting that an effective check on
+diplomacy is not easy to devise, and that high personal character and
+class disinterestedness (the latter at present unattainable) on the part
+of our diplomatists will be as vital as ever. I well know that diplomacy
+is carried on at present not only by official correspondence meant for
+possible publication and subject to an inspection which is in some
+degree a responsible inspection, but by private letters which the King
+himself has no right to read. I know that even in the United States,
+where treaties and declarations of war must be made by Parliament, it is
+nevertheless possible for the President to bring about a situation in
+which Congress, like our House of Commons in the present instance, has
+no alternative but to declare war. But though complete security is
+impracticable, it does not follow that no precautions should be taken,
+or that a democratic tradition is no safer than a feudal tradition. A
+far graver doubt is raised by the susceptibility of the masses to war
+fever, and the appalling danger of a daily deluge of cheap newspapers
+written by nameless men and women whose scandalously low payment is a
+guarantee of their ignorance and their servility to the financial
+department, controlled by a moneyed class which not only curries favour
+with the military caste for social reasons, but has large direct
+interests in war as a method of raising the price of money, the only
+commodity the moneyed class has to sell. But I am quite unable to see
+that our Junkers are less susceptible to the influence of the Press than
+the people educated by public elementary schools. On the contrary, our
+Democrats are more fool-proof than our Plutocrats; and the ravings our
+Junkers send to the papers for nothing in war time would be dear at a
+halfpenny a line. Plutocracy makes for war because it offers prizes to
+Plutocrats: Socialism makes for peace because the interests it serves
+are international. So, as the Socialist side is the democratic side, we
+had better democratize our diplomacy if we desire peace.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+*RECRUITING.*
+
+
+And now as to the question of recruiting. This is pressing, because it
+is not enough for the Allies to win: we and not Russia must be the
+decisive factor in the victory, or Germany will not be fairly beaten,
+and we shall be only rescued _proteges_ of Russia instead of the
+saviours of Western Europe. We must have the best army in Europe; and we
+shall not get it under existing arrangements. We are passing out of the
+first phase of the war fever, in which men flock to the colours by
+instinct, by romantic desire for adventure, by the determination not, as
+Wagner put it, "to let their lives be governed by fear of the end," by
+simple destitution through unemployment, by rancour and pugnacity
+excited by the inventions of the Press, by a sense of duty inculcated in
+platform orations which would not stand half an hour's discussion, by
+the incitements and taunts of elderly non-combatants and maidens with a
+taste for mischief, and by the verses of poets jumping at the cheapest
+chance in their underpaid profession. The difficulty begins when all the
+men susceptible to these inducements are enlisted, and we have to draw
+on the solid, sceptical, sensible residuum who know the value of their
+lives and services and liberties, and will not give them except on
+substantial and honourable conditions. These Ironsides know that it is
+one thing to fight for your country, and quite another to let your wife
+and children starve to save our rich idlers from a rise in the supertax.
+They also know that it is one thing to wipe out the Prussian drill
+sergeant and snob officer as the enemies of manhood and honour, and
+another to let that sacred mission be made an excuse for subjecting us
+to exactly the same tyranny in England. They have not forgotten the "On
+the knee" episode, nor the floggings in our military prisons, nor the
+scandalous imprisonment of Tom Mann, nor the warnings as to military law
+and barrack life contained even in Robert Blatchford's testimony that
+the army made a man of him.
+
+
+*What the Labour Party Owes to the Army.*
+
+And here is where the Labour Party should come in. The Labour Party's
+business is to abolish the Militarist soldier, who is only a quaint
+survival of the King's footman (himself a still quainter survival of the
+medieval baron's retainer), and substitute for him a trained combatant
+with full civil rights, receiving the Trade Union rate of wages proper
+to a skilled worker at a dangerous trade. It must co-operate with the
+Trade Unions in fixing this moral minimum wage for the citizen soldier,
+and in obtaining for him a guarantee that the wage shall continue until
+he obtains civil employment on standard terms at the conclusion of the
+war. It must make impossible the scandal of a monstrously rich peer (his
+riches, the automatic result of ground land-landlordism, having "no
+damned nonsense of merit about them") proclaiming the official weekly
+allowance for the child of the British soldier in the trenches. That
+allowance is eighteenpence, being less than one third of the standard
+allowance for an illegitimate child under an affiliation order. And the
+Labour Party must deprive the German bullet of its present double effect
+in killing an Englishman in France and simultaneously reducing his
+widow's subsistence from a guinea a week to five shillings. Until this
+is done we are simply provoking Providence to destroy us.
+
+I wish I could say that it is hardly necessary to add that Trade
+Unionism must be instituted in the Army, so that there shall be
+accredited secretaries in the field to act as a competent medium of
+communication between the men on service and the political
+representatives of their class at the War Office (for I shall propose
+this representative innovation presently). It will shock our colonels;
+but I know of no bodies of men for whom repeated and violent shocking is
+more needed and more likely to prove salutary than the regimental masses
+of the British army. One rather pleasant shock in store for them is the
+discovery that an officer and a gentleman, whose sole professional
+interest is the honour and welfare of his country, and who is bound to
+the mystical equality of life-and-death duty for all alike, will get on
+much more easily with a Trade Union secretary than a commercial employer
+whose aim is simply private profit and who regards every penny added to
+the wages of his employees as a penny taken off his own income. Howbeit,
+whether the colonels like it or not--that is, whether they have become
+accustomed to it or not--it has to come, and its protection from Junker
+prejudice is another duty of the Labour Party. The Party as a purely
+political body must demand that the defender of his country shall retain
+his full civil rights unimpaired; that, the unnecessary, mischievous,
+dishonourable and tyrannical slave code called military law, which at
+its most savagely stern point produced only Wellington's complaint that
+"it is impossible to get a command obeyed in the British Army," be
+carted away to the rubbish heap of exploded superstitions; and that if
+Englishmen are not to be allowed to serve their country in the field as
+freely as they do in the numerous civil industries in which neglect and
+indiscipline are as dangerous as they are in war, their leaders and
+Parliamentary representatives will not recommend them to serve at all.
+In wartime these things may not matter: discipline either goes by the
+board or keeps itself under the pressure of the enemy's cannon; and
+bullying sergeants and insolent officers have something else to do than
+to provoke men they dislike into striking them and then reporting them
+for two years' hard labour without trial by jury. In battle such
+officers are between two fires. But soldiers are not always, or even
+often, at war; and the dishonour of abdicating dearly-bought rights and
+liberties is a stain both on war and peace. Now is the time to get rid
+of that stain. If any officer cannot command men without it, as
+civilians and police inspectors do, that officer has mistaken his
+profession and had better come home.
+
+
+*Obsolete Tests in the Army.*
+
+Another matter needs to be dealt with at the same time. There are
+immense numbers of atheists in this country; and though most of them,
+like the Kaiser, regard themselves as devout Christians, the best are
+intellectually honest enough to object to profess beliefs they do not
+hold, especially in the solemn act of dedicating themselves to death in
+the service of their country. Army form E 501 A (September, 1912)
+secured to these the
+
+[Illustration: JOHN GALSWORTHY. (_Photo by E.O. Hoppe_.) _See Page_
+102]
+
+[Illustration: RUDYARD KIPLING _(Photo by E.O. Hoppe_.) _See Page_ 106]
+
+benefit of the Bradlaugh Affirmation Act of 1888, as the enlisting
+soldier said simply "I, So and So, do make Oath, &c." But recruits are
+now confronted with another form (E 501, June, 1914) running "I, So and
+So, swear by Almighty God, &c." On September 1st, at Lord Kitchener's
+call, a civil servant obtained leave to enlist and had the oath put to
+him, in this form by the attesting officer. He offered to swear in the
+1912 form. This was refused; and we accordingly lost a recruit of just
+that sturdily conscientious temper which has made the most formidable
+soldiers known to history. I am bound to add, however, that the
+attesting officer, on being told that the oath would be a blasphemous
+farce to the conscience of the recruit, made no difficulty about that,
+and was quite willing to accept him if he, on his part, would oblige by
+professing what he did not believe. Thus a Ghoorka's religious
+conscience is respected: an Englishman's is insulted and outraged.
+
+But, indeed, all these oaths are obstructive and useless superstitions.
+No recruit will hesitate to pledge his word of honour to fight to the
+death for his country or for a cause with which he sympathizes; and that
+is all we require. There is no need to drag in Almighty God and no need
+to drag in the King. Many an Irishman, many a colonial Republican, many
+an American volunteer who would fight against the Prussian monarchy
+shoulder to shoulder with the French Republicans with a will, would
+rather not pretend to do it out of devotion to the British throne. To
+vanquish Prussia in this war we need the active aid or the sympathy of
+every Republican in the world. America, for instance, sympathizes with
+England, but classes the King with the Kaiser as an obsolete
+institution. Besides, even from the courtly point of view the situation
+is a delicate one. Why emphasize the fact that, formally speaking, the
+war is between two grandsons of Albert the Good, that thoroughbred
+German whose London monument is so much grander than Cromwell's?
+
+The Labour Party should also set its face firmly against the abandonment
+of Red Cross work and finance, or the support of soldiers' families, or
+the patrolling of the streets, to amateurs who regard the war as a
+wholesome patriotic exercise, or as the latest amusement in the way of
+charity bazaars, or as a fountain of self-righteousness. Civil
+volunteering is needed urgently enough: one of the difficulties of war
+is that it creates in certain departments a demand so abnormal that no
+peace establishment can cope with it. But the volunteers should be
+disciplined and paid: we are not so poor that we need spunge on anyone.
+And in hospital and medical service war ought not at present to cost
+more than peace would if the victims of our commercial system were
+properly tended, and our Public Health service adequately extended and
+manned. We should therefore treat our Red Cross department as if it were
+destined to become a permanent service. No charity and no amateur
+anarchy and incompetence should be tolerated. As to allowing that
+admirable detective agency for the defence of the West End against
+begging letter writers, the Charity Organization Society to touch the
+soldier's home, the very suggestion is an outrage. The C.O.S., the Poor
+Law, and the charitable amateur, whether of the patronizing or prying or
+gushing variety, must be kept as far from the army and its folk as if
+they were German spies. The business of our fashionable amateurs is to
+pay Income Tax and Supertax. This time they will have to pay through the
+nose, vigorously wrung for that purpose by the House of Commons; so they
+had better set their own houses in order and leave the business of the
+war to be officially and responsibly dealt with and paid for at full
+standard rates.
+
+
+*Wanted: Labour Representation in the War Office.*
+
+But parliamentary activity is not sufficient. There must be a more
+direct contact between representative Labour and the Army, because
+Parliament can only remedy grievances, and that not before years of
+delay and agitation elapse. Even then the grievances are not dealt with
+on their merits; for under our party system, which is the most
+abominable engine for the perversion and final destruction of all
+political conscience ever devized by man, the House of Commons never
+votes on any question but whether the Government shall remain in office
+or give the Opposition a turn, no matter what the pretext for the
+division may be. Only in such emergencies as the present, when the
+Government is forced to beg the Labour members to help them to recruit,
+is there a chance of making reasonable conditions for the soldier.
+
+
+*The Four Inoculations.*
+
+It is therefore necessary that the War Office should have working class
+representatives on all committees and councils which issue notices to
+the public. There is at present, it would seem, not a single person in
+authority there who has the faintest notion of what the immense majority
+of possible British recruits are thinking about. The results have been
+beyond description ludicrous and dangerous. Every proclamation is
+urgently worded so as to reassure recruits with £5,000 a year and repel
+recruits with a pound a week. On the very day when the popular Lord
+Kitchener, dropping even the _et rex meus_ of Wolsey, frankly asked the
+nation for 100,000 men for his army, and when it was a matter of life
+and death that every encouragement should be held out to working men to
+enlist, the War Office decided that this was the psychological moment to
+remind everybody that soldiers on active service often die of typhoid
+fever, and to press inoculation on the recruits pending the officially
+longed-for hour when Sir Almroth Wright's demand for compulsion can be
+complied with. I say nothing here about the efficacy of inoculation.
+Efficacious or not, Sir Almroth Wright himself bases his demand for
+compulsion on the ground that it is hopeless to expect the whole army to
+submit to it voluntarily. That being so, it seems to me that when men
+are hesitating on the threshold of the recruiting station, only a German
+spy or our War Office (always worth ten thousand men to our enemies)
+would seize that moment to catch the nervous postulant by the sleeve and
+say, "Have you thought of the danger of dysentery?" The fact that the
+working class forced the Government, very much against its doctor-ridden
+will, to abolish compulsory vaccination, shews the extent to which its
+households loathe and dread these vaccines (so called, but totally
+unconnected with cows or Jenner) which, as they are continually reminded
+by energetic anti-inoculation propagandists in largely circulated
+journals and pamphlets, not to mention ghastly photographs of disfigured
+children, sometimes produce worse effects than the diseases they are
+supposed to prevent. Indifferent or careless recruits are easily induced
+to submit to inoculation by little privileges during the ensuing
+indisposition or by small money bribes; and careful ones are
+proselytized by Sir Almroth's statistics; but on the whole both
+inoculation and amateur medical statistics are regarded with suspicion
+by the poor; and the fact that revaccination is compulsory in the
+regular army, and that the moral pressure applied to secure both typhoid
+inoculation and vaccination both in the regular army and the
+Territorials is such as only a few stalwarts are able to resist, is
+deeply resented. At present the inoculation mania has reached the pitch
+of proposing no less than four separate inoculations: revaccination,
+typhoid, cholera, and--Sir Almroth's last staggerer--inoculation against
+wounds! When the War Office and its medical advisers have been
+successfully inoculated against political lunacy, it will be time enough
+to discuss such extravagances. Meanwhile, the sooner the War Office
+issues a proclamation that no recruit will be either compelled or
+importuned to submit to any sort of inoculation whatever against his
+will, the better for the recruiting, and the worse for the enemy.
+
+
+*The War Office Bait of Starvation.*
+
+But this blunder was a joke compared to the next exploit of the War
+Office. It suddenly began to placard the country with frantic assurances
+to its five-thousand-a-year friends that they would be "discharged with
+all possible speed THE MINUTE THE WAR IS OVER." Only considerations of
+space restrained them, I presume, from adding "LAWN TENNIS, SHOOTING,
+AND ALL THE DELIGHTS OF FASHIONABLE LIFE CAN BE RESUMED IMMEDIATELY ON
+THE FIRING OF THE LAST SHOT." Now what does this mean to the wage
+worker? Simply that the moment he is no longer wanted in the trenches he
+will be flung back into the labour market to sink or swim without an
+hour's respite. If we had had a Labour representative or two to help in
+drawing up these silly placards--I am almost tempted to say if we had
+had any human being of any class with half the brains of a rabbit
+there--the placards would have contained a solemn promise that no single
+man should be discharged at the conclusion of the war, save at his own
+request, until a job had been found for him in civil life. I ask the
+heavens, with a shudder, do these class-blinded people in authority
+really intend to take a million men out of their employment; turn them
+into soldiers; and then at one blow hurl them back, utterly unprovided
+for, into the streets?
+
+But a War Office capable of placarding Lord Roberts's declaration that
+the men who are enlisting are doing "what all able-bodied men in the
+kingdom should do" is clearly ignorant enough for anything. I do not
+blame Lord Roberts for his oratorical flourish: we have all said things
+just as absurd on the platform in moments of enthusiasm. But the
+officials who reproduced it in cold blood would have us believe that
+soldiers live on air; that ammunition drops from heaven like manna; and
+that an army could hold the field for twenty-four hours without the
+support of a still more numerous body of civilians working hard to
+support it. Sane men gasp at such placards and ask angrily, "What sort
+of fools do you take us for?" I have in my hand a copy of _The Torquay
+Times_ containing a hospitable invitation to soldiers' wives to call at
+the War Office, Whitehall, S.W., if they desire "assistance and
+explanation of their case." The return fare from Torquay to London is
+thirty shillings and sixpence third class; but the War Office no doubt
+assumes that all soldiers' wives keep motor cars. Still, let us be just
+even to the War Office. It did _not_ ask the soldiers' wives for forms
+of authorization to pay the separation allowance to their bankers every
+six months. It actually offered the money monthly!
+
+
+*Delusive Promises.*
+
+The middle and upper classes are nearly as bad as the War Office. They
+talk of keeping every man's place open for him until the end of the war.
+Obviously this is flatly impossible. Some places can be kept, and no
+doubt are being kept. Some functions are suspended by the war and cannot
+be resumed until the troops return to civil life and resume them.
+Employers are so hardened to the daily commercial necessity for
+discharging men without a thought as to what is to become of them that
+they are quite ready to undertake to sack the replacers when the troops
+come back. Also the return of peace may be followed by a revival of
+trade in which employment may not be hard to find, even by discharged
+soldiers, who are always passed over in the labour market in favour of
+civilians, as those well know who have the task of trying to find places
+for them. But these considerations do not justify an attempt to persuade
+recruits that they can go off soldiering for months--they are told by
+Lord Kitchener that it will probably be for years--and then come back
+and walk to their benches or into their offices and pick up their work
+as if they had left only the night before. The very people who are
+promising this are raising the cry "business as usual" in the same
+breath. How can business be carried on as usual, or carried on at all,
+on unoccupied office stools and at counters with no men behind them?
+Such rubbish is an insult to the recruit's intelligence. These promises
+of keeping places open were made to the men who enlisted for South
+Africa, and were of course broken, as a promise to supply green cheese
+by quarrying the moon would have been broken. New employees must be
+found to do the work of the men who are in the field; and these new ones
+will not all be thrown into the street when the war is over to make room
+for discharged soldiers, even if a good many of these soldiers are not
+disqualified by their new training and habits for their old employment.
+I repeat, there is only one assurance that can be given to the recruits
+without grossly and transparently deluding them; and that is that they
+shall not be discharged, except at their own request, until civil
+employment is available for them.
+
+
+*Funking Controversy.*
+
+This is not the only instance of the way in which, under the first scare
+of the war, we shut our eyes and opened our mouths to every folly. For
+example, there was a cry for the suspension of all controversy in the
+face of the national danger. Now the only way to suspend controversial
+questions during a period of intense activity in the very departments in
+which the controversy has arisen is to allow them all to be begged.
+Perhaps I should not object if they were all begged in favour of my own
+side, as, for instance, the question of Socialism was begged in favour
+of Socialism when the Government took control of the railways; bought up
+all the raw sugar; regulated prices; guaranteed the banks; suspended the
+operation of private contracts; and did all the things it had been
+declaring utterly and eternally Utopian and imposible when Socialists
+advocated them. But it is now proposed to suspend all popular liberties
+and constitutional safeguards; to muzzle the Press, and actually to have
+no contests at bye-elections! This is more than a little too much. We
+have submitted to have our letters, our telegrams, our newspapers
+censored, our dividends delayed, our trains cut off, our horses and even
+our houses commandeered, our streets darkened, our restaurants closed,
+and ourselves shot dead on the public highways if we were slow to
+realize that some excited person bawling in the distance was a sentry
+challenging us. But that we are to be politically gagged and enslaved as
+well; that the able-bodied soldier in the trenches, who depends on the
+able-minded civilian at home to guard the liberties of his country and
+protect him from carelesness or abuse of power by the authorities whom
+he must blindly and dumbly obey, is to be betrayed the moment his back
+is turned to his fellow-citizens and his face to the foe, is not
+patriotism: it is the paralysis of mortal funk: it is the worst kind of
+cowardice in the face of the enemy. Let us hear no more of it, but
+contest our elections like men, and regain the ancient political
+prestige of England at home as our expeditionary force has regained it
+abroad.
+
+The Labour Party, then, need have no hesitation in raising all the
+standing controversies between Democracy and Junkerism in their acutest
+form, and taking advantage of the war emergency to press them to a
+series of parliamentary victories for Labour, whether in negotiations
+with the Government whips, in divisions on the floor of the House, or in
+strenuously contested bye-elections. No doubt our Junkers will try to
+disarm their opponents by representing that it would be in the last
+degree unfair, un-English, and ungentlemanly on the part of the Labour
+members to seize any tactical advantage in parliamentary warfare, and
+most treacherous and unpatriotic to attack their country (meaning the
+Junker Party) when it is at war. Some Labour members will be easily
+enough gulled in this way: it would be laughable, if the consequences
+were not so tragic, to see how our parliamentary beginners from the
+working class succumb to the charm of the Junker appeal. The Junkers
+themselves are not to be coaxed in this manner: it is no use offering
+tracts to a missionary, as the poor Kaiser found when he tried it on.
+The Labour Party will soon learn the value of these polite
+demonstrations that it is always its duty not to hamper the governing
+classes in their very difficult and delicate and dangerous task of
+safeguarding the interests of this great empire: in short, to let itself
+be gammoned by elegant phrases and by adroit practisings on its personal
+good-nature, its inveterate proletarian sentimentality, and its secret
+misgivings as to the correctness of its manners. The Junkers have
+already taken the fullest advantage of the war to paralyze democracy. If
+the Labour members do not take a vigorous counter-offensive, and fight
+every parliamentary trench to the last division, the Labour Movement
+will be rushed back as precipitately as General von Kluck rushed the
+Allies back from Namur to the gates of Paris. In truth, the importance
+of the war to the immense majority of Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Germans
+lies in the possibility that when Junkers fall out common men may come
+by their own.
+
+
+
+
+*III.*
+
+*THE TERMS OF PEACE.*
+
+
+*Natural Limits to Duration of the War.*
+
+
+So much for the recruiting. Now for the terms of peace. It is time to
+take that subject in hand; for Lord Kitchener's notion that we are going
+to settle down to years of war as we did a century ago is soldierly, but
+not sensible. It is, of course, physically possible for us to continue
+for twenty years digging trenches and shelling German troops and shoving
+German armies back when they are not shoving us, whilst old women pull
+turnips and tend goats in the fire zones across which soldiers run to
+shelter. But we cannot afford to withdraw a million male adults who have
+passed a strictish health test from the work of parentage for several
+years unless we intend to breed our next generation from parents with
+short sight, varicose veins, rotten teeth, and deranged internal organs.
+Soldiers do not think of these things: "theirs not to reason why: theirs
+but to do and die"; but sensible civilians have to. And even soldiers
+know that you cannot make ammunition as fast as you can burn it, nor
+produce men and horses as instantaneously as you can kill them by
+machinery. It would be well, indeed, if our papers, instead of writing
+of ten-inch shells, would speak of £1,000 shells, and regimental bands
+occasionally finish the National Anthem and the Brabançonne and the
+Marseillaise with the old strain, "That's the way the money goes: Pop
+goes the Ten Inch." It is easy to rebuke Mr. Norman Angell and Herr
+Bloch for their sordid references to the cost of war; and Mr. H.G. Wells
+is profoundly right in pointing out that the fact that war does not pay
+commercially is greatly to its credit, as no high human activity ever
+does pay commercially. But modern war does not even pay its way. Already
+our men have "pumped lead" into retreating Germans who had no lead left
+to pump back again; and sooner or later, if we go on indefinitely, we
+shall have to finish the job with our fists, and congratulate ourselves
+that both Georges Carpentier and Bombardier Wells are on our side. This
+war will stop when Germany throws up the sponge, which will happen long
+before she is utterly exhausted, but not before we ourselves shall be
+glad enough of a rest. Nations are like bees: they cannot kill except at
+the cost of their own lives.
+
+The question of terms will raise a fierce controversy. At the extremes
+of our public opinion we have two temperaments, first, our gentlemen,
+our sportsmen, our daredevils, our _preux chevaliers_. To these the
+notion of reviling your enemy when he is up; kicking him when he is
+knocked down by somebody else; and gouging out his eyes, cutting out his
+tongue, hewing off his right arm, and stealing all his money, is
+abhorrent and cowardly. These gallants say, "It is not enough that we
+can fight Germany to-day. We can fight her any day and every day. Let
+her come again and again and yet again. We will fight her one to three;
+and if she comes on ten to one, as she did at Mons, we will mill on the
+retreat, and drive her back again when we have worn her down to our
+weight. If her fleet will not come out to fight us because we have too
+many ships, we will send all the odds in our favour back to Portsmouth
+and fight ship to ship in the North Sea, and let the bravest and best
+win." That is how gallant fighters talk, and how Drake is popularly
+(though erroneously) supposed to have tackled the Armada.
+
+
+*The Ignoble Attitude of Cruel Panic.*
+
+But we are not all _preux chevaliers._ We have at the other extremity
+the people who are craving for loot and vengeance, who clamour for the
+humiliation and torture of the enemy, who rave against the village
+burnings and shootings by the Prussians in one column and exult in the
+same proceedings by the Russians in another, who demand that German
+prisoners of war shall be treated as criminals, who depict our Indian
+troops as savage cutthroats because they like to think of their enemies
+being mauled in the spirit of the Indian Mutiny, who shriek that the
+Kaiser must be sent to Devil's Island because St. Helena is too good for
+him, and who declare that Germany must be so maimed and trodden into the
+dust that she will not be able to raise her head again for a century.
+Let us call these people by their own favourite name, Huns, even at the
+risk of being unjust to the real Huns. And let us send as many of them
+to the trenches as we can possibly induce to go, in the hope that they
+may presently join the lists of the missing. Still, as they rather cling
+to our soil, they will have to be reckoned with when the settlement
+comes. But they will not count for much then. Most of them will be
+heartily ashamed of what they said in those first three or four weeks of
+blue funk (I am too timid myself not to make allowances for that most
+distressing and universal, but fortunately transient effect of war); and
+most of those who are not will be ashamed to bear malice publicly.
+
+
+*The Commercial Attitude.*
+
+Far more weighty in the matter will be the intermediate sections. First,
+our commercial main body, which thinks that chivalry is not business,
+and that rancour is childish, but cannot see why we should not make the
+Germans pay damages and supply us with some capital to set the City
+going again, forgetting that when France did that after 1871 for Berlin,
+Berlin was set going so effectually that it went headlong to a colossal
+financial smash, whilst the French peasant who had provided the capital
+from his old stocking throve soberly on the interest at the expense of
+less vital classes. Unfortunately Germany has set the example of this
+kind of looting. Prussian generals, like Napoleon's marshals, have
+always been shameless brigands, keeping up the seventeenth and
+eighteenth century tradition of making cities bribe them to refrain from
+sack and pillage and even billeting, and being quite incapable of the
+magnificence of the great Condé (or was it Turenne?), who refused a
+payment offered by a city on the ground that he had not intended to
+march through it. Blucher's fury when Wellington would not allow him to
+plunder Paris, and his exclamation when he saw London "What a city to
+loot!" is still regarded as fair soldiering; and the blackmail levied
+recently by the Prussian generals on the Belgian and French towns they
+have occupied must, I suppose, be let pass as ransom, not as ordinary
+criminal looting. But if the penalty of looting be thus spared, the
+Germans can hardly complain if they are themselves held to ransom when
+the fortunes of war go against them. Liège and Lille and Antwerp and the
+rest must be paid their money back with interest; and there will be a
+big builder's bill at Rheims. But we should ourselves refrain strictly
+from blackmail. We should sell neither our blood nor our mercy. If we
+sell either we are as much brigands as Blucher.
+
+
+*Vindictive Damages.*
+
+And we must not let ourselves be tempted to soil our hands under pretext
+of vindictive damages. The man who thinks that all the money in Germany
+could pay for the life of a single British drummer boy ought to be shot
+merely as an expression of the feeling that he is unfit to live. We
+stake our blood as the Germans stake theirs; and in that _ganz
+besonderes Saft_ alone should we [missing text]r accept payment. We had
+better **[missing text]y to the Kaiser at the end of the **[missing
+text] "Scoundrel: you can never replace **[missing text] Louvain
+library, nor the sculpture of Rheims; and it follows logically that you
+shall empty your pockets into ours." Much better say: "God forgive us
+all!" If we cannot rise to this, and must soil our hands with plunder,
+at least let us call it plunder, and not profane our language and our
+souls by giving it fine names.
+
+
+*Our Annihilationists.*
+
+Then we shall have the Militarists, who will want to have Germany "bled
+to the white," dismembered and maimed, so that she may never do it
+again. Well, that is quite simple, if you are Militarist enough to do
+it. Loading Germany with debt will not do it. Towing her fleet into
+Portsmouth or sinking it will not do it. Annexing provinces and colonies
+will not do it. The effective method is far shorter and more practical.
+What has made Germany formidable in this war? Obviously her
+overwhelmingly superior numbers. That was how she rushed us back almost
+to the gates of Paris. The organization, the readiness, the sixteen-inch
+howitzer helped; but it was the multitudinous _Kanonenfutter_ that
+nearly snowed us under. The British soldier at Cambrai and Le Cateau
+killed and killed until his rifle was too hot to hold and his hand was
+paralyzed with slayer's cramp; but still they came and came.
+
+
+*Why Not Kill the German Women?*
+
+Well, there is no obscurity about that problem. Those Germans who took
+but an instant to kill had taken the travail of a woman for
+three-quarters of a year to breed, and eighteen years to ripen for the
+slaughter. All we have to do is to kill, say, 75 per cent, of all the
+women in Germany under 60. Then we may leave Germany her fleet and her
+money, and say "Much good may they do you." Why not, if you are really
+going in to be what you, never having read "this Neech they talk of,"
+call a Nietzschean Superman? War is not an affair of sentiment. Some of
+our newspapers complain that the Germans kill the wounded and fire on
+field hospitals and Red Cross Ambulances. These same newspapers fill
+their columns with exultant accounts of how our wounded think nothing of
+modern bullet wounds and hope to be back at the front in a week, which I
+take to be the most direct incitement to the Germans to kill the wounded
+that could be devized. It is no use being virtuously indignant: "stone
+dead hath no fellow" is an English proverb, not a German one. Even the
+killing of prisoners is an Agincourt tradition. Now it is not more
+cowardly to kill a woman than to kill a wounded man. And there is only
+one reason why it is a greater crime to kill a woman than a man, and why
+women have to be spared and protected when men are exposed and
+sacrificed. That reason is that the destruction of the women is the
+destruction of the community. Men are comparatively of no account: kill
+90 per cent, of the German men, and the remaining 10 per cent. can
+repeople her. But kill the women, and _Delenda est Carthago_. Now this
+is exactly what our Militarists want to happen to Germany. Therefore the
+objection to killing women becomes in this case the reason for doing it.
+Why not? No reply is possible from the Militarist, disable-your-enemy
+point of view. If disablement is your will, there is your way, and the
+only effectual way. We really must not call the Kaiser and Von Bernhardi
+disciples of the mythical Neech when they have either overlooked or
+shrunk from such a glaring "biological necessity." A pair of puling
+pious sentimentalists if you like. But Supermen! Nonsense. O, my brother
+journalists, if you revile the Prussians, call them sheep led by snobs,
+call them beggars on horseback, call them sausage eaters, depict them in
+the good old English fashion in spectacles and comforter, seedy overcoat
+buttoned over paunchy figure, playing the contrabass tuba in a street
+band; but do not flatter them with the heroic title of Superman, and
+hold up as magnificent villainies worthy of Milton's Lucifer these
+common crimes of violence and raid and lust that any drunken blackguard
+can commit when the police are away, and that no mere multiplication can
+dignify. As to Nietzsche, with his Polish hatred of Prussia (who
+heartily reciprocated the sentiment), when did he ever tell the Germans
+to allow themselves to be driven like sheep to the slaughter in millions
+by mischievous dolts who, being for the most part incapable of reading
+ten sentences of a philosophic treatise without falling asleep, allow
+journalists as illiterate as themselves to persuade them that he got his
+great reputation by writing a cheap gospel for bullies? Strictly between
+ourselves, we also are an illiterate people; but we may at least hold
+our tongues about matters we don't understand, and not say in the face
+of Europe that the English believe that the composer of Parsifal was a
+Militarist Prussian (he was an exiled revolutionist); that Nietzsche was
+a diciple of Wagner (Nietzsche preferred the music of Bizet, a
+Frenchman); and that the Kaiser is a disciple of Nietzsche, who would
+have laughed his childish pietism to scorn.
+
+
+*The Simple Answer.*
+
+Nietzsche would certainly have agreed that we must kill the German women
+if we mean business when we talk of destroying Germany. But he would
+also have answered my Why not?, which is more than any consistent
+Militarist can. Indeed, it needs no philosopher to give the answer. The
+first ordinary anti-Militarist human person you meet will tell you that
+it would be too horrible; that life would be unbearable if people did
+such things. And he would be quite right; so please let us hear no more
+of kicking your enemy when he is down so that he may be unable to rise
+for a whole century. We may be unable to resist the temptation to loot
+Germany more or less if we conquer her. We are already actively engaged
+in piracy against her, stealing her ships and selling them in our prize
+courts, instead of honestly detaining them until the war is over and
+keeping a strict account of them. When gentlemen rise in the House of
+Commons and say that they owe Germans money and do not intend to pay it,
+one must face the fact that there will be a strong popular demand for
+plunder. War, after all, is simply a letting loose of organized murder,
+theft, and piracy on a foe; and I have no doubt the average Englishman
+will say to me what Falstaff said to Pistol concerning his share in the
+price of the stolen fan: "Reason, you rogue, reason: do you think I'll
+endanger my soul _gratis_?" To which I reply, "If you can't resist the
+booty, take it frankly, and know yourself for half patriot, half
+brigand; but don't talk nonsense about disablement. Cromwell tried it in
+Ireland. He had better have tried Home Rule. And what Cromwell could not
+do to Ireland we cannot do to Germany."
+
+
+*The Sensible People.*
+
+Finally we come to the only body of opinion in which there is any hope
+of civilization: the opinion of the people who are bent, not on
+gallantry nor revenge nor plunder nor pride nor panic nor glory nor any
+of the invidiousnesses of patriotism, but on the problem of how to so
+redraw the map of Europe and reform its political constitutions that
+this abominable crime and atrocious nuisance, a European war, shall not
+easily occur again. The map is very important; for the open sores which
+have at last suppurated and burst after having made the world uneasy for
+years, were produced by altering the colour of Alsace and Lorraine and
+of Bosnia and Herzegovina on the map. And the new map must be settled,
+not by conquest, but by consent of the people immediately concerned. One
+of the broken treaties of Europe which has been mentioned less
+frequently of late than the Belgian treaty is the treaty of Prague, by
+which a plebiscite was to have been taken on the subject of the
+nationality of Schleswig and Holstein. That plebiscite has never been
+taken. It may have to be taken, with other plebiscites, before this war
+is settled.
+
+
+*German Unity Inviolable.*
+
+But here let me warn those who are hoping for a disintegrated Germany
+like that which Thackeray ridiculed, that their hopes are vain. The
+southern Germans, the, friendliest, most easy-going people in the world
+(as far as I know the world) dislike the Prussians far more heartily
+than we do; but they know that they are respected and strong and big as
+part of United Germany, and that they were weak and despised and petty
+as separate kingdoms. Germany will hold together. No doubt the Germans
+may reasonably say to the Prussian drill sergeant and his master
+Hohenzollern, "A nice mess you have made of your job after all we have
+endured from you because we believed you could make us invincible. We
+thought that if you were hard masters you were at any rate good
+grenadiers; but here are these piffling little Belgians and these
+Russians who were beaten by the Japanese, and these English who made
+such a poor show against a handful of Boer farmers, fighting and
+organizing just as well as you. So, as the French and English are
+organized as a republic and an extremely limited monarchy, we will try
+how that sort of constitution will suit us." But they will not break up:
+on the contrary, they are much more likely to extend the German
+community by incorporating German Austria. And as this would raise the
+question whether Hohenzollern or Hapsburg should rule the roost, the
+simplest solution would be to get rid of them both, and take the sooner
+or later inevitable step into the democratic republican form of
+Government to which Europe is visibly tending, though "this king
+business," as my American correspondents call it, has certain
+conveniences when it is limited and combined with an aristocracy also
+limited by primogeniture and politically controlled by a commonalty into
+which all but the eldest brothers in the aristocratic families fall,
+thus making the German segregation of the _adel_ class impossible. Such
+a monarchy, especially when the monarch is a woman, as in Holland today,
+and in England under Victoria, is a fairly acceptable working substitute
+for a formal republic in old civilizations with inveterate monarchical
+traditions, absurd as it is in new and essentially democratic States. At
+any rate, it is conceivable that the western allies might demand the
+introduction of some such political constitution in Germany and Austria
+as a guarantee; for though the demand would not please Russia, some of
+Russia's demands will not please us; and there must be some give and
+take in the business.
+
+
+*Limits of Constitutional Interference.*
+
+Let us consider this possibility for a moment. First, it must be firmly
+postulated that civilized nations cannot have their political
+constitutions imposed on them from without if the object of the
+arrangement is peace and stability. If a victorious Germany were to
+attempt to impose the Prussian constitution on France and England, they
+would submit to it just as Ireland submitted to Dublin Castle, which, to
+say the least, would not be a millennial settlement. Profoundly as we
+are convinced that our Government of India is far better than any native
+Indian government could be (the assumption that "natives" could govern
+at all being made for the sake of argument with due reluctance), it is
+quite certain that until it becomes as voluntary as the parliamentary
+government of Australia, and has been modified accordingly, it will
+remain an artificial, precarious, and continually threatening political
+structure. Nevertheless, we need not go to the opposite extreme and
+conclude that a political constitution must fit a country so accurately
+that it must be home-made to measure. Europe has a stock of ready-made
+constitutions, both Monarchical and Republican, which will fit any
+western European nation comfortably enough. We are at present
+considerably bothered by the number of Germans who, though their own
+country and constitution is less than a day's journey away, settle here
+and marry Englishwomen without feeling that our constitution is
+unbearable. Englishmen are never tired of declaring that "they do things
+better abroad" (as a matter of fact they often do), and that the ways of
+Prussia are smarter than the ways of Paddington. It is therefore quite
+possible that a reach-me-down constitution proposed, not by the
+conquerors, but by an international congress with no interest to serve
+but the interests of peace, might prove acceptable enough to a nation
+thoroughly disgusted with its tyrants.
+
+
+*Physician: Heal Thyself.*
+
+Now a congress which undertook the Liberalization of Germany would
+certainly not stop there. If we invite a congress to press for a
+democratization of the German constitution, we must consent to the
+democratization of our own. If we send the Kaiser to St. Helena (or
+whatever the title of the Chiselhurst villa may be) we must send Sir
+Edward Grey there, too. For if on the morrow of the peace we may all
+begin to plot and plan one another's destruction over again in the
+secrecy of our Foreign Office, so that in spite of Parliament and free
+democratic institutions the Foreign Secretary may at any moment step
+down from the Foreign Office to the House of Commons and say, "I
+arranged yesterday with the ambassador from Cocagne that England is to
+join his country in fighting Brobdingnag; so vote me a couple of hundred
+millions, and off with you to the trenches," we shall be just where we
+were before as far as any likelihood of putting an end to war is
+concerned. The congress will certainly ask us to pledge ourselves that
+if we shake the mailed fist at all we shall shake it publicly, and that
+though we may keep our sword ready (let me interject in passing that
+disarmament is all nonsense: nobody is going to disarm after this
+experience) it shall be drawn by the representatives of the nation, and
+not by Junker diplomatists who despise and distrust the nation, and have
+planned war behind its back for years. Indeed they will probably demur
+to its being drawn even by the representative of the nation until the
+occasion has been submitted to the judgment of the representatives of
+the world, or such beginnings of a world representative body as may be
+possible. That is the true _Weltpolitik_.
+
+
+*The Hegemony of Peace.*
+
+For the main business of the settlement, if it is to have any serious
+business at all, must be the establishment of a Hegemony of Peace, as
+desired by all who are really capable of high civilization, and
+formulated by me in the daily Press in a vain attempt to avert this
+mischief whilst it was brewing. Nobody took the smallest public notice
+of me; so I made a lady in a play say "Not bloody likely," and instantly
+became famous beyond the Kaiser, beyond the Tsar, beyond Sir Edward
+Grey, beyond Shakespeare and Homer and President Wilson, the papers
+occupying themselves with me for a whole week just as they are now
+occupying themselves with the war, and one paper actually devoting a
+special edition to a single word in my play, which is more than it has
+done for the Treaty of London (1839). I concluded then that this was a
+country which really could not be taken seriously. But the habits of a
+lifetime are not so easily broken; and I am not afraid to produce
+another dead silence by renewing my good advice, as I can easily recover
+my popularity by putting still more shocking expressions into my next
+play, especially now that events have shewn that I was right on the
+point of foreign policy.
+
+
+*East Is East; and West Is West.*
+
+I repeat, then, that there should be a definite understanding that
+whatever may happen or not happen further east, England, France, and
+Germany solemnly pledge themselves to maintain the internal peace of the
+west of Europe, and renounce absolutely all alliances and engagements
+that bind them to join any Power outside the combination in military
+operations, whether offensive or defensive, against one inside it. We
+must get rid of the monstrous situation that produced the present war.
+France made an alliance with Russia as a defence against Germany.
+Germany made an alliance with Austria as a defence against Russia.
+England joined the Franco-Russian alliance as a defence against Germany
+and Austria. The result was that Germany became involved in a quarrel
+between Austria and Russia. Having no quarrel with France, and only a
+second-hand quarrel with Russia, she was, nevertheless, forced to attack
+France in order to disable her before she could strike Germany from
+behind when Germany was fighting France's ally, Russia. And this attack
+on France forced England to come to the rescue of England's ally,
+France. Not one of the three nations (as distinguished from their tiny
+Junker-Militarist cliques) wanted to fight; for England had nothing to
+gain and Germany had everything to lose, whilst France had given up hope
+of her Alsace-Lorraine _revanche_, and would certainly not have hazarded
+a war for it. Yet because Russia, who has a great deal to gain by
+victory and nothing except military prestige to lose by defeat, had a
+quarrel with Austria over Servia, she has been able to set all three
+western friends and neighbours shedding "rivers of blood" from one
+another's throats; an outrageous absurdity. Fifty years ago the notion
+of England helping Russia and Japan to destroy Germany would have seemed
+as suicidal as Canada helping the Apaches to destroy the United States
+of America; and though we now think much better of the Japanese (and
+also, by the way, of the Apaches), that does not make us any the more
+patient with the man who burns down his own street because he admires
+the domestic architecture of Yokohama, especially when the fire
+presently spreads to the cathedral of Rheims. It is bad enough that we
+should have betrayed oriental Persia to oriental Russia as we did (and
+get nothing for our pains but what we deserved); but when it comes to
+sacrificing occidental Germany to her as well, we are sharpening a knife
+for our own occidental throat. The Russian Government is the open enemy
+of every liberty we boast of. Charles I.'s unsuccessful attempt to
+arrest five members of the House of Commons for disagreeing with him is
+ancient history here: it occurred 272 years ago; but the Tsar's
+successful attempt to arrest thirty members of the Duma and to punish
+them as dangerous criminals is a fact of to-day. Under Russian
+government people whose worst crime is to find _The Daily News_ a
+congenial newspaper are hanged, flogged, or sent to Siberia as a matter
+of daily routine; so that before 1906 even the articles in _The Times_
+on such events as the assassinations of Bobrikoff and the Grand Duke
+were simply polite paraphrases of "Serve him right." It may be asked why
+our newspapers have since ceased to report examples of Russia's
+disregard of the political principles we are supposed to stand for. The
+answer is simple. It was in 1906 that we began to lend Russia money, and
+Russia began to advertise in _The Times_. Since then she has been
+welcome to flog and hang her H.G. Wellses and Lloyd Georges by the dozen
+without a word of remonstrance from our plutocratic Press, provided the
+interest is paid punctually. Russia has been embraced in the large
+charity of cosmopolitan capital, the only charity that does not begin at
+home.
+
+
+*The Russian Russians and Their Prussian Tsars.*
+
+And here I must save my face with my personal friends who are either
+Russians or discoverers of the soul of the Russian people. I hereby
+declare to Sasha Kropotkin and Cunninghame Graham that my heart is with
+their Russia, the Russia of Tolstoy and Turgenieff and Dostoieffsky, of
+Gorki and Tchekoff, of the Moscow Art Theatre and the Drury Lane Ballet,
+of Peter Kropotkin and all the great humanitarians, great artists, and
+charming people whom their very North German Tsars exile and imprison
+and flog and generally do what in them lies to suppress and abolish. For
+the sake of Russian Russia, I am prepared to strain every point in
+Prussian Russia's favour. I grant that the Nihilists, much as we loved
+them, were futile romantic people who could have done nothing if
+Alexander II. had abdicated and offered them the task of governing
+Russia instead of persecuting them and being finally blown to bits by
+them. I grant that the manners of the Fins to the Russians are described
+as insufferable both by the Swedes and the Russians, and that we never
+listened to the Russian side of that story. I am ready to grant Gilbert
+Murray's plea that the recent rate of democratic advance has been
+greater in Russia than anywhere else in Europe, though it does remind me
+a little of the bygone days when the Socialists, scoring 20 votes at one
+general election and forty at the next, were able to demonstrate that
+their gain of 100 per cent. was immensely in excess of the wretched two
+or three per cent. that was the best the Unionists or Liberals could
+shew. I am willing to forget how short a time it is since Sir Henry
+Campbell-Bannerman said: "The Duma is dead: long live the Duma!" and
+since we refused to allow the Tsar to land in England when his ship was
+within gangway's length of our shore, on which occasion I myself held up
+the Anglo-Russian agreement for the partition of Persia to the
+execration of a crowd in Trafalgar Square, whilst our Metropolitan
+Police snatched the _l'sarbeleidigend_ English newspapers from the
+sellers and tore them up precisely in the Cossack manner. I have an
+enormous relish for the art of Russia; I perceive a spirit in Russia
+which is the natural antidote to Potsdamnation; and I like most of the
+Russians I know quite unaffectedly. I could find it in my heart to
+reproach the Kaiser for making war on the Russia of these delightful
+people, just as I like to think that at this very moment good Germans
+may be asking him how he can bring himself to discharge shrapnel at the
+England of Bernard Shaw and Cunninghame Graham. History may not forgive
+him for it; but the practical point at the moment is that he does it,
+and no doubt attributes the perfidy of England to the popularity of our
+works. And as we have to take the Kaiser as we find him, and not as the
+Hohenzollern legend glorifies him, I have to take the Tsar as I find
+him. When we fight the Kaiser we are not fighting Bach and Wagner and
+Strauss, to whom we have just joyfully surrendered without a blow at the
+battle of Queen's Hall, but all the forces in Germany that made things
+hard for Wagner and Strauss. And when we fight for the Tsar we are not
+fighting for Tolstoy and Gorki, but for the forces that Tolstoy
+thundered against all his life and that would have destroyed him had he
+not been himself a highly connected Junker as well as a revolutionary
+Christian. And if I doubt whether the Tsar would feel comfortable as a
+member of a Democratic League of Peace, I am not doubting the good
+intent of Kropotkin: I am facing the record of Kropotkin's imperial
+jailer, and standing on the proud fact that England is the only country
+in Europe, not excepting even France, in which Kropotkin has been
+allowed to live a free man, and had his birthday celebrated by public
+meetings all over the country, and his articles welcomed by the leading
+review. In point of fact, it is largely on Kropotkin's account that I
+regard the Tsar as a gentleman of slightly different views to President
+Wilson, and hate the infamous tyranny of which he is the figurehead as I
+hate the devil. And I know that practically all our disinterested and
+thoughtful supporters of the war feel deeply uneasy about the Russian
+alliance. At all events, I should be trifling grossly with the facts of
+the situation if I pretended that the most absolute autocracy in Europe,
+commanding an inexhaustible army in an invincible country with a
+dominion stretching from the Baltic to the Pacific, may not, if it
+achieves a military success against the most dreaded military Power in
+Europe, be stirred to ambitions far more formidable to western liberty
+and human welfare than those of which Germany is now finding out the
+vanity after worrying herself and everyone else with them for forty
+years. When all is said that can be said for Russia, the fact remains
+that a forcibly Russianized German province would be just such another
+open sore in Europe as Alsace-Lorraine, Poland, Macedonia or Ireland. It
+is useless to dream of guarantees: if Russia undertook to govern
+democratically she would not be able to redeem her promise: she would do
+better with primitive Communism. Her city populations may be as capable
+of Democracy as our own (it is, alas! not saying much); but the
+overwhelming mass of peasants to whom the Tsar is a personal God will
+for a long time to come make his bureaucracy irresistible. As against
+Russian civilization German and Austrian civilization is our
+civilization: there is no getting over that. A constitutional kingship
+of Poland and a sort of Caliphate of the Slavs in remapped southeastern
+Europe, with that access to warm sea water which is Russia's common
+human right, valid against all Balances of Power and Keys to India and
+the like, must be her reward for her share in the war, even if we have
+to nationalize Constantinople to secure it to her. But it cannot be too
+frankly said at the outset that any attempt to settle Europe on the
+basis of the present hemming in of a consolidated Germany and German
+Austria by a hostile combination of Russia and the extreme states
+against it, would go to pieces by its own inherent absurdity, just as it
+has already exploded most destructively by its own instability. Until
+Russia becomes a federation of several separate democratic States, and
+the Tsar is either promoted to the honourable position of hereditary
+President or else totally abolished, the eastern boundary of the League
+of Peace must be the eastern boundary of Swedish, German, and Italian
+civilization; and Poland must stand between it and the quite different
+and for the moment unassimilable, civilization of Russia, whose
+friendship we could not really keep on any other terms, as a closer
+alliance would embarrass her as much as it would embarrass us.
+Meanwhile, we must trust to the march of Democracy to de-Russianize
+Berlin and de-Prussianize Petrograd, and to put the nagaikas of the
+Cossacks and the riding-whips with which Junker officers slash German
+privates, and the forty tolerated homosexual brothels of Berlin, and all
+the other psychopathic symptoms of overfeeding and inculcated insolence
+and sham virility in their proper place, which I take to be the dustbin.
+
+
+*Driving Capital Out of the Country*.
+
+But I must here warn everyone concerned that the most formidable
+opposition to the break-up of these unnatural alliances between east and
+west, between Democracy and Autocracy, between the twentieth century and
+the Dark Ages, will not come from the Balancers of Power. They are not
+really Balance of Power alliances: in fact, they are tending to an
+enormous overbalance of power in favor of the east as against the west
+and in favor of Militarist Autocracy as against Democracy. They are at
+root absolutely unpatriotic, even absolutely conscienceless products of
+commercial finance; and the Balance of Power theories are only the
+attempts of our diplomats to put a public spirited face on the
+operations of private cupidity. This is not the first time nor the
+second that I have had to urge that the greatest danger to us in the
+sphere of foreign politics is the tendency of capital to run away from
+civilization: the one running downhill to hell as naturally as the other
+struggles uphill to the Celestial City. The Englishman is allowed to
+produce the subsistence of himself and his family only on condition that
+he produces the subsistence of the capitalist and his retainers as well;
+and lo! he finds more and more that these retainers are not Englishmen,
+but Russians, South Americans, Kaffirs, Persians, or yellow or black
+barbarians armed for his destruction (not to mention Prussians and
+Austrians), and that the treaties made by our diplomatists have less and
+less to do with the security of the nation or the balance of power or
+any other public business, and more and more with capitalist
+opportunities of making big dividends out of slavish labour. For
+instance, the Anglo-Russian agreement is not a national treaty: it is
+the memorandum of a commercial agreement settling what parts of Persia
+are to be exploited by the Russian and English capitalists respectively;
+the capitalists, always against State interference for the benefit of
+the people, being very strongly in favor of it for coercing strikers at
+home and keeping foreign rivals off their grass abroad. And the absurd
+part of it is that when the State has thus arranged for our capitalists
+to exploit certain parts of Persia, and for their sakes to protect the
+parliamentary liberties of the part left to Russia, they discovered
+that, after all, the most profitable game was to lend Russia the money
+to exploit with, and to facilitate the operation by allowing her to
+destroy the Persian parliament in the face of our own exhortation to it
+to keep the flag flying, which we accordingly did without a blush. The
+French capitalists had dragged France into an alliance with Russia long
+before this; but the French Republic had the excuse of the German peril
+and the need for an anti-German ally. Her natural ally for that purpose
+was England; but as there was no market in England for her money, her
+plutocrats drove her into the alliance with Russia as well; and it is
+that alliance and not the alliance with England that has terrified
+Germany into flying at her throat and plunging Europe into a frightful
+war. The natural alliance with England twice averted war: in the
+Moroccan crises of Algeciras and Agadir, when Sir Edward Grey said
+boldly that we should defend France, and took the first steps towards a
+joint military and naval control of the French and English forces. Why
+he shrank from that firm position last July and thereby led Germany to
+count so fatally on our neutrality I do not pretend to know; it suffices
+for my argument that we were able to hold the balance between France and
+Germany, but failed to hold it between Germany and Russia, and that it
+was the placing of Russian loans in France and England that brought
+Russia into our western affairs. It would have paid us ten times over to
+have made Russia a present of all we and France have lent her
+(indemnifying, of course, the holders of the stock through an addition
+to the income tax) rather than pay the price of a European war. But what
+is the use of crying for spilt milk? I am merely explaining why, when
+French money went to Russia, the French papers discovered that the
+Russians were a most interesting people and their Government--properly
+understood--a surprisingly Liberal Government; and why, when English
+money went to Russia, the English press suddenly developed leanings
+towards the Greek Church, and deplored the unofficial execution of
+Stolypin as deeply as it had rejoiced in the like fate of Bobrikoff. The
+upshot of it all is that western civilization is at present busy
+committing suicide by machinery, and importing hordes of Asiatics and
+Africans to help in the throat cutting, not for the benefit of the silly
+capitalists, who are being ruined wholesale, but to break up the
+Austrian Empire for the benefit of Russia and the Slavs of eastern
+Europe, which may be a very desirable thing, but which could and should
+be done by the eastern Powers among themselves, without tearing Belgium
+and Germany and France and England to pieces in the process.
+
+
+*The Red Flag and the Black.*
+
+Will you now at last believe, O stupid British, German, and French
+patriots, what the Socialists have been telling you for so many years:
+that your Union Jacks and tricolours and Imperial Eagles ("where the
+carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered") are only toys to keep
+you amused, and that there are only two real flags in the world
+henceforth: the red flag of Democratic Socialism and the black flag of
+Capitalism, the flag of God and the flag of Mammon? What earthly or
+heavenly good is done when Tom Fool shoots Hans Narr? The plain fact is
+that if we leave our capital to be dealt with according to the
+selfishness of the private man he will send it where wages are low and
+workers enslaved and docile: that is, as many thousand miles as possible
+from the Trade Unions and Trade Union rates and parliamentary Labour
+Parties of civilization; and Germany, at his sordid behest, will plunge
+the world into war for the sake of disgracing herself with a few rubber
+plantations, poetically described by her orators and journalists as "a
+place in the sun." When you do what the Socialists tell you by keeping
+your capital jealously under national control and reserving your
+shrapnel for the wasters who not only shirk their share of the
+industrial service of their country, but intend that their children and
+children's children shall be idle wasters like themselves, you will find
+that not a farthing of our capital will go abroad as long as there is a
+British slum to be cleared and rebuilt, or a hungry, ragged, and
+ignorant British child to be fed, clothed, and educated.
+
+
+*A League of Peace*.
+
+But in the west I see no insuperable obstacle to a Treaty of Peace in
+the largest sense. This war has smoothed the way to it, if I may use the
+word smoothing to describe a process conduced with so little courtesy
+and so much shrapnel. Germany has now learned--and the lesson was
+apparently needed, obvious as it would have been to a sanely governed
+nation--that when it comes to shoving and shooting, Germany instantly
+loses all the advantages of her high civilization, because France and
+England, cultured or uncultured, can shove and shoot as well or beter
+than she, whilst as to slashing and stabbing, their half barbarous Turco
+and Ghoorka slaves can cut the Prussian Guard to bits, in spite of the
+unquestionable superiority of Wagner's music to theirs. Then take
+France. She does not dream that she could fight Germany and England
+single-handed. And England could not fight France and Germany without a
+sacrifice as ruinous as it would be senseless. We therefore have the
+necessary primary conditions for a League of Peace between the three
+countries; for if one of them break it, the other two can make her
+sorry, under which circumstances she will probably not break it. The
+present war, if it end in the reconquest of Alsace and Lorraine by the
+French, will make such a League much more stable; not that France can
+acquire by mere conquest any right to hold either province against its
+will (which could be ascertained by plebiscite), but because the honors
+of war as between France and Germany would then be easy, France having
+regained her laurels and taught Germany to respect her, without
+obliterating the record of Germany's triumph in 1870. And if the war
+should further result in the political reconstruction of the German
+Empire as a democratic Commonwealth, and the conquest by the English
+people of democratic control of English foreign policy, the combination
+would be immensely eased and strengthened, besides being brought into
+harmony with American public feeling, which is important to the security
+and prestige of the League.
+
+
+*The Case of the Smaller States.*
+
+Already the war has greatly added to the value of one of the factors
+upon which the League of Peace will depend. The smaller States: Holland,
+Belgium, Switzerland, and the Scandinavian Powers, would have joined it
+any time these 40 years, had it existed, for the sake of its protection,
+and thereby made the Protestant north of Mr. Houston Chamberlain's dream
+as much a reality as any such dream is ever likely to be. But after the
+fight put up by Belgium the other day, the small States will be able to
+come in with the certainty of being treated with considerable respect as
+military factors; for Belgium can now claim to have saved Europe
+single-handed. Germany has been very unpleasantly reminded of the fact
+that though a big man may be able to beat a little one, yet if the
+little one fights for all he is worth he may leave the victor very sorry
+he broke the peace. Even as between the big Powers, victory has not, as
+far as the fighting has yet gone, been always with the biggest
+battalions. With a couple of millions less men, the Kaiser might have
+taken more care of them and made a better job of it.
+
+At the same time I hold no brief for small States as such, and most
+vehemently deny that we are in any way bound to knight errantry on their
+behalf as against big ones. They are mostly either incorrigibly
+bellicose themselves, like Montenegro, or standing temptations to the
+big Powers, like Bosnia and Herzegovina. They multiply frontiers, which
+are nuisances, and languages, which have made confusion since the
+building of Babel. The striking contrast between the United States of
+North America and the disunited States of South America in this respect
+is, from the Pacifist point of view, very much in favor of the northern
+unity. The only objection to large political units is that they make
+extremely dangerous autocracies. But as groups of federated democracies
+they are the best neighbours in the world. A federal democratic Russia
+would be as safe a colleague as America: a federal democratic Germany
+would be as pleasant company as Switzerland. Let us, I beg, hear no more
+of little States as British Dulcineas.
+
+
+*The Claims of Belgium.*
+
+As to the special case of Belgium, its claims in the settlement are
+simple and indeed single. If we conclude a peace without clearing the
+Germans completely out of Belgium, we shall be either beaten or
+dishonoured. And such indemnity as a money payment can effect for
+Belgium is due not only by Germany, but by Britain, France, and Russia
+as well. Belgium has been crushed between the Alliance and the Entente:
+it was these two menaces to the peace of Europe that produced
+Armageddon; and as Belgium's heroic resistance served the Entente
+against the Alliance, the obligation to make good the remediable damage
+is even more binding on the Entente.
+
+But there is another and more pressing matter arising out of the
+conquest of Belgium.
+
+
+*The Belgian Refugees and the Problem of Unemployment.*
+
+As I write these lines the descent on our shores of an army of refugees
+from captured Antwerp and threatened Ostend has forced the President of
+the Local Government Board to make a desperate appeal to all and sundry
+to form representative committees to deal with the prevention and relief
+of distress: in other words to save the refugees from starving to death.
+Now the Board of Trade has already drawn attention to a memorandum of
+the Local Government Board as to the propriety of providing employment
+for refugees. And instantly and inevitably the condition had to be laid
+down that if the Committees find employment for anyone, they shall refer
+the case to the local Labour Exchange in order that "any steps taken to
+assist refugees to find employment shall not be such as to endanger the
+employment of British workpeople." In other words, the starving Belgians
+have fled from the Germans only to compete for crust with starving
+Englishmen. As long as there is an unemployed Englishman in the
+country--and there are a good many, especially in the cotton
+industry--how is it possible to give a job to a Belgian without
+depriving an Englishman of it? Why, instead of making impossible
+conditions, and helplessly asking private citizens to do something for
+pity's sake, will not the Government face the fact that the refugee
+question is simply an intensification of the normal unemployed question,
+the only difference being that we are accustomed to leave our own people
+to starve when they are common persons with whom the governing classes
+do not associate, whereas the Belgians have rendered us such a
+tremendous service in the war, and our statesmen have so loudly
+protested that the integrity of Belgium is dearer to England than her
+own heart's blood, that we cannot with any decency treat the destitute
+Belgians as if they were mere British riffraff. Yet when we attempt to
+provide for the Belgians by finding work for them the Board of Trade has
+to point out that by doing so we are taking the bread out of the mouths
+of our own people. Hence we arrive at the remarkable situation of
+starving Britons and Belgians looking hungrily through barbed wire
+fences at flourishing communities of jolly and well fed German prisoners
+of war (whose friendly hat wavings to me and my fellow passengers as I
+rush through Newbury Racecourse Station in the Great Western Express I
+hereby acknowledge publicly with all possible good feeling). I therefore
+for the present strongly recommend all Belgians who have made up their
+minds to flee to England, to pick up German uniforms on the battle
+fields and surrender to the British in the character of Uhlans. Their
+subsistence will then be secure until the war is over, as we dare not
+illtreat our prisoners lest the Germans should retaliate upon the
+British soldiers in their hands, even if we were all spiteful enough to
+desire to do it, as some of our baser sort have not been ashamed to
+propose.
+
+But the women and children, and the too young and the too old, cannot
+resort to this expedient. And though theoretically our own unemployed
+could be dressed in British uniforms and sent abroad with instructions
+to take refuge in neutral territory and be "interned" or to surrender to
+the first Uhlan patrol they met, yet it would be difficult to reduce
+this theory to practice, though the possibility is worth mentioning as a
+reduction to absurdity of the situation. As a matter of common sense "we
+should at once place all destitute Belgian refugees on the footing of
+prisoners of war, except that we need not post sentries to shoot them if
+they try to escape, nor surround them with barbed wire. Indeed these
+precautions are necessary in the case of the Germans rather to save
+their sense of honour whilst remaining here than to defeat any very
+strong longing on their part to return to the trenches.
+
+In a reasonable state of society there would be another difference. The
+Belgians would offer to work so as not to be a burden to us; whilst the
+German prisoner would say--as he actually does, by the way--"No: I am
+not here by my own will: if you open the door I shall go home and take
+myself off your hands; so I am in no way bound to work for you." As it
+is, our Trade Unions are up in arms at the slightest hint of either
+Belgian or German labour being employed when there is no shortage of
+English labour!"
+
+
+*The Minority Report*.
+
+All this exasperating anomaly and deadlock and breakdown would disappear
+if we had a proper system of provision for our own unemployed civilians
+(there are no unemployed soldiers: we do not discharge them between the
+battles). The Belgians would have found an organization of unemployment
+ready for them, and would have been provided for with our own
+unemployed, not as refugees, but simply as unemployed. How to do that
+need not be explained here. The problem was worked out by one of the
+hardest bits of thinking yet done in the Socialist movement, and set
+forth in the Minority Report of the Royal Commission on the Poor Laws
+and the Relief of Distress, 1909. Our helplessness in the present
+emergency shews how very unwise we were to shelve that report.
+Unluckily, what with the wounded vanity of the majority of the
+Commission, who had been played off the stage by Mrs. Sidney Webb; the
+folly of the younger journalists of the advanced guard, who had just
+then rediscovered Herbert Spencer's mare's nest of "the servile State,"
+and revolted with all the petulant anarchism of the literary profession
+against the ideal Interfering Female as typified in their heated
+imaginations by poor Mrs. Sidney Webb, who became the Aunt Sally of our
+young artists in stale anti-bureaucratic invective; and, above all, the
+mulishly silent refusal of our governing classes to see why the
+unemployed should not be simply left to starve, as they had always been
+(the Poor Law being worse than useless for so large a purpose), nothing
+was done; and there is consequently no machinery ready for dealing with
+the refugees. That is why we must treat them for the moment simply as
+unguarded prisoners of war.
+
+
+*The General Strike Against War.*
+
+But if the problem of unemployment among our own people becomes acute,
+we shall have to fall back on the Minority Report proposals or else run
+the risk of a revolt against the war. We have already counted on the
+chances of that revolt hampering Germany, just as Germany counted on the
+chances of its hampering Russia, The notion that the working classes can
+stop a war by a general international strike is never mentioned during
+the first rally to the national flag at the outbreak of a war; but it is
+there all the time, ready to break out again if the supplies of food and
+glory run short. Its gravity lies in its impracticability. If it were
+practicable, every sane man would advocate it. As it is, it might easily
+mean that British troops would be coercing British strikers at home when
+they should be fighting Potsdam abroad, thus producing a disastrous and
+detestable division of popular feeling in the face of the enemy.
+
+
+*The Disarmament Delusion.*
+
+Objections to the Western Pacifist settlement will come from several
+quarters, including the Pacifist quarters. Some of the best disposed
+parties will stumble over the old delusion of disarmament. They think it
+is the gun that matters. They are wrong: the gun matters very much when
+war breaks out; but what makes both war and the gun is the man behind
+them. And if that man really means the peace of the world to be kept, he
+will take care to have a gun to keep it with. The League of Peace must
+have a first-rate armament, or the League of War will very soon make
+mincemeat of it. The notion that the men of evil intent are to have all
+the weapons will not work. Theoretically, all our armaments should be
+pooled. But as we, the British Empire, will most certainly not pool our
+defenses with anyone, and as we have not the very smallest intention of
+disarming, and will go on building gun for gun and ship for ship in step
+with even our dearest friends if we see the least risk of our being left
+in a position of inferiority, we cannot with any countenance demand that
+other Powers shall do what we will not do ourselves. Our business is not
+to disable ourselves or anyone else, but to organize a balance of
+military power against war, whether made by ourselves or any other
+Power; and this can be done only by a combination of armed and fanatical
+Pacifists of all nations, not by a crowd of non-combatants wielding
+deprecations, remonstrances, and Christmas cards.
+
+
+*America's Example: War at a Year's Notice.*
+
+How far it will be possible to take these national armaments out of
+national control remains to be seen. Already America, who is as deeply
+demoralized by Capitalism as we are, though much less tainted with
+Militarism now that Colonel Roosevelt has lost his front seat, has
+pledged herself to several European States not to go to war with them
+until the matter under dispute has been in the hands of an international
+tribunal for a year. Now there is no military force on earth, nor likely
+to be, strong enough to prevent America from treating these agreements
+as Germany has just treated the 1839 Treaty guaranteeing the neutrality
+of Belgium. Therefore the Militarists declare that the agreements are
+not worth the scraps of paper they are written on. They always will
+footle in this way. They might as well say that because there are crimes
+which men can commit with legal impunity in spite of our haphazard
+criminal codes, men always do commit them. No doubt nations will do what
+it is to their interest to do. But because there is in every nation a
+set of noisy moral imbeciles who cannot see that nations have an
+overwhelming interest in creating and maintaining a tradition of
+international good faith, and honouring their promissory notes as
+scrupulously as the moral imbeciles pay their silly gambling debts and
+fight their foolish duels, we are not, I presume, going to discard every
+international guarantee except the howitzer. Why, the very Prussian
+Militarists themselves are reviling us for doing what their own
+Militarist preachers assumed as a matter of course that we should do:
+that is, attack Prussia without regard to the interests of European
+civilization when we caught her at a disadvantage between France and
+Russia. But we should have been ashamed to do that if she had not, by
+assuming that there was no such thing as shame (_alias_ conscience),
+terrified herself into attacking France and Belgium, when, of course, we
+were immediately ashamed not to defend them. This idiotic ignoring of
+the highest energies of the human soul, without the strenuous pressure
+of which the fabric of civilization--German civilization perhaps most of
+all--could not hold together for a single day, should really be treated
+in the asylums of Europe, not on battlefields.
+
+I conclude that we might all very well make a beginning by pledging
+ourselves as America has done to The Hague tribunal not to take up arms
+in any cause that has been less than a year under arbitration, and to
+treat any western Power refusing this pledge as an unpopular and
+suspicious member of the European club. To break such a pledge would be
+an act of brigandage; and the need for suppressing brigandage cannot be
+regarded as an open question.
+
+
+*The Security Will o' the Wisp.*
+
+It will be observed that I propose no guarantee of absolute security.
+Not being a sufferer from _delirium tremens_ I can live without it.
+Security is no doubt the Militarists' most seductive bait to catch the
+coward's vote. But their method makes security impossible, They
+undertook to secure the English in Egypt from an imaginary Islam rising
+by the Denshawai Horror, as a result of which nobody has ventured to
+suggest that we should trust the Egyptian army in this conflict, though
+India, having learnt from Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay Macdonald that
+there are really anti-Militarists in England who regard Indians as
+fellow creatures, is actually rallying to us against the Prussian
+Junkers, who are, in Indian eyes, indistinguishable from the
+Anglo-Indians who call Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay Macdonald
+traitors, and whose panicstricken denial of even a decent pretence of
+justice in the sedition trials is particularly unfortunate just now. We
+must always take risks; and we should never trade on the terror of
+death, nor forget that this wretchedest of all the trades is none the
+less craven because it can so easily be gilt with romance and heroism
+and solemn national duty and patriotism and the like by persons whose
+superficial literary and oratorical talent covers an abyss of
+Godforsaken folly.
+
+
+*The Only Real World Danger.*
+
+The one danger before us that nothing can avert but a general raising of
+human character through the deliberate cultivation and endowment of
+democratic virtue without consideration of property and class, is the
+danger created by inventing weapons capable of destroying civilization
+faster than we produce men who can be trusted to use them wisely. At
+present we are handling them like children. Now children are very
+pretty, very lovable, very affectionate creatures (sometimes); and a
+child can make nitroglycerine or chloride of nitrogen as well as a man
+if it is taught to do so. We have sense enough not to teach it; but we
+do teach the grown-up children. We actually accompany that dangerous
+technical training with solemn moral lessons in which the most
+destructive use of these forces at the command of kings and capitalists
+is inculcated as heroism, patriotism, glory and all the rest of it. It
+is all very well to fire cannons at the Kaiser for doing this; but we do
+it ourselves. It is therefore undeniably possible that a diabolical
+rhythm may be set up in which civilization will rise periodically to the
+point at which explosives powerful enough to destroy it are discovered,
+and will then be shattered and thrown back to a fresh start with a few
+starving and ruined survivors. H.G. Wells and Anatole France have
+pre-figured that result in fiction; and I cannot deny the strength of
+its probability; for if England and Germany can find no better way of
+celebrating their arrival at the highest point of civilization yet
+attained than setting out to blow one another to fragments with
+fulminates, it would seem that the peace of the neutral States is the
+result, not of their being more civilized, but less heavily armed. And
+when we see that the effect of the enterprise is not to redouble civil
+vigilance and stimulate the most alert and jealous political criticism,
+but on the contrary to produce an assumption that every constitutional
+safeguard must be suspended until the war is over, and that every silly
+tyrannical expedient such as censorship of the press, martial law, and
+the like, will begin to work good instead of evil the moment men take to
+murdering one another, it must be admitted that the prospect is not too
+hopeful. Our only consolation is that civilization has survived very
+destructive wars before, mostly because they have produced effects not
+only unintended but violently objected to by the people who made them.
+In 1870, for instance, Napoleon III. can hardly have intended his own
+overthrow and return to exile in England; nor did Bismarck aim at the
+restoration of French Republicanism and the formation of an
+Anglo-Franco-Russian alliance against Prussia. Several good things may
+come out of the present war if it leaves anybody alive to enjoy them.
+
+
+*The Church and the War.*
+
+And now, where in our society is the organ whose function it should be
+to keep us constantly in mind that, as Lassalle said, "the sword is
+never right," and to shudder with him at the fact that "the Lie is a
+European Power"? In no previous war have we struck that top note of keen
+irony, the closing of the Stock Exchange and not of the Church. The
+pagans were more logical: they closed the Temple of Peace when they drew
+the sword. We turn our Temples of Peace promptly into temples of war,
+and exhibit our parsons as the most pugnacious characters in the
+community. I venture to affirm that the sense of scandal given by this
+is far deeper and more general than the Church thinks, especially among
+the working classes, who are apt either to take religion seriously or
+else to repudiate it and criticize it closely. When a bishop at the
+first shot abandons the worship of Christ and rallies his flock around
+the altar of Mars, he may be acting patriotically, necessarily,
+manfully, rightly; but that does not justify him in pretending that
+there has been no change, and that Christ is, in effect, Mars. The
+straightforward course, and the one that would serve the Church best in
+the long run, would be to close our professedly Christian Churches the
+moment war is declared by us, and reopen them only on the signing of the
+treaty of peace. No doubt to many of us the privation thus imposed would
+be far worse than the privation of small change, of horses and motor
+cars, of express trains, and all the other prosaic inconveniences of
+war. But would it be worse than the privation of faith, and the horror
+of the soul, wrought by the spectacle of nations praying to their common
+Father to assist them in sabring and bayonetting and blowing one another
+to pieces with explosives that are also corrosives, and of the Church
+organizing this monstrous paradox instead of protesting against it?
+Would it make less atheists or more? Atheism is not a simple homogeneous
+phenomenon. There is the youthful atheism with which every able modern
+mind begins: an atheism that clears the soul of superstitions and
+terrors and servilities and base compliances and hypocrisies, and lets
+in the light of heaven. And there is the atheism of despair and
+pessimism: the sullen cry with which so many of us at this moment,
+looking on blinded deafened maimed wrecks that were once able-bodied
+admirable lovable men, and on priests blessing war, and newspapers and
+statesmen and exempt old men hounding young men on to it, are saying "I
+know now there is no God." What has the Church in its present attitude
+to set against this crushed acceptance of darkness except the quaint but
+awful fact that there are cruder people on whom horrifying calamities
+have just the opposite effect, because they seem the work of some power
+so overwhelming in its malignity that it must be worshipped because it
+is mighty? Let the Church beware how it plays to that gallery. If all
+the Churches of Europe closed their doors until the drums ceased rolling
+they would act as a most powerful reminder that though the glory of war
+is a famous and ancient glory, it is not the final glory of God.
+
+But as I know quite well that the Churches are not going to do anything
+of the kind, I must not close on a note which might to some readers
+imply that I hope, as some highly respected friends of mine do, to build
+a pacific civilization on the ruins of the vast ecclesiastical
+organizations which have never yet been able to utter the truth, because
+they have had to speak to the poor according to their ignorance and
+credulity, and to the rich according to their power. When I read that
+the icon of the Russian peasant is a religious force that will prevail
+over the materialism of Helmholtz and Haeckel, I have to contain myself
+as best I can in the face of an assumption by a modern educated European
+which implies that the Irish peasants who tied scraps of rag to the
+trees over their holy wells and paid for masses to shorten the stay of
+their dead relatives in purgatory, were more enlightened than their
+countryman Tyndall, the Lucretian materialist, and to ask whether the
+Russian peasant may not find his religious opinions somewhat neutralized
+by his alliance with the countries of Paul Bert and Combes, of Darwin
+and Almroth Wright. If we are to keep up any decent show of talking
+sense on this point we must begin by recognizing that the lines of
+battle in this war cut right across all the political and sectarian
+lines in Europe, except the line between our Socialist future and our
+Commercialist past. Materialist France, metaphysical Germany,
+muddle-headed English, Byzantine Russia may form what military
+combinations they please: the one thing they cannot form is a Crusade;
+and all attempts to represent this war as anything higher or more
+significant philosophically or politically or religiously for our
+Junkers and our Tommies than a quite simple primitive contest of the
+pugnacity that bullies and the pugnacity that will not be bullied are
+foredoomed to the derision of history. However far-reaching the
+consequences of the war may be, we in England are fighting to shew the
+Prussians that they shall not trample on us nor on our neighbors if we
+can help it, and that if they are fools enough to make their fighting
+efficiency the test of civilization, we can play that game as
+destructively as they. That is simple, and the truth, and by far the
+jolliest and most inspiring ground to recruit on. It stirs the blood and
+stiffens the back as effectively and quickly as hypocrisy and cant and
+humbug sour and trouble and discourage. But it will not carry us farther
+than the end of the fight. We cannot go on fighting forever, or even for
+very long, whatever Lord Kitchener may think; and win, lose, or tie, the
+parties, when the fight is over, must fall back on their civil wisdom
+and political foresight for a settlement of the terms on which we are to
+live happily together ever after. The practicable conditions of a stable
+comity of nations cannot be established by the bayonet, which settles
+nothing but the hash of those who rely on it. They are to found, as I
+have already explained, in the substitution for our present Militarist
+kingdoms of a system of democratic units delimited by community of
+language, religion, and habit; grouped in federations of united States
+when their extent makes them politically unwieldy; and held against war
+by the bond of international Socialism, the only ground upon which the
+identity of interest between all workers never becomes obscured.
+
+
+*The Death of Jaures.*
+
+By far the greatest calamity wrought by the war has been the death of
+Jaurès, who was worth more to France and to Europe than ten army corps
+and a hundred Archdukes. I once proposed a press law that might have
+saved him. It was that every article printed in a newspaper should bear
+not only the name and address of the writer, but the sum paid him for
+the contribution. If the wretched dupe who assassinated Jaurès had known
+that the trashy articles on the Three Years Law he had been reading were
+not the voice of France in peril, but the ignorant scribbling of some
+poor devil at his wits' end to earn three francs, he would hardly have
+thrown away his own life to take that of the greatest statesman his
+country has produced since Mirabeau. It is hardly too much to say that
+this ghastly murder and the appalling war that almost eclipsed its
+horror, is the revenge of the sweated journalist on a society so silly
+that though it will not allow a man to stuff its teeth without
+ascertained qualifications for the task, it allows anyone, no matter how
+poor, how ignorant, how untrained, how imbecile, to stuff its brains
+without even taking the trouble to ask his name. When we interfere with
+him and his sweaters at all, we interfere by way of appointing a
+censorship to prevent him from telling, not lies, however mischievous
+and dangerous to our own people abroad, but the truth. To be a liar and
+a brewer of bad blood is to be a privileged person under our censorship,
+which, so far, has proceeded by no discoverable rule except that of
+concealing from us everything that the Germans must know lest the
+Germans should find it out.
+
+
+*Socialism Alone Keeps Its Head.*
+
+Socialism has lost its leader on the Continent; but it is solid and
+representative on the main point; it loathes war; and it sees clearly
+that war is always waged by working men who have no quarrel, but on the
+contrary a supreme common interest. It steadily resists the dangerous
+export of capital by pressing the need for uncommercial employment of
+capital at home: the only practicable alternative. It knows that war, on
+its romantic side, is "the sport of kings": and it concludes that we had
+better get rid of kings unless they can kill their tedium with more
+democratic amusements. It notes the fact that though the newspapers
+shout at us that these battles on fronts a hundred miles long, where the
+slain outnumber the total forces engaged in older campaigns, are the
+greatest battles known to history, such machine-carnages bore us so
+horribly that we are ashamed of our ingratitude to our soldiers in not
+being able to feel about them as about comparatively trumpery scraps
+like Waterloo or even Inkerman and Balaclava. It never forgets that as
+long as higher education, culture, foreign travel, knowledge of the
+world: in short, the qualification for comprehension of foreign affairs
+and intelligent voting, is confined to one small class, leaving the
+masses in poverty, narrowness, and ignorance, and being itself
+artificially cut off at their expense from the salutary pressure of the
+common burden which alone keeps men unspoilt and sane, so long will that
+small class be forced to obtain the support of the masses for its wars
+by flattering proclamations of the national virtues and indignant
+denunciations of the villanies of the enemy, with, if necessary, a
+stiffening of deliberate falsehood and a strenuous persecution of any
+attempt at inconvenient truthtelling. Here there is no question of the
+Junker being a monster. You must rule ignoramuses according to their
+ignorance. The priest must work bogus miracles for them; the man of
+science must offer them magical cures and prophylactics; the barrister
+must win their verdict by sophistries, false pathos, and appeals to
+their prejudices; the army and navy must dazzle them with pageants and
+bands and thundering salvos and romantic tales; the king must cut
+himself off from humanity and become an idol. There is no escape whilst
+such classes exist. Mahomet, the boldest prophet that ever threw down
+the gage of the singleness and supremacy of God to a fierce tribe of
+warriors who worshipped stones as devotedly as we worship dukes and
+millionaires, could not govern them by religious truth, and was forced
+to fall back on revolting descriptions of hell and the day of judgment,
+invented by him for the purpose. What else could he do if his people
+were not to be abandoned to their own destruction? If it is an axiom of
+diplomacy that the people must not be told the truth, that is not in the
+least because, for example, Sir Edward Grey has a personal taste for
+mendacity; it is a necessity imposed by the fact that the people are
+incapable of the truth. In the end, lying becomes a reflex action with
+diplomatists; and we cannot even issue a penny bluebook without
+beginning it with the quite unprovoked statement that "no crime has ever
+aroused deeper or more general horror throughout Europe" than the
+assassination of the Archduke. The real tragedy was that the violent
+death of a fellow creature should have aroused so little.
+
+
+*Divided Against Ourselves*.
+
+This state of things would be bad enough if the governing classes really
+sought the welfare of the governed, and were deceiving them for their
+own good. But they are doing nothing of the sort. They are using their
+power secondarily, no doubt, to uphold the country in which they have so
+powerful and comfortable a position; but primarily their object is to
+maintain that position by the organized legal robbery of the poor; and
+to that end they would join hands with the German Junkers as against the
+working class in Germany and England as readily as Bismarck joined hands
+with Thiers to suppress the Commune of Paris. And even if this were not
+so, nothing would persuade the working classes that those who sweat them
+ruthlessly in commercial enterprise are any more considerate in public
+affairs, especially when there is any question of war, by which much
+money can be made for rich people who deal in the things most wanted and
+most highly paid for in war time: to wit, armaments and money. The
+direct interest of our military caste in war accounts for a good deal;
+but at least it involves personal risk and hardship and bereavement to
+the members of that caste. But the capitalist who has shares in
+explosives and cannons and soldiers' boots runs no risk and suffers no
+hardship; whilst as to the investor pure and simple, all that happens to
+him is that he finds the unearned income obtainable on Government
+security larger than ever. Victory to the capitalists of Europe means
+that they can not only impose on the enemy a huge indemnity, but lend
+him the money to pay it with whilst the working classes produce and pay
+both principal and interest.
+
+As long as we have that state of things, we shall have wars and secret
+and mendacious diplomacy. And this is one of many overwhelming reasons
+for building the State on equality of income, because without it
+equality of status and general culture is impossible. Democracy without
+equality is a delusion more dangerous than frank oligarchy and
+autocracy. And without Democracy there is no hope of peace, no chance of
+persuading ourselves that the sacredness of civilization will protect it
+any more than the sacredness of the cathedral of Rheims has protected
+it, not against Huns and Vandals, but against educated German gentlemen.
+
+
+*Rheims.*
+
+Commercial wage-slaves can never reproduce that wonderful company of
+sculptured figures that made Rheims unlike any other place in the world;
+and if they are now destroyed, or shortly about to be, it does not
+console me that we still have--perhaps for a few days longer only--the
+magical stained glass of Chartres and the choir of Beauvais. We tell
+ourselves that the poor French people must feel as we should feel if we
+had lost Westminster Abbey. Rheims was worth ten Westminster Abbeys; and
+where it has gone the others may just as easily go too. Let us not sneer
+at the German pretension to culture: let us face the fact that the
+Germans are just as cultured as we are (to say the least) and that war
+has nevertheless driven them to do these things as irresistibly as it
+will drive us to do similar things tomorrow if we find ourselves
+attacking a town in which the highest point from which our positions can
+be spotted by an observer with a field glass in one hand and a telephone
+in the other is the towering roof of the cathedral. Also let us be
+careful how we boast of our love of medieval art to people who well
+know, from the protests of Ruskin and Morris, that in times of peace we
+have done things no less mischievous and irreparable for no better
+reason than that the Mayor's brother or the Dean's uncle-in-law was a
+builder in search of a "restoration" job. If Rheims cathedral were taken
+from the Church to-morrow and given to an English or French joint stock
+company, everything transportable in it would presently be sold to
+American collectors, and the site cleared and let out in building sites.
+That is the way to make it "pay" commercially.
+
+
+*The Fate of The Glory Drunkard.*
+
+But our problem is how to make Commercialism itself bankrupt. We must
+beat Germany, not because the Militarist hallucination and our
+irresolution forced Germany to make this war, so desperate for her, at a
+moment so unfavourable to herself, but because she has made herself the
+exponent and champion in the modern world of the doctrine that military
+force is the basis and foundation of national greatness, and military
+conquest the method by which the nation of the highest culture can
+impose that culture on its neighbors. Now the reason I have permitted
+myself to call General Von Bernhardi a madman is that he lays down quite
+accurately the conditions of this military supremacy without perceiving
+that what he is achieving is a _reductio ad absurdum_. For he declares
+as a theorist what Napoleon found in practice, that you can maintain the
+Militarist hold over the imaginations of the people only by feeding them
+with continual glory. You must go from success to success; the moment
+you fail you are lost; for you have staked everything on your power to
+conquer, for the sake of which the people have submitted to your tyranny
+and endured the sufferings and paid the cost your military operations
+entailed. Napoleon conquered and conquered and conquered; and yet, when
+he had won more battles than the maddest Prussian can ever hope for, he
+had to go on fighting just as if he had never won anything at all. After
+exhausting the possible he had to attempt the impossible and go to
+Moscow. He failed; and from that moment he had better have been a
+Philadelphia Quaker than a victor of Marengo, Austerlitz, Jena and
+Wagrarn. Within a short breathing time after that morning when he stood
+outside Leipsic, whistling _Malbrook s'en va-t-en guerre_ whilst his
+flying army gasped its last in the river or fled under a hail of bullets
+from enemies commanded by generals without a tenth of his ability or
+prestige, we find him disguised as a postillion, cowering abjectly
+behind the door of a carriage whilst the French people whom he had
+crammed with glory for a quarter of a century were seeking to tear him
+limb from limb. His success had made him the enemy of every country
+except France: his failure made him the enemy of the human race. And
+that was why Europe rose up finally and smashed him, although the
+English Government which profited by that operation oppressed the
+English people for thirty years afterwards more sordidly than Napoleon
+would have oppressed them, and its Allies replaced him on the throne of
+France by an effete tyrant not worthy to unlace his shoe latchet.
+Nothing can finally redeem Militarism. When even genius itself takes
+that path its end is still destruction. When mere uppishness takes it
+the end is not changed, though it may be reached more precipitately and
+disastrously.
+
+
+*The Kaiser.*
+
+Prussia has talked of that path for many years as the one down which its
+destiny leads it. Its ruler, with the kid gloves he called mailed fists
+and the high class tailoring he called shining armour, did much of the
+talking, though he is in practice a most peaceful teetotaller, as many
+men with their imaginations full of the romance of war are. He had a
+hereditary craze for playing at soldiers; and he was and is a naïve
+suburban snob, as the son of The Englishwoman would naturally be,
+talking about "the Hohenzollerns" exactly as my father's people in
+Dublin used to talk about "the Shaws." His stage walk, familiar through
+the cinematograph, is the delight of romantic boys, and betrays his own
+boyish love of the _Paradeschritt_. It is frightful to think of the
+powers which Europe, in its own snobbery, left in the hands of this
+Peter Pan; and appalling as the results of that criminal levity have
+been, yet, being by no means free from his romantic follies myself, I do
+not feel harshly toward Peter, who, after all, kept the peace for over
+twenty-six years. In the end his talk and his games of soldiers in
+preparation for a toy conquest of the world frightened his neighbours
+into a league against him; and that league has now caught him in just
+such a trap as his strategists were laying for his neighbours. We please
+ourselves by pretending that he did not try to extricate himself, and
+forced the war on us; but that is not true. When he realized his peril
+he tried hard enough; but when he saw that it was no use he accepted the
+situation and dashed at his enemies with an infatuate courage not
+unworthy of the Hohenzollern tradition. Blinded as he was by the false
+ideals of his class, it was the best he could do; for there is always a
+chance for a brave and resolute warrior, even when his back is not to
+the wall but to the Russians.
+
+That means that we have to conquer him and not to revile him and strike
+moral attitudes. His victory over British and French Democracy would be
+a victory of Militarism over civilization; it would literally shut the
+gates of mercy on mankind. Leave it to our official fools and
+governesses to lecture the Kaiser, and to let loose Turcos and Ghoorkas
+on him: a dangerous precedent. Let Thomas Atkins, Patrick Murphy, Sandy
+McAlister, and Pitou Dupont fight him under what leadership they can
+get, until honour is satisfied, simply because if St. George does not
+slay the dragon the world will be, as a friend of mine said of Europe
+the other day, "no place for a gentleman."
+
+
+*Recapitulation.*
+
+1. The war should be pushed vigorously, not with a view to a final
+crushing of the German army between the Anglo-French combination and the
+Russian millions, but to the establishment of a decisive military
+superiority by the Anglo-French combination alone. A victory
+unattainable without Russian aid would be a defeat for Western European
+Liberalism; Germany would be beaten not by us, but by a Militarist
+autocracy worse than her own. By sacrificing Prussian Poland and the
+Slav portions of the Austrian Empire Germany and Austria could satisfy
+Russia, and merge Austria and Germany into a single German State, which
+would then dominate France and England, having ascertained that they
+could not conquer her without Russia's aid. We may fairly allow Russia
+to conquer Austria if she can; that is her natural part of the job. But
+if we two cannot without Russian help beat Potsdam, or at least hold her
+up in such a stalemate as will make it clear that it is impossible for
+her to subjugate us, then we shall simply have to "give Germany best"
+and depend on an alliance with America for our place in the sun.
+
+2. We cannot smash or disable Germany, however completely we may defeat
+her, because we can do that only by killing her women; and it is
+trifling to pretend that we are capable of any such villainy. Even to
+embarrass her financially by looting her would recoil on ourselves, as
+she is one of our commercial customers and one of our most frequently
+visited neighbors. We must, if we can, drive her from Belgium without
+compromise. France may drive her from Alsace and Lorraine. Russia may
+drive her from Poland. She knew when she opened fire that these were the
+stakes in the game; and we are bound to support France and Russia until
+they are won or lost, unless a stalemate reduces the whole method of
+warfare to absurdity. Austria, too, knew that the Slav part of her
+empire was at stake. By winning these stakes the Allies will wake the
+Kaiser from his dream of a Holy Teuton Empire with Prussia as the Head
+of its Church, and teach him to respect us; but that once done, we must
+not allow our camp followers to undo it all again by spiteful
+humiliations and exactions which could not seriously cripple Germany,
+and would make bad blood between us for a whole generation, to our own
+great inconvenience, unhappiness, disgrace, and loss. We and France have
+to live with Germany after the war; and the sooner we make up our mind
+to do it generously, the better. The word after the fight must be _sans
+rancune_; for without peace between France, Germany, and England, there
+can be no peace in the world.
+
+3. War, as a school of character and a nurse of virtue, must be formally
+shut up and discharged by all the belligerents when this war is over. It
+is quite true that ill-bred and swinish nations can be roused to a
+serious consideration of their position and their destiny only by
+earthquakes, pestilences, famines, comets' tails, Titanic shipwrecks,
+and devastating wars, just as it is true that African chiefs cannot make
+themselves respected unless they bury virgins alive beneath the
+doorposts of their hut-palaces, and Tartar Khans find that the
+exhibition of a pyramid of chopped-off heads is a short way to impress
+their subjects with a convenient conception of their divine right to
+rule. Ivan the Terrible did undoubtedly make his subjects feel very
+serious indeed; and stupid people are apt to believe that this sort of
+terror-stiffened seriousness is virtue. It is not. Any person who should
+set-to deliberately to contrive artificial earthquakes, scuttle liners,
+and start epidemics with a view to the moral elevation of his
+countrymen, would very soon find himself in the dock. Those who plan
+wars with the same object should be removed with equal firmness to
+Hanwell or Bethlehem Hospital. A nation so degraded as to be capable of
+responding to no higher stimulus than that of horror had better be
+exterminated, by Prussian war lords or anyone else foolish enough to
+waste powder on them instead of leaving them to perish of their own
+worthlessness.
+
+4. Neither England nor Germany must claim any moral superiority in the
+negotiations. Both were engaged for years in a race for armaments. Both
+indulged and still indulge in literary and oratorical provocation. Both
+claimed to be "an Imperial race" ruling other races by divine right.
+Both shewed high social and political consideration to parties and
+individuals who openly said that the war had to come. Both formed
+alliances to reinforce them for that war. The case against Germany for
+violating the neutrality of Belgium is of no moral value to England
+because (_a_) England has allowed the violation of the Treaty of Paris
+by Russia (violation of the neutrality of the Black Sea and closing of
+the free port of Batoum), and the high-handed and scandalous violation
+of the Treaty of Berlin by Austria (seizure of Bosnia and Herzegovina),
+without resorting to arms or remedying the aggression in any other way;
+(_b_) because we have fully admitted that we should have gone to war in
+defence of France in any case, whether the Germans came through Belgium
+or not, and refused to give the German Ambassador any assurance that we
+should remain neutral if the Germans sacrificed the military advantage
+of attacking through Belgium for the sake of avoiding a war with us;
+(_c_) that the apparent moral superiority of the pledge given by France
+and England to respect Belgian neutrality is illusory in face of the
+facts that France and England stood to gain enormously, and the Germans
+to lose correspondingly, by confining the attack on France to the
+heavily fortified Franco-German frontier, and that as France and England
+knew they would be invited by the Belgians to enter Belgium if the
+Germans invaded it, the neutrality of Belgium had, as far as they were
+concerned, no real existence; (_d_) that as all treaties are valid only
+_rebus sic stantibus_, and the state of things which existed at the date
+of the Treaty of London (1839) had changed so much since then (Belgium
+is no longer menaced by France, at whom the treaty was aimed, and has
+acquired important colonies, for instance) that in 1870 Gladstone could
+not depend on it, and resorted to a special temporary treaty not now in
+force, the technical validity of the 1839 treaty is extremely doubtful;
+(_e_) that even if it be valid its breach is not a _casus belli_ unless
+the parties for reasons of their own choose to make it so; and (_f_)
+that the German national peril pleaded by the Imperial Chancellor in his
+Peer Gynt speech (the _durchhauen_ one), when he rashly but frankly
+threw away the strong technical case just stated and admitted a breach
+of international law, was so great according to received Militarist
+ideas in view of the Russian mobilization, that it is impossible for us
+or any other Militarist-ridden Power to feel sure ourselves, much less
+to convince others, that we should have been any more scrupulous in the
+like extremity. It must be added that nothing can extenuate the enormity
+of the broad fact that an innocent country has been horribly devastated
+because her guilty neighbors formed two huge explosive combinations
+against one another instead of establishing the peace of Europe, but
+that is an offence against a higher law than any recorded on diplomatic
+scraps of paper, and when it comes to judgment the outraged conscience
+of humanity will not have much patience with the naughty child's plea of
+"he began it."
+
+5. Militarism must not be treated as a disease peculiar to Prussia. It
+is rampant in England; and in France it has led to the assassination of
+her greatest statesman. If the upshot of the war is to be regarded and
+acted upon simply as a defeat of German Militarism by Anglo-French
+Militarism, then the war will not only have wrought its own immediate
+evils of destruction and demoralization, but will extinguish the last
+hope that we have risen above the "dragons of the prime that tare each
+other in their slime." We have all been equally guilty in the past. It
+has been steadily assumed for years that the Militarist party is the
+gentlemanly party. Its opponents have been ridiculed and prosecuted in
+England; hanged, flogged or exiled in Russia; and imprisoned in France:
+they have been called traitors, cads, cranks, and so forth: they have
+been imprisoned for "bad taste" and for sedition whilst the most
+virulent sedition against Democracy and the most mutinous military
+escapades in the commissioned ranks have been tolerated obsequiously,
+until finally the practical shelving of Liberal Constitutionalism has
+provoked both in France and England a popular agitation of serious
+volume for the supersession of parliament by some sort of direct action
+by the people, called Syndicalism. In short Militarism, which is nothing
+but State Anarchism, has been carried to such a pitch that it has been
+imitated and countered by a movement of popular Anarchism, and has
+exploded in a European war because the Commercialist Governments of
+Europe had no faith in the effective guidance of any modern State by
+higher considerations than Lord Roberts's "will to conquer," the weight
+of the Kaiser's mailed fist, and the interest of the Bourses and Stock
+Exchanges. Unless we are all prepared to fight Militarism at home as
+well as abroad, the cessation of hostilities will last only until the
+belligerents have recovered from their exhaustion.
+
+6. It had better be admitted on our side that as to the conduct of the
+war there is no trustworthy evidence that the Germans have committed any
+worse or other atrocities than those which are admitted to be inevitable
+in war or accepted as part of military usage by the Allies. By "making
+examples" of towns, and seizing irresponsible citizens as hostages and
+shooting them for the acts of armed civilians over whom they could exert
+no possible control, the Germans have certainly pushed these usages to a
+point of Terrorism which is hardly distinguishable from the deliberate
+murder of non-combatants; but as the Allies have not renounced such
+usages, nor ceased to employ them ruthlessly in their dealings with the
+hill tribes and fellaheen and Arabs with whom they themselves have to
+deal (to say nothing of the notorious domestic Terrorism of the Russian
+Government), they cannot claim superior humanity. It is therefore waste
+of time for the pot to call the kettle black. Our outcry against the
+Germans for sowing the North Sea with mines was followed too closely by
+the laying of a mine field there by ourselves to be revived without
+flagrant Pharisaism. The case of Rheims cathedral also fell to the
+ground as completely as a good deal of the building itself when it was
+stated that the French had placed a post of observation on the roof.
+Whether they did or not, all military experts were aware that an officer
+neglecting to avail himself of the cathedral roof in this way, or an
+opposing officer hestitating to fire on the cathedral so used, would
+have been court-martialed in any of the armies engaged. The injury to
+the cathedral must therefore be suffered as a strong hint from
+Providence that though we can have glorious wars or glorious cathedrals
+we cannot have both.
+
+7. To sum up, we must remember that if this war does not make an end of
+war in the west, our allies of to-day may be our enemies of to-morrow,
+as they are of yesterday, and our enemies of to-day our allies of
+to-morrow as they are of yesterday; so that if we aim merely at a fresh
+balance of military power, we are as likely as not to negotiate our own
+destruction. We must use the war to give the _coup de grace_ to medieval
+diplomacy, medieval autocracy, and anarchic export of capital, and make
+its conclusion convince the world that Democracy is invincible, and
+Militarism a rusty sword that breaks in the hand. We must free our
+soldiers, and give them homes worth fighting for. And we must, as the
+old phrase goes, discard the filthy rags of our righteousness, and fight
+like men with everything, even a good name, to win, inspiring and
+encouraging ourselves with definite noble purposes (abstract nobility
+butters no parsnips) to face whatever may be the price of proving that
+war cannot conquer us, and that he who dares not appeal to our
+conscience has nothing to hope from our terrors.
+
+
+
+
+*"Shaw's Nonsense About Belgium"*
+
+By Arnold Bennett.
+
+Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.
+
+
+Mr. Bernard Shaw's "Common Sense About the War" is the talk of the town,
+and it deserves to be. One of its greatest values is its courage, for in
+it Shaw says many things no one else would have dared to say. It
+therefore, by breaking the unearthly silence on certain aspects of the
+situation, perhaps inaugurates a new and healthier period of discussion
+and criticism on such subjects as recruiting, treatment of soldiers and
+sailors' dependents, secret diplomacy, militarism, Junkerism, churches,
+Russia, peace terms, and disarmament. It contains the most magnificent,
+brilliant, and convincing common sense that could possibly be uttered.
+No citizen, I think, could rise from the perusal of this tract with a
+mind unilluminated or opinions unmodified. Hence everybody ought to read
+it, though everybody will not be capable of appreciating the profoundest
+parts of it.
+
+Mixed up with the tremendous common sense, however, is a considerable
+and unusual percentage of that perverseness, waywardness, and
+arlequinading which are apparently an essential element of Mr. Shaw's
+best work. This is a disastrous pity, having regard to the immense
+influence and vogue of Shaw, not only in Germany, but in America, and
+the pity is more tragic as Shaw has been most absurd about the very
+matter which most Englishmen regard as most important, namely, Great
+Britain's actual justification for going to war.
+
+
+*Shaw's Admitted Prejudice.*
+
+Mr. Shaw begins by conceiving the possibility of his being blinded by
+prejudice or perversity, and admits his capacity for criticising England
+with a certain slight malicious taste for taking the conceit out of her.
+Seemingly he belongs to that numerous class who think that to admit a
+fault is to excuse it. As a highwayman might say before taking your
+purse, "Now, I admit, I have a certain slight taste for thieving," and
+expect you to smile forgiveness of his depredation, Shaw's bias is
+evident wherever he discusses the action and qualities of Great Britain.
+Thus he contrasts Bernhardi's brilliant with our own very dull
+militarists' facts, the result being that the intense mediocrity of
+Bernhardi leaps to the eye on every page, and that events have
+thoroughly discredited all his political and many of his military ideas,
+whereas we possess militarists of first-class quality.
+
+Naturally, Shaw calls England muddle-headed. Yet of late nothing has
+been less apparent than muddle-headednes. Of British policy, Shaw says
+that since the Continent generally regards us as hypocritical, we must
+be hypocritical. He omits to say that the Continent generally, and
+Germany in particular, regards our policy and our diplomacy as extremely
+able and clear-sighted. The unscrupulous cleverness of Britain is one of
+Germany's main themes.
+
+These are minor samples of Mr. Shaw's caprices. In discussing the origin
+of the war Mr. Shaw's aim is to prove that all the great powers are
+equally to blame. He goes far back and accuses Great Britain of
+producing the first page of Bernhardian literature in the anonymous
+pamphlet "The Battle of Dorking." He admits in another passage that the
+note of this pamphlet was mainly defensive. He is constantly thus making
+intrenchments for himself in case of forced retirement, and there is in
+his article almost nothing unjust against Great Britain that is not
+ingeniously contradicted or mitigated elsewhere.
+
+
+*Great Britain's War Literature.*
+
+Beginning with "The Battle of Dorking" and ending with H.G. Well's "War
+in the Air," one of the most disturbing and effective warnings against
+militarism ever written, he sees simply that Great Britain has produced
+threatening and provocative militarist literature comparable to
+Germany's. No grounds exist for such a contention. There are militarists
+in all countries, but there are infinitely more in Germany than in any
+other country. The fact is notorious. The fact is also notorious that
+the most powerful, not the most numerous, party in Germany wanted the
+war. It would be as futile to try to prove that Ireland did not want
+home rule as that Germany did not want war. As for a war literature,
+bibliographical statistics show, I believe, that in the last ten years
+Germany has published seven thousand books or pamphlets about war. No
+one but a German or a Shaw, in a particularly mischievous mood, would
+seek to show that Great Britain is responsible for the war fever. It
+simply is not so.
+
+Mr. Shaw urges that we all armed together. Of course we did. When one
+nation publicly turns bellicose the rest must copy her preparations. If
+Great Britain could live this century over again she would do over again
+what she actually did, because common sense would not permit her to do
+otherwise. The admitted fact that some Britons are militarists does not
+in the slightest degree impair the rightness or sagacity of our policy.
+If one member of a family happens to go to the bad and turn burglar,
+therein is no reason why the family mansion should not be insured
+against burglary.
+
+Mr. Shaw proceeds to what he calls the diplomatic history of the war.
+His notion of historical veracity may be judged from his description of
+the Austrian ultimatum to Servia as an escapade of a dotard. He puts the
+whole blame of it on Franz Josef, and yet he must know quite well that
+Germany has admitted even to her own subjects that Austria asked
+Germany's opinion about her policy and obtained Germany's approval
+before delivering the ultimatum. [Official German pamphlet "Reasons for
+the War with Russia," August, 1914.] There is no word in Mr. Shaw's
+diplomatic history of the repeated efforts toward peace made by Great
+Britain and scotched by Germany. On the contrary, with astounding
+audacity and disingenuousness, he tries to make it appear that
+suggestions for peace were offered by Germany and rejected by Great
+Britain. Once more it simply was not so.
+
+
+*Defense of Sir Edward Grey.*
+
+Mr. Shaw's paraphrase of Document 17 in the British diplomatic
+dispatches is a staggering travesty. So far as I can see it bears no
+relation to the original. Further, he not only deplores that a liberal
+government should have an imperialist Foreign Secretary, but he accuses
+Sir Edward Grey of sacrificing his country's welfare to the interests of
+his party and committing a political crime in order not to incur the
+wrath of The Daily News and The Manchester Guardian. This is totally
+inexcusable. Let me not be misunderstood. I am not a liberal. I am an
+out-and-out radical. I foresee a cleavage in the Liberal Party, and when
+that cleavage comes I shall be on the extreme left wing. I entirely
+agree with Mr. Shaw's denunciation of secret diplomacy and undemocratic
+control of foreign policy. By every social tradition I should be in
+opposition to Sir Edward Grey, but I think Grey was the best Foreign
+Secretary that the Liberal Party could have chosen and that he worked
+well on the only possible plane, the plane of practicality. I am quite
+sure he is an honest man, and I strongly resent, as Englishmen of all
+opinions will resent, any imputation to the contrary.
+
+As for the undemocratic control of foreign policy, a strong point about
+our policy on the eve of the war is that it was dictated by public
+opinion. [See Grey's dispatch to the British Ambassador at Berlin, No.
+123.] Germany could have preserved peace by a single gesture addressed
+to Franz Josef. She did not want peace. Mr. Shaw said Sir Edward Grey
+ought to have shouted out at the start that if Germany fought we should
+fight. Sir Edward Grey had no authority to do so, and it would have been
+foolish to do so. Mr. Shaw also says Germany ought to have turned her
+whole army against Russia and left the western frontier to the care of
+the world's public opinion in spite of the military alliance by which
+France was bound to Russia. We have here an example of his aptitude for
+practical politics.
+
+
+*Was Belgium a Mere Excuse?*
+
+Let us now come to Belgium. Mr. Shaw protests needlessly that he holds
+no brief for small States as such, and he most vehemently denies that we
+are bound to knight errantry on their behalf. His objection to small
+States is that they are either incorrigibly bellicose or standing
+temptations to big powers. Outside the Balkans no small State is
+bellicose. All are eminently pacific. That they are a standing
+temptation to thieves is surely no reason for their destruction. If it
+is a reason Mr. Shaw ought to throw his watch down the drain.
+
+Mr. Shaw states that Belgium was a mere excuse for our going to war.
+That there was a vast deal more in the pre-war diplomacy than appears in
+the printed dispatches, or in any dispatches, I am as convinced as Mr.
+Shaw is, but I am equally convinced that so far as we are concerned
+there was nothing in diplomacy, however secret, to contradict our public
+attitude. The chief item not superficially apparent is that the
+diplomats knew all along that Germany wanted war and was doing all she
+could to obtain war on terms most favorable to herself. That our own
+interest coincided with our duty to Belgium did not by any means render
+our duty a mere excuse for action. If a burglar is making his way upward
+in the house where Mr. Shaw lives and Mr. Shaw comes down and collars
+him in the flat of a defenseless invalid below and hands him over to the
+police Mr. Shaw would not expect the police to say, "You are a
+hypocrite; you only seized the burglar because you feared he would come
+to you next." I stick to the burglar simile, because a burglar is just
+what Germany is.
+
+
+*The "Infamous Proposal" Phrase.*
+
+Mr. Shaw characterizes Mr. Asquith's phrase, "Germany's infamous
+proposal," as the "obvious barrister's claptrap." Once more this is
+totally inexcusable. I do not always see eye to eye with Mr. Asquith, I
+agree with Mr. Shaw that he has more than once sinned against democratic
+principles, but what has that to do with the point? My general
+impression of Mr. Asquith and general impression of this country is that
+Mr. Asquith, in addition to being a pretty good Liberal, is an honest
+man. His memorable speech containing the "infamous proposal" phrase was
+most positively a genuine emotional expression of his conviction and of
+the conviction of the whole country, and Mr. Shaw, a finished master of
+barrister's claptrap when he likes, has been merely scurrilous about it.
+Germany's proposal was infamous. Supposing that we had taken the Belgium
+point at Mr. Shaw's valuation of it, the "nonsense about Belgium," as he
+calls it, and refrained from war, what would have been the result? The
+result would have been that today we could not have looked one another
+in the face as we passed down the street.
+
+But Mr. Shaw is not content with arguing that the Belgium point was a
+mere excuse for us. He goes further and continually implies that there
+was no Belgium point. Every time he mentions the original treaty that
+established Belgian neutrality he puts after it in brackets, [date
+1839,] an obvious barrister's device, sarcastically to discredit the
+treaty because of its age. He omits to say that the chief clause in the
+treaty contains the word "perpetually." What is worse, he infers that by
+the mere process of years, as Belgium gradually made herself, civilized
+herself, enriched herself, and increased her stake in the world, her
+moral right to independence and freedom instead of being strengthened
+was somehow mysteriously weakened. The theory is monstrous, but if he
+does not mean that he means nothing.
+
+Further, he says that in 1870 Gladstone could not depend on the treaty
+of 1839 and resorted to a special temporary treaty not now in force, and
+that, therefore, technically the validity of the 1839 treaty is
+extremely doubtful. This twisting of facts throws a really sinister
+light upon the later developments of Mr. Shaw as a controversialist. The
+treaty of 1870 was, indeed, temporary, except in so far as it confirmed
+the treaty of 1839. Article 3 of the treaty of 1870 says it shall be
+binding on the contracting parties during the continuance of the war and
+for twelve months after, and then proceeds "and on the expiration of
+that time the independence and neutrality of Belgium will, so far as the
+high contracting parties are respectively concerned, continue to rest as
+heretofore on the quintuple treaty of 1839," (textual.)
+
+Mr. Shaw's manifesto is lengthy and it will no doubt be reprinted in
+book form. I repeat what I said in my first paragraph as to the major
+part of it, but I assert that the objectionable part of the manifesto is
+so objectionable in its flippancy, in its perversity, in its injustice,
+and in its downright inexactitude as to amount to a scandal. Mr. Shaw
+has failed to realize either his own importance or the importance and
+very grave solemnity of the occasion. The present is no hour for that
+disingenuous, dialectical bravura which might excusably relieve a
+domestic altercation. Before reprinting Mr. Shaw should, I suggest;
+seriously reconsider his position and rewrite.
+
+
+
+
+*"Bennett States the German Case"*
+
+By George Bernard Shaw.
+
+Letter to The Daily News of London.
+
+
+_To The Daily News, Sir:_
+
+In justice to the enemy I am bound to admit that Mr. Bennett's case,
+which is the German case, is a very strong one and that his ironic
+comment on the case against Germany, "We have here an example of Mr.
+Shaw's aptitude for practical politics," is a comment that the Kaiser
+will probably make and that the average "practical man" will make, too.
+
+Mr. Bennett, in saying that I am a simpleton to doubt that, if Germany
+had not attacked France, France would have attacked her, shows a much
+greater courage than he credits me with. That is Germany's contention,
+and if valid is her justification for dashing at any enemy who, as Mr.
+Bennett believes, was lying in wait to spring on her back when Russia
+had her by the throat. If Mr. Bennett is right, and I am a simpleton,
+there is nothing more to be said. The Imperial Chancellor's plea of "a
+state of necessity" is proved up to the hilt.
+
+I did not omit to say that Germany regards our policy and our diplomacy
+as extremely able and clear-sighted. I expressly and elaborately pointed
+that out. Mr. Bennett, being an Englishman, is so flattered by the
+apparent compliment from those clever Germans that he insists it is
+deserved. I, being an Irishman and, therefore, untouched by flattery,
+see clearly that what the Germans mean by able and clear-sighted is
+crafty, ruthless, unscrupulous, and directed to the deliberate and
+intentional destruction of Germany by a masterly diplomatic combination
+of Russia, France and Great Britain against her, and I defend the
+English and Sir Edward Grey in particular on the ground, first, that the
+British nation at large was wholly innocent of the combination, and,
+second, that even among diplomatists, guilty as most of them
+unquestionably were and openly as our Junkers--like the German
+ones--clamored for war with Germany, there was more muddle than
+Machiavelli about them, and that Sir Edward never completely grasped the
+situation or found out what he really was doing and even had a
+democratic horror of war.
+
+
+*Shaw's Excuses Scorned.*
+
+But Mr. Bennett will not have any of my excuses for his unhappy country.
+He will have it that the Germans are right in admiring Sir Edward as a
+modern Caesar Bogia, and that our militarist writers are "of first class
+quality," as contrasted with the "intense mediocrity" of poor Gen.
+Bernhardi.
+
+If Mr. Bennett had stopped there the Kaiser would send him the Iron
+Cross, but of course, like a true born Englishman, he goes on to deny
+indignantly that England has produced a militarist literature comparable
+to Germany and to affirm hotly that Mr. Asquith is an honest man whose
+bad arguments are "a genuine emotional expression of his convictions and
+that of the whole country," and that Sir Edward Grey is an honest man,
+and that he (Mr. Bennett) "strongly resents as Englishmen of all
+opinions will resent any imputation to the contrary"--just what I said
+he would say and that he entirely agrees with my denunciation of secret
+diplomacy and undemocratic control of foreign policy and that I am a
+perverse and wayward harlequin, mischievous, unveracious, scurrilous,
+monstrous, disingenuous, flippant, unjust, inexact, scandalous, and
+objectionable, and that on all points to which he takes exception and a
+good many more I am so magnificent, brilliant, and convincing that no
+citizen could rise from perusing me without being illuminated.
+
+That is just a little what I meant by saying that Englishmen are
+muddle-headed, because they never have been forced by political
+adversity to mistrust their tempers and depend on a carefully stated
+case as Irishmen have been.
+
+
+*Showed Germany the Way.*
+
+I did with great pains what nobody else had done. I showed what Germany
+should have done, knowing that I had no right to reproach her for doing
+what she did until I was prepared to show that a better way had been
+open to her.
+
+Bennett says, in effect, that nobody but a fool could suppose that my
+way was practicable and proceeds to call Germany a burglar. That does
+not get us much further. In fact, to me it seems a step backward. At all
+events it is now up to Mr. Bennett to show us what practical alternative
+Germany had except the one I described. If he cannot do that, can he
+not, at least, fight for his side? We, who are mouthpieces of many
+inarticulate citizens, who are fighting at home against the general
+tumult of scare and rancor and silly cinematograph heroics for a sane
+facing of facts and a stable settlement, are very few. We have to bring
+the whole continent of war-struck lunatics to reason if we can.
+
+What chance is there of our succeeding if we begin by attacking one
+another because we do not like one another's style or confine ourselves
+to one another's pet points? I invite Mr. Bennett to pay me some more
+nice compliments and to reserve his fine old Staffordshire loathing for
+my intellectual nimbleness until the war is over.--G. BERNARD SHAW.
+
+[Illustration: G.K. CHESTERTON. _See Page 108_]
+
+[Illustration: SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE. (_Photo by Arnold Genthe_) _See
+Page 132_]
+
+
+
+
+*Flaws in Shaw's Logic*
+
+By Cunninghame Graham.
+
+Letter to The Daily News of London.
+
+
+_To the Editor of The Daily News:_
+
+The controversy between men of peace as to the merits, demerits, causes,
+and possible results of the great war is becoming almost as dangerous
+and little less noisy than the real conflict now being waged in and
+around Ypres. The only difference between the two conflicts is that the
+combatants in Flanders only strive to kill the body. Those who fire
+paper bullets aim at the annihilation of the soul.
+
+Literature is a nice thing in its way. It both passes and gives us many
+weary hours. It has its place. But I submit that at present it is mere
+dancing on a tight rope. Whether the war could have been avoided or not
+is without interest today. In fact, there is no controversy possible
+after Maximilian Harden's pronouncement. In it he throws away the
+scabbard and says boldly that Germany from the first was set on war.
+Hence it becomes a work of supererogation to find excuses for her, and
+hence, my old friend, Bernard Shaw, penned his long indictment of his
+hereditary enemy, England, all in vain.
+
+We are a dull-witted race. Although the Continent has dubbed us
+"Perfidious Albion," it is hard for us to take in general ideas, and no
+man clearly sees the possibilities of the development of the original
+sin that lies dormant in him. Thus it becomes hard for us to understand
+the reason why, if Germany tore up a treaty three months ago we are
+certain to tear up another in three years' time.
+
+All crystal gazing appeals but little to the average man on this side of
+the St. George's channel. It may be that we shall tear up many treaties,
+but the broad fact remains that hitherto we have torn up none.
+
+The particular treaty that Germany tore up was signed by five powers in
+1839, ratified again in 1870 by a special clause respected by King
+Frederick William in his war against the French, was often referred to
+in Parliament by Gladstone and by other Ministers, and was considered
+binding on its signatories. Germany tore it up for her own ends, thus
+showing that she was a stupid though learned people, for she at once at
+the same time prejudiced her case to the whole world and made a military
+mistake.
+
+No human motives are without alloy, but at the same time honesty in our
+case has proved the better policy. Germany, no doubt, would have granted
+us almost anything for our assent to her march through Belgium. We
+refused her offers, no doubt from mixed motives, for every Englishman is
+not an orphan archangel, stupid, or dull or muddle-headed, or what not.
+The balance of the world is with us, not, perhaps, because they love us
+greatly, but because they see that we, perhaps by accident, have been
+forced into the right course and that all smaller nationalities such as
+Montenegro, Ireland, Poland, and the rest would disappear on our defeat.
+
+CUNNINGHAME GRAHAM.
+
+
+
+
+*Editorial Comment on Shaw*
+
+From THE NEW YORK TIMES, Nov. 5, 1914.
+
+
+Mr. G. Bernard Shaw thinks that "the time has now come to pluck up
+courage and begin to talk and write soberly about the war." Our readers
+will find in THE TIMES Sunday Magazine this morning some of the fruits
+of this auto-suggestion. They are very remarkable. While Mr. Shaw can
+hardly be called a representative of any considerable class, the fact
+that one prominent writer, always much read, can assume Mr. Shaw's
+attitude and make public Mr. Shaw's comments throws a strong light on
+the spirit of British society. It is true that he intimates that he ran
+the risk of "prompt lynching" at one time, but that was probably the
+suggestion of a certain timidity and vanity to which he pleads guilty.
+His safe and prosperous existence is really a striking evidence, on the
+one hand, of British good nature, and, on the other, of the indifferent
+estimate the British put on his influence.
+
+Like Iago, Mr. Shaw is nothing if not critical, and in this crisis his
+criticism is for the most part bitter, extreme, and in purpose
+destructive. He particularly dislikes Sir Edward Grey and the Government
+of which he is a leading spirit, and the class which the Government
+represents. He singles out Sir Edward as the chief "Junker" and among
+the chief "militarists" who brought about this war. Mr. Shaw's attacks
+on the Foreign Secretary are savage, and, as often happens with savage
+attacks--they are far from consistent. For example, Mr. Shaw paraphrases
+at some length the interview between Sir Edward and the German
+Ambassador, in which the latter made four different propositions to
+secure the neutrality of Great Britain if Germany waged war on France,
+all of which Sir Edward refused. Mr. Shaw sees in this only evidence of
+determination to take arms against Germany in any case, carrying out a
+long-cherished plan formed by the Government of which Sir Edward Grey
+was, for this matter, the responsible member. He does not see--- though
+it is so plain that a wayfaring man though a professional satirist
+should not err therein--that what the Secretary intended to do--what, in
+fact, he did do--was to refuse to put a price on British perfidy, to
+accept any "bargain" offered to that end.
+
+On the other hand, Mr. Shaw paraphrases at still greater length the
+report of the interview in which the Russian Foreign Minister and the
+French Ambassador at St. Petersburg tried to induce the British
+Government to commit itself in advance to war against Germany. Mr. Shaw
+thinks that thus the German "bluff" would have been called and war would
+have been prevented, and he is confident that Mr. Winston Churchill
+would have taken the Bismarck tone and dictated the result. He cannot
+see--what is really the essential fact in both cases--that Sir Edward
+Grey was striving in every honorable way to preserve peace, that his
+Government refused to stand idle and see France crushed in the same
+spirit that it refused to menace Germany until a definite and undeniable
+cause of war arose.
+
+That cause came with Germany's violation of its pledge to observe the
+neutrality of Belgium, and England's response excites Mr. Shaw's most
+furious contempt. He adopts with zest the judgment of the German
+Chancellor. The pledge for all who signed it was but a scrap of paper,
+of no more binding force than others that had gone their way to dusty
+death in the diplomatic waste baskets. To observe the obligation it
+imposed was hypocrisy. To fight in order to compel Germany to observe it
+was crass militarism. Plainly, Mr. Shaw is a little difficult. The
+Government under which he lives is either too bellicose or not bellicose
+enough; too ready to help France if France is attacked or not ready
+enough to bully Germany, and especially it is all wrong about Belgium
+and its treaty, since treaties have several times been broken, and so on
+through a bewildering circle of contradictory statements and notions.
+
+Mr. Shaw finds little to choose between the groups of combatants. He
+distinctly prides himself on his impartiality, not to say indifference.
+On account of his Irish birth he claims something of the detachment of a
+foreigner, but admits a touch of Irish malice in taking the conceit out
+of the English. Add to this his professed many-sidedness as a dramatist
+and playwright and we get as good an explanation as can be given of this
+noted writer's attitude toward the tremendous struggle now waging. But
+Mr. Shaw's assumption of even-handed scorn for every one concerned, of
+"six of one and a half dozen of the other," does not hold out. He feels
+profoundly that such fighting as Germany does, for such a purpose as
+inspires Germany, must be met by force, and that England could not in
+the long run, no matter by whom guided or governed, have shirked the
+task laid upon her. That being the case, one wonders a little why it was
+worth while to cover every one with ridicule and to present a picture of
+Great Britain so essentially grotesque and distorted.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+*Bernard Shaw on the End of the War.*
+
+_From The New York Sun, Nov_. 15, 1914.
+
+
+In the midst of a good deal of untimely gibing, George Bernard Shaw, as
+reported in a London dispatch to The Sun of yesterday, says one or two
+very wise and appropriate things about the end of the war and the times
+to come after it. His warnings are a useful check to the current loose
+talk of the fire-eaters and preachers of the gospel of vengeance.
+
+"We and France have to live with Germany after the war," Mr. Shaw points
+out. Even to embarrass her financially would be a blow to England
+herself, Germany being one of England's best customers and one of her
+most frequently visited neighbors. The truth of this is unanswerable.
+The great object must be to effect a peace with as little rancor as
+possible.
+
+Mr. Shaw does not say it, but there are going to be overwhelming
+political reasons why the pride of Germany and Austria and still more
+why their military power shall not be too much impaired in case of their
+defeat.
+
+Perhaps in the final settlement the Western Allies may be found to have
+more in common with Berlin than with St. Petersburg. Germany has pointed
+this out with much force.
+
+Mr. Shaw's position is not admirable when he chooses their days of
+tribulation for sticking pins into his own people, even though some of
+the things he says may be unpleasantly true. But it cannot be denied
+that he has some sane views on the situation. The pity is that he must
+always impair the force of the useful things he has to say by
+flippancies, impertinences, and out-of-place girdings at those whose
+courage he should help to maintain. He reminds one of a man who insists
+on wrangling over the mistaken construction of a chimney while the house
+is burning down.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+*Bernard Shaw as a Patriot.*
+
+_From The New York World, Nov. 17, 1914._
+
+
+Bernard Shaw has written for our neighbor THE TIMES an elaborate
+three-page thesis to maintain:
+
+1. That Great Britain was abundantly justified in making war with
+Germany.
+
+2. That the explanation given by the British Government for making war
+against Germany was stupid, hypocritical, mendacious, and disgraceful.
+
+3. That he alone is capable of interpreting the moral purpose of the
+British people in undertaking this necessary work of civilization.
+
+4. That the reason the British Government's justification of the war is
+so inadequate is because no British Government is ever so clever as
+Bernard Shaw.
+
+5. That even in the midst of the most horrible calamity known to human
+history it pays to advertise.
+
+Various patriots have various ways of serving their country. Some go to
+the firing line to be shot and others stay at home to be a source of
+innocent merriment to the survivors.
+
+
+
+
+*"Shaw Empty of Good Sense"*
+
+
+By Christabel Pankhurst.
+
+Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.
+
+
+His reputation for perversity and contrariety is fully maintained by
+George Bernard Shaw in the ineptly-named article, "Common Sense About
+the War." At home in Britain we all know that it is Mr. Shaw's habit to
+oppose where he might be expected to support, and vice versa. For
+example, should he speak at a prohibition meeting he would most likely
+extol strong drink, or if asked to defend the sale of liquor declare
+dramatically for prohibition.
+
+He sees himself as the critic of everything and everybody--the one and
+only man who knows what to do and how to do it.
+
+Mr. Shaw charges his compatriots with intellectual laziness, but they
+are not so lazy as to leave him to do their thinking for them. That he
+sometimes--and oftener in the past than now--says illuminating things is
+true, but firm reliance cannot be placed upon his freakish mental
+processes, exemplified in his writings about the war. He has played with
+effect the part of jester to the British public, but when, as now, his
+jests are empty of the kernel of good sense, the matter gets beyond a
+joke.
+
+The truth is that in face of this great and tragic reality of war the
+men of mere words, the literary theorists, are in danger of missing
+their way. Certainly women of deeds are more likely to see things aright
+than are men of words, and it is as a woman of deeds that I, a
+suffragette, make answer to my irresponsible compatriot, Mr. Bernard
+Shaw. And yet not a compatriot, for Mr. Shaw disclaims those feelings of
+loyalty and enthusiasm for the national cause that fill the mass of us
+who live under the British flag!
+
+"Until Home Rule emerges from its present suspended animation," says Mr.
+Shaw, "I shall retain my Irish capacity for criticising England with
+something of the detachment of a foreigner." Now, these words are not a
+little surprising, because Mr. Shaw's interest in the Home Rule cause
+has hitherto been of a most restrained and well-nigh secret character,
+and any one who imagines that Mr. Shaw is a strenuous campaigner for
+Home Rule is greatly mistaken. If in the years preceding the war the
+Horne Rule cause had depended upon Mr. Shaw's activities, it would have
+been in a bad way. It is now, when a foreign enemy menaces our nation as
+a whole, that Mr. Shaw manifests this enhanced interest in Home Rule.
+
+The suffragettes, who have fought and suffered for their cause as no
+living man reformer in the British Isles has fought and suffered for
+his, have during the present crisis subordinated their claim to the
+urgent claims of national honor and safety. So Mr. Shaw, whose
+campaigning is done generally in the armchair, and never in any place
+more dangerous than the rostrum, ought surely to refrain from his
+frivolous, inconsistent, destructive, and unprofitable criticism of our
+country.
+
+As for the question of lynching, Mr. Shaw is, the American public may be
+assured, in no danger whatever of being lynched. He is in far more
+danger of having the Iron Cross conferred upon him by the Kaiser in
+recognition of his attempt to supplement the activities of the official
+German Press Bureau. But if he were a German subject, writing on certain
+points of German policy as he does upon certain points of British
+policy, his fate can well be imagined. The only retribution that will
+come upon this man, who exploits the freedom of speech and pen that
+England gives him, is that his words lose now and henceforth the weight
+they used to have. Oh, the conceit of the man, who in this dark hour,
+when the English are dying on the battlefield, writes of "taking the
+conceit out of England" by a stroke of his inconsequent pen!
+
+
+*Admits England's Cause Is Just.*
+
+But with all his will to "take the conceit" out of this England, so
+fiercely menaced, her sons killed, her daughters widowed--yet needing,
+so he thinks, his castigation into the bargain--the critic is
+constrained to admit that our country is playing the part of "the
+responsible policeman of the West" and that "for England to have
+refrained from hurling herself into the fray, horse, foot, and
+artillery, was impossible from every point of view." Then why preface
+these statements by a series of attacks upon the country which is
+admitted to be justly fighting in a just cause?
+
+The sole importance of Mr. Shaw's criticism comes from this. He
+unwarrantably indorses statements made by Germany in her attempt to put
+the Allies in the wrong. Because he is known to the German people by his
+dramatic work, extracts from his article will be circulated among them
+as an expression of the views of a representative British citizen. And
+how are the Germans to know that this is false, deprived as they are of
+news of what is happening in the outside world and ignorant as they must
+be of Mr. Shaw's real lack of influence at this serious time?
+
+That their traffic in mere words disables some literary men from
+comprehending facts is shown by Mr. Shaw's play upon the word
+"Junkerism." He points to the dictionary definition of the word instead
+of to the fact it represents, and by this verbal juggling tries to
+convince his readers that the military autocracy that dominates and
+misdirects Germany has its counterpart and equal in Great Britain.
+Whereas, the conditions in the two countries are wholly different, and
+it is this very difference that Germany has regarded as one of the signs
+of British inferiority.
+
+Mr. Shaw's suggestion that the British are posing as "Injured Innocence"
+and as "Mild Gazelles" is neither funny nor true. We are simply a people
+defending ourselves, resisting conquest and military despotism, and
+fighting for the ideal of freedom and self-government. When our country
+is no longer in danger we suffragettes, if it be still necessary, are
+prepared to fight on and wage our civil war that we may win freedom and
+self-government for women as well as men. But, in the meantime, we
+support the men--yes, and even the Government do we in a sense
+support--in fighting the common enemy who menaces the freedom of men and
+women alike. Although the Government in the past have erred gravely in
+their dealing with the woman question, they are for the purpose of this
+war the instrument of the nation.
+
+
+*Facts Belie Him.*
+
+Mr. Shaw would seem to hold Britain responsible for German militarism,
+but the facts he cites are against him there. "I am old enough," says
+he, "to remember the beginnings of the anti-German phase of military
+propaganda in England. The Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left England
+very much taken aback. Up to that date nobody was much afraid that
+Prussia--suddenly Prussia beat France right down in the dust."
+Precisely! It was this war on France, deliberately engineered by
+Bismarck, and it was the defeat and despoilment of France that fed
+Germany's militarism and encouraged Germany to make those plans of
+military aggression which, after long and deliberate preparation, are
+being carried into effect in the present war. Germany's plans of
+military aggression have compelled other countries to prepare, however
+inadequately, to defend themselves.
+
+Mr. Shaw gives support to the Germans' contention that they are not the
+aggressors but are menaced by Russia. Yet he does not explain why, if
+that is so, Germany took French gold and territory in 1870 and has since
+continued to alienate France; nor why Germany has chosen Britain as her
+enemy of enemies to be supplanted and surpassed in power.
+
+If Germany is simply on the defensive against Russia and has no desire
+to attack and cripple France and Britain, then why has she antagonized
+these countries and driven one after the other into a Russian alliance?
+
+When he affects to criticise Germany for not having "entrusted the
+security of her western frontier to the public opinion of Western Europe
+and to America and fought Russia, if attacked, with her rear not
+otherwise defended," Mr. Shaw burkes the fact that Germany's object is
+to seize Belgium and to make it part of the German Empire, also to seize
+at least the northern coast of France and to make this seizure the means
+of dominating Britain.
+
+Indeed, the point at which German ambition for conquest ceases would be
+hard to fix. And yet Mr. Shaw pictures for us an injured-innocent,
+mild-gazelle Germany on the defensive! Quite in this picture is his
+assertion that "the ultimatum to Servia was the escapade of a dotard,"
+whereas, everybody knows that the ultimatum was dictated at Berlin. It
+is plain as a pikestaff that in order to bring on the Great War of
+conquest for which her rulers thought The Day had arrived. Germany
+dictated the issue and terms of the ultimatum to Servia and then urged
+Austria to refuse any compromise and arbitration which might have
+averted war.
+
+Mr. Shaw has assumed the impossible task of trying to blind the American
+public to these and other facts that prove Germany to be the aggressor
+in this war, but he will fail in his attempt at white-washing German
+policy because it is one of the characteristics of the American people
+that they have a strong feeling for reality and that no twisting and
+combining of words can prevent them from getting at the facts beneath.
+
+Bernhardi's writings are generally believed to be an inspiration, and in
+part a statement of German policy. But Mr. Shaw differs. In trying to
+prove that Bernhardism has nothing to do with the case, he maintains
+that Germany has neglected the Bernhardi programme, and says:
+
+"He warned Germany to make an alliance with Italy, Austria, Turkey, and
+America before undertaking the subjugation of France, then of England."
+
+Mr. Shaw then asserts that Germany disregarded this advice and allowed
+herself to be caught between Russia and a Franco-British combination
+with no ally save Austria. But here again facts are against him. For
+Germany has followed with marvelous precision the line drawn by
+Bernhardi.
+
+She is actually fighting in partnership with Austria. She allied herself
+with Italy--though Italy has refused to fight with her in this present
+war of aggression. Germany has also bent Turkey to her purpose, and has
+dragged the Turks into the war. An alliance with America! Well, to have
+gained the help of America in crushing France and crippling England, and
+ravaging and conquering Belgium was quite beyond the power of German
+diplomacy and intrigue! Still Germany's attempts to win at least
+America's moral support in this war are vigorous, if unsuccessful.
+
+And with what quotable matter Mr. Shaw provides the German rulers for
+the further deluding of their subjects when he writes of the German
+people being "stirred to their depths by the apparent treachery and
+duplicity of the attack made upon them in their extrernest peril from
+France and Russia," when he writes of the Kaiser doing "all a Kaiser
+could do without unbearable ignominy to induce the British not to fight
+him and give him fair play with Russia," and when he writes of "taking
+the Kaiser at a disadvantage." As though we ought meekly to have agreed
+to the Kaiser's plan of defeating France and using her defeat as a
+bridge to England and a means of conquering England! Uncommon nonsense
+about the war--so we must rename Mr. Shaw's production!
+
+And what is all this that flows from the pen of Mr. Shaw about Belgium
+and "obsolete treaties," "rights of way," "necessities that know no
+international law," "circumstances that alter treaties"? Made in Germany
+such statements are, and yet even the Imperial German Chancellor is not
+so contemptuous as Bernard Shaw is of Belgium's charter of existence,
+the treaty now violated by Germany.
+
+That is a treaty that cannot become obsolete until the powers who made
+it release Belgium from the restrictions and obligations which the
+treaty imposes. Germany pleads guilty in this matter of the violation of
+Belgian neutrality, though Mr. Shaw attempts to show her innocent, for
+the German Chancellor has said: "This is an infraction of international
+law--we are compelled to overrule the legitimate protests of the
+Luxemburg and Belgian Governments. We shall repair the wrong we are
+doing as soon as our military aims have been achieved." And again the
+Chancellor said the invasion of Belgium "is contrary to the law of
+nature." To Mr. Bernard Shaw's peculiar sense of international morality
+such dealing is not, however, repugnant.
+
+
+*No "Right of Way" in Belgium.*
+
+In his letter to President Wilson Mr. Shaw, either willfully or
+ignorantly, seeks to confuse the neutrality of a neutralized State such
+as Belgium and the neutrality of an ordinary State such as Italy, and he
+pretends that violation of the first sort of neutrality creates a
+situation in no way different from that created by the violation of the
+second and normal sort of neutrality. I would refer Mr. Shaw to "The
+Case for Belgium" issued by the Belgian delegates to the United States
+wherein they point out that "the peculiarity about Belgian neutrality is
+that it has been imposed upon her by the powers as the one condition
+upon which they recognized her national existence."
+
+The consequence of this is that whereas Italy and the United States and
+other powers having a similar status can, subject to the risk of attack
+from an affronted belligerent, please themselves whether or not they
+condone a violation of their neutrality, Belgium and the other
+neutralized States cannot condone such violation, but must either resist
+all breaches of their neutrality or surrender their right to existence.
+And further a neutralized State, putting faith in the treaty that
+guarantees its existence and its neutrality, refrains naturally from
+that preparation for war which would be deemed necessary in the absence
+of such a treaty.
+
+There is no such thing as the "right of way" through neutralized Belgium
+which Mr. Shaw claims on behalf of belligerent Germany. Far from
+exercising a right of way Germany has violently committed a trespass,
+offering a German promise, a mere "scrap of paper," as reparation. "A
+right of way," argues Bernard Shaw, "is not a right of conquest"; but
+the truth is that in passing through Belgium Germany assumed dominion
+over Belgium, which dominion she has since formally asserted and is
+seeking forcibly to maintain.
+
+
+*A New Shavian Theory.*
+
+No comprehension does Mr. Shaw display of the hurt to the Belgians'
+sense of honor involved in Germany's use of their territory for purposes
+hostile to their friendly neighbor, France. To be forced into injuring a
+friend is an outrage, indeed, and Mr. Shaw surely knows too much of
+matters military to be unaware that to permit a right of way to one
+combatant amounts to making an attack upon the other, and that Germany,
+by the very fact of crossing Belgium soil, was forcing Belgium to be the
+enemy of France. Only by their great heroism were the Belgians able to
+escape this infamy that had been planned for them.
+
+To be conquered does not really matter! There we have another Shavian
+theory. How grateful would the would-be world-ruling Kaiser feel to Mr.
+Shaw were he to succeed in inoculating the peoples of Europe and of
+America with that theory! So would the task of putting the peoples under
+the German yoke (otherwise known as German culture) be made easier--and
+cheaper. But the spirit of national freedom, which is as precious to
+humanity as is the spirit of individual freedom, cannot be driven out by
+words any more than it can be driven out by blows. The most unlettered
+Belgian soldier, fighting for a truth that is at the very heart and
+depth of all things true, puts the mere wordmonger to shame.
+
+That Great Britain does not fight only for Belgium is certainly a fact,
+though Belgium's plight alone would have been enough to bring us into
+the conflict. We fight also for France, because she is wrongfully
+attacked, and because she is by her civilization and culture one of the
+world's treasures. We fight for the all-sufficient reason of
+self-defense.
+
+There is the case for Britain, and despite his special pleading for
+Germany, Mr. Shaw can show no flaw in it. He does say, however, that the
+British Government, instead of first seeking a mild way of preserving
+peace, ought to have said point blank to Germany: "If you attack France
+we shall attack you." I also think that such a declaration would have
+been the right one. To me and to many others the thought that our
+country might stand by and watch inactively an attack upon France was
+intolerable. Great was our relief when this apprehension was removed by
+the British Government's declaration of war. Why did not the British
+Government say to Germany before the war cloud burst that Britain would
+fight to defend France, and why did the Government delay so long in
+declaring war? Mr. Shaw does not give the reason, but I will give it.
+
+It was that the Government feared opposition to our entering into the
+war would come from a Radico-Socialist literary clique in London, from a
+section of the Liberal press, and from certain Liberal and Labor
+politicians who had been deceived by German professors and other
+missionaries of the Kaiser into thinking the German peril did not exist.
+When Belgium was invaded most of these misguided ones were unable to
+cling any longer to their "keep out of it" policy, and then the
+Government felt free to act. Yet the Government need not have waited,
+because with the facts before them the people as a whole would perfectly
+have understood the necessity of fighting even had Belgium not been
+invaded.
+
+Henceforward the general public must be kept informed of what is
+happening in the international world. Foreign politics must be conducted
+with greater publicity. There, at least, Bernard Shaw is right, but this
+is a reform which he and his fellow-men have failed to effect, whereas
+women, had they been voters, would have demanded and secured it long
+ago.
+
+Now, although undue diplomatic secrecy, always wrong, will be especially
+wrong when the terms of peace come to be made, sentimentality will
+certainly be more mischievous still. It is difficult to resist the
+conclusion that Bernard Shaw's writings on the war are intended as an
+appeal to sentimentality--an appeal that Germany at the close of the war
+shall have treatment which, by being more than just to her, would be
+less than just to the countries whom she has attacked, and would mean a
+recurrence of this appalling war in after years.
+
+Before the war specious words were used to cloak the German policy of
+aggression which has plunged the world in horror and is martyrizing
+peoples. In view of the coming victory of the Allies, the same tactics
+will be adopted by the German militarists, and it behooves Bernard Shaw
+to beware lest even without intent he serve as their tool. Men such as
+he who believe that while they can never be in the wrong, their country
+can never be in the right, are just the men who are in danger of
+stumbling at this time.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTABEL PANKHURST.
+
+_Photo (C) by Underwood & Underwood._
+
+_See Page 68_]
+
+[Illustration: JAMES M. BARRIE. _See Page 100_]
+
+
+
+
+*Comment by Readers of Shaw*
+
+ *Shaw Has Made Minister von Jagow's Remark on a "Scrap of Paper"
+ Understandable.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+Most hearty thanks for that masterly "common-sense" article of Bernard
+Shaw. How clearly he expresses the much that many of us have felt way
+down inside and have not been able to formulate even to ourselves!
+
+He has made at least one woman--and one of German parentage at
+that--understand what reams of public and private communications from
+all over the Fatherland could not make clear: just why the blunt,
+impetuous, shocked, and astounded Kaiser dared give utterance to that
+disgraceful "scrap of paper" remark--inexcusable but also very
+understandable in the light of his knowledge of and confidence in a more
+astute miscreant; why France and Germany have always considered England
+more or less of a Tartuffe and a "Scheinheilige" (one who seems holy);
+and why every German--man, woman and child--so execrates Sir Edward Grey
+and colleagues.
+
+Nothing in all the sickening present conditions, the future long-lasting
+woe and misery, the barbarous neutrality violations has so made me blush
+for my mother's country as the "scrap of paper" incident; and it has
+been most bitter to listen to the extravagant, fantastic eulogies on
+England, with which we've been so favored without feeling honestly able
+to make any excuses whatever for Germany.
+
+But now--thanks to that article--I can understand what I may not
+condone, and, though abhorring the Kaiser and my mother's compatriots
+for their share in that horror going on abroad, I can also pity the
+hot-headed, imperfect mere man going to war under a carefully incited
+and fostered misapprehension, and need no longer glorify the
+cool-headed, sapient policy which so cleverly duped ruler and people.
+
+Not since the war began have I felt so undepressed, so free to
+sympathize where I so love, so free from having to commend those for
+whom I feel no love whatever. For all of which accept the warmest thanks
+of
+
+KATE HUDSON.
+
+New York, Nov. 17.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*Shaw Article Work of "Farceur."*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+"Common sense and Shaw!" Shaw begins his article by saying, "I am giving
+my views for what they are worth, with a malicious bias." Later on he
+says: "I am writing history." Toward the end, after having obscured with
+words many things which had hitherto been clear to most people, he says:
+"Now that we begin to see where we really are, &c." How Shavian!
+
+There are at least two sides to all questions, and so long as they are
+reasonably presented one is glad to hear them even if they fail to
+convince, but when a farceur is allowed to occupy three whole pages
+usually filled by serious and interesting writers it seems time to
+protest. The subject itself is not one for easy paradox or false and
+flippant epigram.
+
+Mr. Shaw says he does not hold his tongue easily. He certainly does not,
+and when it wags it wags foolishly, and, as he admits, maliciously,
+albeit sometimes amusingly, and with superficial brilliance. He says the
+Irish do not consider England their country yet. Of course they do not.
+Why should the Irish consider themselves English? Neither do the Scots,
+nor the Welsh, nor the Canadians, nor will they ever so think. But they
+are all British, and so, despite all Mr. Shaw says to the contrary,
+Kitchener was right.
+
+Mr. Shaw falls into a common and regrettable error when he continually
+writes England when he really means the British Empire. It is the
+British Empire that is at war, for which, though a citizen, Mr. Shaw has
+no authority to speak or to be considered a representative, for, as he
+unnecessarily admits, he is not a "British patriot"; neither is he a
+"Junker," for I have looked through all his definitions of the word, and
+none applies to him.
+
+In what way is the "Battle of Dorking" like Bernhardi? The one he says
+had as a moral: "To arms! or the Germans will besiege London!" The other
+said: "To arms! so that the Germans may besiege London, or any other
+country that does not want compulsory culture!" The one was defensive,
+the other offensive.
+
+He says of the war: "We" began it. Since he says he is not English, and
+that it is an English war, whom does he mean by "We"? If he means the
+British, then, should a policeman see a small boy being ill-treated by a
+large man and go to the help of that boy, he, the policeman, must be
+said to have begun the fight which would probably ensue between him and
+said man, notwithstanding that the policeman is only fulfilling what he
+has sworn to do.
+
+Monaco, he says, "seems to be, on the whole, the most prosperous and
+comfortable State in Europe." If this is buffoonery it is singularly out
+of place. But even Monaco has an "army," has had recently a small
+revolution, and the Monegasques do not consider themselves ideally
+comfortable, and they have many "injustices." Does he hold the
+principality up as a model administration and the source of its
+prosperity as above reproach?
+
+Mr. Shaw represents no one but himself, and, like all small men, he
+reviles others greater than he, such as Sir Edward Grey and Mr. Asquith,
+but it does not become him, looking at his own life's history, to cast
+cheap sneers at anonymous journalists in cheap newspapers, who, though
+they may lack his literary style, possess, at least, one virtue which he
+boasts that he has not--patriotism! Yours very truly,
+
+LAWRENCE GRANT.
+
+New York, Nov. 18.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*Antidote to "Long Infliction of Dreary Stuff."*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+Hail to Bernard Shaw! Could anything be more refreshing? After the long
+infliction upon us of the flood of dreary stuff from London and Paris,
+and all the talk of German militarism, and what is to become of it at
+the hands of such immaculately unmilitary apostles of peace and
+international righteousness and treaty observances as Russia, France,
+and England, and all the maudlin denunciations of the German Nietzsche
+and Bernhardi, and the terrible Kaiser, could anything be more
+refreshing than Shaw's advent in the field of current war history?
+
+Though an Anglo-Saxon of American birth and long descent, and no
+believer in militarism of any sort of itself, yet I see in that no
+reason to distort ancient history by an attempt to make it appear that
+German militarism is at all the chief sinner, or, for that matter, not a
+very necessary and desirable thing in order that Germany may have her
+rightful place in the world, or any place at all.
+
+V.A.W. Warwick, N.Y., Nov. 16.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*False Assumptions Basis of Shaw's Attack.*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+The article on the European war by Mr. G.B. Shaw in THE TIMES of Sunday
+appeals to me as a noteworthy specimen of what an artful literary genius
+can do in the way of argumentative cantankerousness. His chief grievance
+is British diplomacy as represented by Sir Edward Grey, upon whose
+devoted head he empties the vials of his splenetic humor.
+
+Underlying his argument are two glaringly false assumptions, and on
+these the whole fabric rests. The first is that a certain undefined but
+presumably multitudinous body, which he designates as "Socialist,"
+"Democratic," and "Social Democratic," is better qualified to determine
+the policy and conduct the correspondence of the Foreign Office than
+trained and experienced statesmen.
+
+The second is that Sir Edward Grey should have followed the suggestion
+of Sazonof and threatened Germany with war at a certain stage of the
+correspondence. This can now be only a matter of opinion, but it may be
+confidently affirmed that of all nations the Germany of this day would
+be the last to back down in face of a threat. It may be also said
+generally that an open threat is about the surest way to bring on a war.
+Austria threatened Servia and war ensued. Germany threatened Russia and
+war ensued. Germany threatened Belgium--in the form of a notification
+that she intended to invade her territory--and war ensued.
+
+Mr. Shaw's contentions are grotesque.
+
+Flushing, Nov. 16. SAM TEST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*"Junkers" Controlled Old World Ages Before Shaw.*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times:_
+
+With regard to the article by Mr. Bernard Shaw, the gist of the matter
+can be compressed in fewer words. The ideas expressed are not the
+exclusive property of Mr. Shaw. The Old World for indefinite ages has
+been controlled and directed by what he calls the "Junker" class, the
+rich and idle aristocrats who want for nothing, and, being born to rule,
+do not find it worth while to exert themselves mentally, and for whom
+there is no suitable profession but the army and diplomacy.
+
+The mass of the people are to them the great unwashed, and those a
+little higher in the scale "cads and bounders," or the German
+equivalent, in fact the canaille of the French who at the time of the
+Revolution took things into their own hands to the great surprise of
+everybody. This substratum is not considered in the scheme of the
+"Junker's" existence, though the lower orders alone are the workers and
+producers and make ease and luxury possible.
+
+Mr. Shaw. I believe, intends to intimate that there might be a use for
+the intellectual class, the thinkers and writers with the imagination
+that can put them mentally in the place of the individuals who make up
+the masses, think the thoughts and live the lives vicariously of the
+people who are the nation, and if the "Junker" class of England and
+Germany and kindred nations who govern and dictate its policies were
+leavened with the brains and broad-mindedness of the thinkers there
+might be found a better use for men than killing each other and a
+brighter outlook for the world which is now filled with widows and
+orphans.
+
+Mrs. F.B. WILLIAMSON.
+
+Elizabeth, N.J., Nov, 16.
+
+
+
+
+*Open Letter to President Wilson*[A]
+
+*By George Bernard Shaw.*
+
+
+Sir: I petition you to invite the neutral powers to confer with the
+United States of America for the purpose of requesting Britain, France,
+and Germany to withdraw from the soil of Belgium and fight out their
+quarrel on their own territories. However the sympathies of the neutral
+States may be divided, and whatever points now at issue between the
+belligerent powers may be doubtful, there is one point on which there
+can be neither division nor doubt, and that is that the belligerent
+armies have no right to be in Belgium, much less to fight in Belgium,
+and involve the innocent inhabitants of that country in their reciprocal
+slaughter. You will not question my right to address this petition to
+you. You are the official head of the nation that is beyond all question
+or comparison the chief of the neutral powers, marked out from all the
+rest by commanding magnitude, by modern democratic constitution, and by
+freedom from the complication of monarchy and its traditions, which have
+led Europe into the quaint absurdity of a war waged formally between the
+German Kaiser, the German Czar, the German King of the Belgians, the
+German King of England, the German Emperor of Austria, and a gentleman
+who shares with you the distinction of not being related to any of them,
+and is therefore describable monarchically as one Poincaré, a Frenchman.
+
+I make this petition on its merits, without claiming any representative
+character except such as attaches to me as a human being. Nobody here
+has asked me to do it. Except among the large class of constitutional
+beggars, the normal English feeling is that it is no use asking for a
+thing if you feel certain that it will be refused, and are not in a
+position to enforce compliance. Also, that the party whose request is
+refused and not enforced looks ridiculous. Many Englishmen will say that
+a request to the belligerents to evacuate Belgium forthwith would be
+refused; could not be enforced; and would make the asker ridiculous. We
+are, in short, not a prayerful nation. But to you it will be clear that
+even the strongest power, or even allied group of powers, can have its
+position completely changed by an expression of the public opinion of
+the rest of the world. In your clear western atmosphere and in your
+peculiarly responsible position as the head centre of western democracy,
+you, when the European situation became threatening three months ago,
+must have been acutely aware of the fact to which Europe was so fatally
+blinded--namely, that the simple solution of the difficulty in which the
+menace of the Franco-Russo-British Entente placed Germany was for the
+German Emperor to leave his western frontier under the safeguard of the
+neighborliness and good faith of American, British, and French
+democracy, and then await quite calmly any action that Russia might take
+against his country on the east. Had he done so, we could not have
+attacked him from behind; and had France made such an attack--and it is
+in the extremest degree improbable that French public opinion would have
+permitted such a hazardous and unjustifiable adventure--he would at
+worst have confronted it with the fullest sympathy of Britain and the
+United States, and at best with their active assistance. Unhappily,
+German Kings do not allow democracy to interfere in their foreign
+policy; do not believe in neighborliness; and do believe in cannon and
+cannon fodder. The Kaiser never dreamed of confiding his frontier to you
+and to the humanity of his neighbors. And the diplomatists of Europe
+never thought of that easy and right policy, and could not suggest any
+substitute for it, with the hideous result which is before you.
+
+
+*The State of Belgium.*
+
+Now that this mischief has been done, and the two European thunderclouds
+have met and are discharging their lightnings, it is not for me to
+meddle with the question whether the United States should take a side in
+their warfare as far as it concerns themselves alone. But I may plead
+for a perfectly innocent neutral State, the State of Belgium, which is
+being ravaged in a horrible manner by the belligerents. Her surviving
+population is flying into all the neighboring countries to escape from
+the incessant hail of shrapnel and howitzer shells from British cannon,
+French cannon, German cannon, and, most tragic of all, Belgian cannon;
+for the Belgian Army is being forced to devastate its own country in its
+own defense.
+
+For this there can be no excuse; and at such a horror the rest of the
+world cannot look on in silence without incurring the guilt of the
+bystander who witnesses a crime without even giving the alarm. I grant
+that Belgium, in her extreme peril, made one mistake. She called to her
+aid the powers of the Entente alone instead of calling on the whole
+world of kindly men. She should have called on America, too; and it is
+hard to see how you could in honor have disregarded that call. But if
+Belgium says nothing, but only turns her eyes dumbly toward you while
+you look at the red ruin in which her villages, her heaps of slain, her
+monuments and treasures are being hurled by her friends and enemies
+alike, are you any the less bound to speak out than if Belgium had asked
+you to send her a million soldiers?
+
+Not for a moment do I suggest that your intervention should be an
+intervention on behalf of either the Allies or the Entente. If you
+consider both sides equally guilty, we know that you can find reasons
+for that verdict. But Belgium is innocent; and it is on behalf of
+Belgium that so much of the world as is still at peace is waiting for a
+lead from you. No other question need be prejudged. If Germany maintains
+her claim to a right of way through Belgium on a matter which she
+believed (however erroneously) to be one of life and death to her as a
+nation, nobody, not even China, now pretends that such rights of way
+have not their place among those common human rights which are superior
+to the more artificial rights of nationality. I think, for example, that
+if Russia made a descent on your continent under circumstances which
+made it essential to the maintenance of your national freedom that you
+should move an army through Canada, you would ask our leave to do so,
+and take it by force if we did not grant it. You may reasonably suspect,
+even if all our statesmen raise a shriek of denial, that we should take
+a similar liberty under similar circumstances in the teeth of all the
+scraps of paper in our Foreign Office dustbin. You see, I am frank with
+you, and fair, I hope, to Germany. But a right of way is not a right of
+conquest; and even the right of way was not, as the Imperial Chancellor
+imagined, a matter of life and death at all, but a militarist
+hallucination, and one that has turned out, so far, a military mistake.
+In short, there was no such case of overwhelming necessity as would have
+made the denial of a right of way to the German Army equivalent to a
+refusal to save German independence from destruction, and therefore to
+an act of war against her, justifying a German conquest of Belgium. You
+can therefore leave the abstract question of international rights of way
+quite unprejudiced by your action. You can leave every question between
+the belligerents fully open, and yet, in the common interest of the
+world, ask Germany to clear out of Belgium, into France or across the
+Channel, if she can, back home if she can force no other passage, but at
+all events out of Belgium. A like request would, of course, be addressed
+to Britain and to France at the same time. The technical correctness of
+our diplomatic position as to Belgium may be unimpeachable; but as the
+effect of our shells on Belgium is precisely the same as that of the
+German shells, and as by fighting on Belgian soil we are doing her
+exactly the same injury that we should have done her if the violation of
+her neutrality had been initiated by us instead of by Germany, we could
+not decently refuse to fall in with a general evacuation.
+
+
+*A Certain Result of Intervention.*
+
+At all events, your intervention could not fail to produce at least the
+result that even if the belligerents refused to comply, your request
+would leave them in an entirely new and very unpleasant relation to
+public opinion. No matter how powerful a State is, it is not above
+feeling the vast difference between doing something that nobody condemns
+and something that everybody condemns except the interested parties.
+
+That difference alone would be well worth your pains. But it is by no
+means a foregone conclusion that a blank refusal would be persisted in.
+Germany must be aware that the honor of England is now so bound up with
+the complete redemption of Belgium from the German occupation that to
+keep Antwerp and Brussels she must take Portsmouth and London. France is
+no less deeply engaged. You can judge better than I what chance Germany
+now has, or can persuade herself she has, of exhausting or overwhelming
+her western enemies without ruining herself in the attempt. Whatever
+else the war and its horrors may have done or not done, you will agree
+with me that it has made an end of the dreams of military and naval
+steam-rollering in which the whole wretched business began. At a cost
+which the conquest of a whole continent would hardly justify, these
+terrible armaments and the heroic hosts which wield them push one
+another a few miles back and forward in a month, and take and retake
+some miserable village three times over in less than a week. Can you
+doubt that though we have lost all fear of being beaten, (our darkened
+towns, and the panics of our papers, with their endless scares and silly
+inventions, are mere metropolitan hysteria,) we are getting very tired
+of a war in which, having now re-established our old military
+reputation, and taught the Germans that there is no future for their
+empire without our friendship and that of France, we have nothing more
+to gain? In London and Paris and Berlin nobody at present dares say
+"Sirs, ye are brethren; why do ye wrong one to another?"; for the
+slightest disposition toward a Christian view of things is regarded as a
+shooting matter in these capitals; but Washington is still privileged to
+talk common humanity to the nations.
+
+
+*An Advantage of Aloofness.*
+
+Finally, I may remind you of another advantage which your aloofness from
+the conflict gives you. Here, in England and in France, men are going to
+the front every day; their women and children are all within earshot;
+and no man is hard-hearted enough to say the worst that might be said of
+what is going on in Belgium now. We talk to you of Louvain and Rheims in
+the hope of enlisting you on our side or prejudicing you against the
+Germans, forgetting how sorely you must be tempted to say as you look on
+at what we are doing, "Well, if European literature, as represented by
+the library of Louvain, and European religion, as represented by the
+Cathedral of Rheims, have not got us beyond this, in God's name let them
+perish." I am thinking of other things--of the honest Belgians, whom I
+have seen nursing their wounds, and whom I recognize at a glance as
+plain men, innocent of all warlike intentions, trusting to the wisdom
+and honesty of the rulers and diplomatists who have betrayed them, taken
+from their farms and their businesses to destroy and be destroyed for no
+good purpose that might not have been achieved better and sooner by
+neighborly means. I am thinking of the authentic news that no papers
+dare publish, not of the lies that they all publish to divert attention
+from the truth. In America these things can be said without driving
+American mothers and wives mad; here, we have to set our teeth and go
+forward. We cannot be just; we cannot see beyond the range of our guns.
+The roar of the shrapnel deafens us; the black smoke of the howitzer
+blinds us; and what these do to our bodily senses our passions do to our
+imaginations. For justice, we must do as the mediaeval cities did--call
+in a stranger. You are not altogether that to us; but you can look at
+all of us impartially. And you are the spokesman of Western democracy.
+That is why I appeal to you.
+
+G. BERNARD SHAW.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[A] The English newspaper, The Nation, in which Mr. Shaw's letter to the
+President of the United States appeared on Nov. 7, made the following
+comment thereon:
+
+We are glad to publish Mr. Shaw's brilliant appeal to the President of
+the United States, because we believe that when the time for settlement
+arrives, the influence of America will be a powerful, perhaps a
+decisive, factor in obtaining it. We agree, too, with him that while she
+is not likely to respond to an appeal to intervene on the side of the
+Entente or the Alliance, the case of Belgium, the innocent victim of the
+war, is bound to find her in a very different mood. The States are
+already Belgium's almoner; it is only a step further for them to come in
+as her savior. But on a vital point we disagree with Mr. Shaw. His Irish
+mind puts the case with an indifference to which we cannot pretend. We
+have got to save Western Europe from a victory of Prussian militarism,
+as well as to avenge Belgium and set her on her feet again. We regard
+the temper and policy revealed in Germany's violation of Belgium soil
+and her brutalization of the Belgian people as essential to our judgment
+of this war and its end. And we dare not concede an inch to Mr. Shaw's
+"right of way" theory. His distinction between "right of way" and a
+"right of conquest" has no practical effect other than to extinguish the
+rights of small nationalities as against great ones, who alone have the
+power to take a "right of way" when it is refused, and afterward to turn
+it into a right of conquest. Germany's action was not only a breach of
+her own treaty (only revealed within a few hours of its execution), but
+of Article I. of The Hague Convention on the rights of neutral powers:
+
+ "THE TERRITORY OF NEUTRAL POWERS IS INVIOLABLE."
+
+It is not therefore a small thing that Germany has ripped clean through
+the whole fabric of The Hague Conventions of 1907. Could the American
+Government, aware of that fact, address herself to intervention on the
+Belgian question without regard to the breaches of international law
+which were perpetrated, first, through the orignal German invasion of
+Belgium, and then in the conduct of the campaign in that country?
+
+
+
+
+*A German Letter to G. Bernard Shaw*
+
+By Herbert Eulenberg.
+
+ _The following letter from the noted German playwright Eulenberg,
+ whose plays of a decided modern tendency have been presented
+ extensively in Germany and in Vienna, was made public by the German
+ Press Bureau of New York in October_, 1914.
+
+Bernard Shaw: You have addressed us Germans several times of late
+without receiving a reply from us. The reason for this was probably the
+momentary bitterness against your country of our people's intellectual
+representatives. Indeed, our best scholars and artists, Ernst Haeckel at
+81 years, leading the rest, stripped themselves during these past weeks
+of all the honors which England had apportioned them. Permit me as one
+who had the opportunity to do much for the propagation of your dramatic
+works, especially of your finest drama, "Candida," in Western Germany
+and in Holland, to present as quiet and as moderate a retort as is
+possible.
+
+Your appeal to intellectual Germany we reciprocate with a question to
+intellectual England. It is as follows: How is it possible for you to
+witness your country's present unheard of policy (so opposed to culture)
+without rising as one man against it? Do you believe that we thinking
+Germans would ever, without saying or doing anything, observe an
+alliance of our Government, whose goal was the strengthening of
+imperialism and the subjugation and destruction of a cultured power,
+such as France or England? Never! Among your people only a very small
+number of brave scholars protested against this criminal alliance of
+your Government at the beginning of the war. You others, you poets,
+painters, and musicians of present-day England were silent and permitted
+Sir Edward Grey to continue to sin against a people related to you by
+blood and intellect. You raised your voice a little, Bernard Shaw! But
+what did you propose to us: "Refrain from your militarism, my dear
+Germans, and become again the congenial, complacent poets and thinkers,
+the people of Goethe and Beethoven, whom no one hated! Then we will
+surely help you against the bad Russians!"
+
+Is not this proposal a bit too naïve for you, Bernard Shaw? We are
+situated in the midst of Russians and Frenchmen, who have formed an open
+alliance against us for more than twenty years. Our neighbors in the
+East denounce nothing more than us, and our neighbors in the West
+denounce us and plan against us, who have for nearly half a century
+evinced nothing but friendliness toward them. When such enemies surround
+us, does not your friendly counsel, Bernard Shaw, seem as if you said to
+us: "Just let yourself be massacred, Germans! Afterward your British
+cousins will vouchsafe you their protection."
+
+
+*Germany Not Isolated.*
+
+Do you think that we would carry on our militarism and our expensive
+drilling if we lived on an island as you do? We would not think of it.
+We would speedily dispatch a blood-thirsty butcher, like your Lord
+Kitchener, from our island to our most unhealthy colony. We could not
+even reconcile our worthy Dr. Karl Peters, who had dealt a little
+unscrupulously with a few negro women, with our conceptions of culture,
+and had to pass him over to you! But the thought shall not come to me or
+to us, as it does to your Prime Ministers, to pose as angels of light, a
+fact about which you have yourself told your compatriots the bitter
+truth to our great joy. We admit having injured Belgium's neutrality,
+but we have only done it because of dire necessity, because we could not
+otherwise reach France and take up the fight against two sides forced
+upon us. Belgium's independence and freedom, which is suddenly of the
+utmost importance to your King and your Ministers, we have not touched.
+Even after the expeditious capture of Liége we asked Belgium for the
+second time: "Let us pass quickly through your country. We will make
+good every damage, and will not take away a square foot of your country!
+Do destroyers of liberty and Huns and vandals, or whatever other
+defamatory names your English papers now heap upon us, who at the time
+of Beethoven and Schopenhauer formed the Areopagus of culture, conduct
+themselves in such a way? Does not one of your living spirits in England
+cry aloud at the reprehensible alliance which your Government has made
+over your heads with Russia and Japan? On the most shameful day in
+English history, on the day when Mongolian Japan gave the German people
+her ultimatum at the instigation of your politicians, on this, I repeat
+it, most shameful day in the entire English history, I believed that the
+great dead in Westminster Abbey would rise from their graves horrified
+at the shameful deed which their grandsons and great-grandsons imposed
+upon old England.
+
+
+*The Land of Shakespeare.*
+
+We Germans venerated the old England almost as a fatherland. We have
+recognized, understood, and studied Shakespeare, whom you, Bernard Shaw,
+so dislike, more than any other people, even more than the English
+nation itself. Lord Byron received more benefits from Goethe alone than
+from all of England put together. Newton, Darwin, and Adam Smith found
+in Germany their best supporters and interpreters. The dramatic writers
+of latter-day England, most worthy of mention, from Oscar Wilde to you,
+Galsworthy and Knoblauch, are recognized by us and their plays performed
+numberless times. We have always endeavored to understand the English
+character. "Nowhere did we feel so much at home as in Germany," all your
+compatriots will tell you who have been guests here.
+
+In "gratitude" for this our merchants were persecuted for years by your
+merchants, because of a wild hatred for Germans, which, by the way, had
+a most disagreeable effect upon the races of other colors. In
+"gratitude," with but few exceptions which we will not forget, we are
+now abused and belittled by your press before all of Europe and America
+as if we were assassins, vagabonds, enemies of culture and murderers,
+far worse than the Russians. As thanks for that you have entered upon a
+war against us, for which even Sir Edward Grey could not at first give a
+good reason until the injury of Belgium neutrality luckily came to his
+assistance.
+
+Our people are, therefore, now rightly embittered against England
+because through your groundless participation you have made more
+difficult the war against Russia and France, for which one alone, the
+Czar of Russia, bears the blame. But despite this great bitterness they
+would never approve the demolition of your country and your nation,
+because of their respect for your great past and your share in the
+development of culture in Europe. You, however, joined an alliance as a
+third great power, whose only purpose is our dissolution and
+destruction. Merely for reasons of justice and of moral courage a Pitt,
+a Burke, a Disraeli would have withdrawn their participation in such an
+alliance, which--Oh, heroic deed--falls upon the Germans by threes, no,
+by fours or fives. Your present-day statesmen, wholly unworthy of
+representing a people with your past and your inheritance, incite the
+Mongolians and blacks against us, your brother nation. They steal and
+permit our small and insufficiently protected colonies to be stolen and
+no not care a jot for all considerations of Europeans' culture and
+morals.
+
+
+*An Unnatural Russian Alliance.*
+
+England, once the home and the refuge for all free spirits from the days
+of the Inquisition, from Rousseau until Freiligrath and Karl Marx,
+England has allied herself with Russia--the prison and the horror of all
+friends of liberty! Hear ye, hear ye illustrious dead, who lived and
+struggled for the freedom and the greatest possible joy of mankind, and
+shake in your tombs with disgust and with horror! But you living ones,
+and you, Bernard Shaw, the foremost of all English artists, do
+everything in your power to break this terrible alliance and make it
+powerless for England. Much more lies in the balance for her than is
+understood by your present nearsighted politicians, who have in mind
+only the momentary advantages. The destruction of the German power is
+not the only thing in question here; no, it concerns a great part of
+civilized Europe in regard to the suspension of their hard-won political
+liberty; and England, the people of the Magna Charta, the first free
+Constitution, can never be a party to that. That is why we call to you,
+Bernard Shaw, in the name of Europe, and ask you for your voice in the
+struggle.
+
+It is a splendid thing that this serious time has also aroused the
+poets, the thinkers and artists as political and diplomatic advisers,
+and we should not let ourselves be crowded out of this profession, for
+which, thanks to our minds, we are not less fitted than the high-brow
+Lords and Counts. Men of our guild from Thucydides and Herodotus to
+Petrarch and Rubens, and our Humboldt and your Beaconsfield have ever
+shown themselves to be good intermediaries and peace advocates. And
+that, believe me, Bernard Shaw, is of more importance to our people, as
+well as to our Kaiser, who for over twenty-five years has avoided war
+like a poison, than all other bloody laurels. Here's to a decent,
+honorable and "eternal" peace.
+
+HERBERT EULENBERG.
+
+
+
+
+*British Authors Defend England's War*
+
+
+ _One of the most interesting documents brought forth about the war
+ was issued Sept. 17 in London. It was signed by fifty-three of the
+ leading British writers. Herewith are presented the text of their
+ defense of England and their autograph signatures in facsimile._
+
+The undersigned writers, comprising among them men of the most divergent
+political and social views, some of them having been for years ardent
+champions of good-will toward Germany, and many of them extreme
+advocates of peace, are nevertheless agreed that Great Britain could not
+without dishonor have refused to take part in the present war. No one
+can read the full diplomatic correspondence published in the "White
+Paper" without seeing that the British representatives were throughout
+laboring whole-heartedly to preserve the peace of Europe, and that their
+conciliatory efforts were cordially received by both France and Russia.
+
+When these efforts failed Great Britain had still no direct quarrel with
+any power. She was eventually compelled to take up arms because,
+together with France, Germany, and Austria, she had solemnly pledged
+herself to maintain the neutrality of Belgium. As soon as danger to that
+neutrality arose she questioned both France and Germany as to their
+intentions. France immediately renewed her pledge not to violate Belgian
+neutrality; Germany refused to answer, and soon made all answer needless
+by her actions. Without even the pretense of a grievance against Belgium
+she made war on the weak and unoffending country she had undertaken to
+protect, and has since carried out her invasion with a calculated and
+ingenious ferocity which has raised questions other and no less grave
+than that of the willful disregard of treaties.
+
+When Belgium in her dire need appealed to Great Britain to carry out her
+pledge, that country's course was clear. She had either to break faith,
+letting the sanctity of treaties and the rights of small nations count
+for nothing before the threat of naked force, or she had to fight. She
+did not hesitate, and we trust she will not lay down arms till Belgium's
+integrity is restored and her wrongs redressed.
+
+The treaty with Belgium made our duty clear, but many of us feel that,
+even if Belgium had not been involved, it would have been impossible for
+Great Britain to stand aside while France was dragged into war and
+destroyed. To permit the ruin of France would be a crime against liberty
+and civilization. Even those of us who question the wisdom of a policy
+of Continental ententes or alliances refuse to see France struck down by
+a foul blow dealt in violation of a treaty.
+
+We observe that various German apologists, official and semi-official,
+admit that their country had been false to its pledged word, and dwell
+almost with pride on the "frightfulness" of the examples by which it has
+sought to spread terror in Belgium, but they excuse all these
+proceedings by a strange and novel plea. German culture and civilization
+are so superior to those of other nations that all steps taken to assert
+them are more than justified, and the destiny of Germany to be the
+dominating force in Europe and the world is so manifest that ordinary
+rules of morality do not hold in her case, but actions are good or bad
+simply as they help or hinder the accomplishment of that destiny.
+
+These views, inculcated upon the present generation of Germans by many
+celebrated historians and teachers, seem to us both dangerous and
+insane. Many of us have dear friends in Germany, many of us regard
+German culture with the highest respect and gratitude; but we cannot
+admit that any nation has the right by brute force to impose its culture
+upon other nations, nor that the iron military bureaucracy of Prussia
+represents a higher form of human society than the free Constitutions of
+Western Europe.
+
+Whatever the world destiny of Germany may be, we in Great Britain are
+ourselves conscious of a destiny and a duty. That destiny and duty,
+alike for us and for all the English-speaking race, call upon us to
+uphold the rule of common justice between civilized peoples, to defend
+the rights of small nations, and to maintain the free and law-abiding
+ideals of Western Europe against the rule of "Blood and Iron" and the
+domination of the whole Continent by a military caste.
+
+For these reasons and others the undersigned feel bound to support the
+cause of the Allies with all their strength, with a full conviction of
+its righteousness, and with a deep sense of its vital import to the
+future of the world.
+
+[Illustration: Signatures]
+
+[Illustration: Signatures]
+
+
+
+
+*WHO'S WHO AMONG THE SIGNERS.*
+
+WILLIAM ARCHER, dramatic critic and editor of Ibsen's works, author of
+"Life of Macready," "Real Conversations," "The Great Analysis," and
+(with Granville Barker) "A National Theatre."
+
+H. GRANVILLE BARKER, actor, dramatist, and manager, shares with his wife
+management of the Kingsway Theatre, London; author of "The Voysey
+Inheritance," and (with Laurence Housman) "Prunella."
+
+SIR JAMES MATTHEW BARRIE, creator of "Sentimental Tommy" and "Peter
+Pan," famous for his sympathetic studies of Scotch life and his
+fantastic comedies.
+
+HILAIRE BELLOC, best known as a writer on history, politics, and
+economics; a recognized authority on the French Revolution.
+
+ARNOLD BENNETT, author of many popular realistic studies of English
+provincial life, including "Clayhanger" and "Hilda Lessways."
+
+ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER BENSON, chiefly known for "From a College Window,"
+"Beside Still Waters," and other volumes of essays.
+
+EDWARD FREDERIC BENSON, brother of the preceding, author of many novels
+of modern life, including "Dodo."
+
+VERY REV. MONSIGNOR ROBERT HUGH BENSON, the youngest of the three famous
+Benson brothers. Besides numerous devotional and theological works,
+Monsignor Benson has written several widely appreciated historical
+novels.
+
+LAWRENCE BINYON, author of many lyrics and poetic dramas, Assistant
+Keeper in the British Museum, in charge of Oriental Prints and Drawings.
+
+ANDREW CECIL BRADLEY, critic, sometime Professor of Poetry at Oxford
+University, author of a standard work on Shakespeare.
+
+ROBERT BRIDGES, Poet-Laureate. Prominent as a physician before his
+poetry brought him the high honor he now enjoys.
+
+HALL CAINE, one of the most popular of contemporary novelists.
+
+R.C. CARTON, dramatist, author of "Lord and Lady Algy" and "A White
+Elephant."
+
+CHARLES HADDON CHAMBERS, dramatist, author of "John a Dreams," part
+author of "The Fatal Card."
+
+GILBERT K. CHESTERTON, essayist, novelist, poet; defender of orthodox
+thought by unorthodox methods.
+
+HUBERT HENRY DAVIES, dramatist, author of "The Mollusc" and "A Single
+Man."
+
+SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE, creator of "Sherlock Holmes."
+
+HERBERT ALBERT LAURENS FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University,
+author of "The Mediaeval Empire," "Napoleon Bonaparte," and other
+historical works.
+
+JOHN GALSWORTHY, a novelist and dramatist who has come into great
+prominence during the last five years, his plays, "Strife" and
+"Justice," and his novel, "The Dark Flower," being widely known.
+
+ANSTEY GUTHRIE, (F. ANSTEY,) author of "The Brass Bottle," "The Talking
+Horse," and other fantastic and humorous tales.
+
+SIR HENRY RIDER HAGGARD, author of many widely read romances, among them
+being "She."
+
+THOMAS HARDY, generally considered to be the greatest living English
+novelist.
+
+JANE ELLEN HARRISON, sometime Fellow and Lecturer at Newnham College,
+Cambridge University; writer of many standard works on classical
+religion, literature, and life.
+
+ANTHONY HOPE HAWKINS, (ANTHONY HOPE,) author of popular historical
+romance and sketches of modern society, including "The Prisoner of
+Zenda."
+
+MAURICE HEWLETT, poet and romantic novelist, author of "Earthworks Out
+of Tuscany" and other mediaeval tales.
+
+ROBERT HICHENS, novelist, author of "The Garden of Allah," "Bella
+Donna," and other stories.
+
+JEROME K. JEROME, humorist, famous for "Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow"
+and the "Three Men" series, and for his play "The Passing of the Third
+Floor Back."
+
+HENRY ARTHUR JONES, dramatist, author of "The Silver King," "The
+Hypocrites," and other plays.
+
+RUDYARD KIPLING needs no introduction to people who read the English
+language.
+
+WILLIAM J. LOCKE, author of "The Morals of Marcus," "Septimus," and "The
+Beloved Vagabond," which have been made into successful plays.
+
+EDWARD VERRAL LUCAS, associate editor of Punch and editor of several
+popular anthologies, author of "A Wanderer in Holland."
+
+JOHN WILLIAM MACKAIL, Professor of Poetry at Oxford University, author
+and editor of many volumes dealing with ancient Greek and Roman
+literature.
+
+JOHN MASEFIELD, known chiefly for his long poems of life among the
+British poor.
+
+ALFRED EDWARD WOODLEY MASON, writer of romantic novels, of which "The
+Four Feathers" and "The Turnstile" are perhaps the best known, and of
+several popular dramas.
+
+GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek at Oxford University since
+1908, editor and translator of Greek classics, perhaps the greatest
+Greek scholar now living.
+
+HENRY NEWBOLT, "laureate of the British Navy," author of "Drake's Drum"
+and many other songs.
+
+BARRY PAIN, author of "Eliza" and other novels and short stories of
+adventure, of many well-known parodies and poems.
+
+SIR GILBERT PARKER, of Canadian birth, poet and author of romantic
+novels, including "The Judgment House," and "The Right of Way."
+
+EDEN PHILLPOTTS, realistic novelist, noted for his exact portraits of
+the English rustic, author of "Down Dartmoor Way."
+
+SIR ARTHUR WING PINERO, one of the most popular of living dramatists.
+His plays include "Sweet Lavender" and "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray."
+
+SIR ARTHUR QUILLER-COUCH, Professor of English Literature at Cambridge
+University, poet, novelist, and writer of short stories.
+
+SIR OWEN SEAMAN, since 1906 editor of Punch, writer of parodies and
+light verse.
+
+GEORGE R. SIMS, journalist, poet, and author of many popular dramas,
+including "The Lights of London," "Two Little Vagabonds," and "Harbour
+Lights."
+
+MAY SINCLAIR, writer of novels dealing with modern moral problems, "The
+Divine Fire" and "The Combined Maze" being best known.
+
+FLORA ANNIE STEEL, author of "Tales from the Punjab," "On the Face of
+the Waters," "A Prince of Dreamers," and other novels and short stories,
+most of which deal with life in India.
+
+ALFRED SUTRO, dramatist, author of "The Walls of Jericho," "The
+Barrier," and other plays of modern society."
+
+GEORGE MACAULAY TREVELYAN, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge;
+author of "England Under the Stuarts," and other historical and
+biographical works.
+
+RT. HON. GEORGE OTTO TREVELYAN, historian, biographer of Macaulay, and
+author of a four-volume work on the American Revolution.
+
+HUMPHRY WARD, journalist and author, sometime Fellow of Brasenose
+College, editor of several biographical and historical works.
+
+MARY A. WARD, (Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD,) best known of contemporary women
+novelists; her first success was "Robert Elsmere."
+
+H.G. WELLS, novelist, author of "Tono Bungay" and "Ann Veronica."
+
+MARGARET L. WOODS, poet; her "Wild Justice" and "The Invader" have
+placed her in the front rank.
+
+ISRAEL ZANGWILL, novelist, poet, dramatist, interpreter of the modern
+Jewish spirit.
+
+
+
+
+*The Fourth of August--Europe at War*
+
+*By H.G. Wells.*
+
+_Copyright_, 1914, _by The New York Times Company_.
+
+
+Europe is at war!
+
+The monstrous vanity that was begotten by the easy victories of '70 and
+'71 has challenged the world, and Germany prepares to reap the harvest
+Bismarck sowed. That trampling, drilling foolery in the heart of Europe,
+that has arrested civilization and darkened the hopes of mankind for
+forty years. German imperialism, German militarism, has struck its
+inevitable blow. The victory of Germany will mean the permanent
+enthronement of the War God over all human affairs. The defeat of
+Germany may open the way to disarmament and peace throughout the earth.
+
+To those who love peace there can be no other hope in the present
+conflict than the defeat, the utter discrediting of the German legend,
+the ending for good and all of the blood and iron superstition, of
+Krupp, flag-wagging Teutonic Kiplingism, and all that criminal, sham
+efficiency that centres in Berlin. Never was war so righteous as war
+against Germany now. Never has any State in the world so clamored for
+punishment.
+
+But be it remembered that Europe's quarrel is with the German State, not
+with the German people; with a system, and not with a race. The older
+tradition of Germany is a pacific and civilizing tradition. The
+temperament of the mass of German people is kindly, sane, and amiable.
+Disaster to the German Army, if it is unaccompanied by any such
+memorable wrong as dismemberment or intolerable indignity, will mean the
+restoration of the greatest people in Europe to the fellowship of
+Western nations. The role of England in this huge struggle is plain as
+daylight. We have to fight. If only on account of the Luxemburg outrage,
+we have to fight. If we do not fight, England will cease to be a country
+to be proud of; it will be a dirt-bath to escape from. But it is
+inconceivable that we should not fight. And having fought, then in the
+hour of victory it will be for us to save the liberated Germans from
+vindictive treatment, to secure for this great people their right, as
+one united German-speaking State, to a place in the sun.
+
+First we have to save ourselves and Europe, and then we have to stand
+between German on the one hand and the Cossack and revenge on the other.
+
+For my own part, I do not doubt that Germany and Austria are doomed to
+defeat in this war. It may not be catastrophic defeat, though even that
+is possible, but it is defeat. There is no destiny in the stars and
+every sign is false if this is not so.
+
+They have provoked an overwhelming combination of enemies. They have
+underrated France. They are hampered by a bad social and military
+tradition. The German is not naturally a good soldier; he is orderly and
+obedient, but he is not nimble nor quick-witted; since his sole
+considerable military achievement, his not very lengthy march to Paris
+in '70 and '71, the conditions of modern warfare have been almost
+completely revolutionized and in a direction that subordinates the
+massed fighting of unintelligent men to the rapid initiative of
+individualized soldiers. And, on the other hand, since those years of
+disaster, the Frenchman has learned the lesson of humility; he is
+prepared now sombrely for a sombre struggle; his is the gravity that
+precedes astonishing victories. In the air, in the open field, with guns
+and machines, it is doubtful if any one fully realizes the superiority
+of his quality to the German. This sudden attack may take him aback for
+a week or so, though I doubt even that, but in the end I think he will
+hold his own; even without us he will hold his own, and with us then I
+venture to prophesy that within three months from now his tricolor will
+be over the Rhine. And even suppose his line gets broken by the first
+rush. Even then I do not see how the Germans are to get to Paris or
+anywhere near Paris. I do not see how against the strength of the modern
+defensive and the stinging power of an intelligent enemy in retreat, of
+which we had a little foretaste in South Africa, the exploit of Sedan
+can be repeated. A retiring German army, on the other hand, will be far
+less formidable than a retiring French army, because it has less "devil"
+in it, because it is made up of men taught to obey in masses, because
+its intelligence is concentrated in its aristocratic officers, because
+it is dismayed when it breaks ranks. The German Army is everything the
+conscriptionists dreamed of making our people; it is, in fact, an army
+about twenty years behind the requirements of contemporary conditions.
+
+On the eastern frontier the issue is more doubtful because of the
+uncertainty of Russian things. The peculiar military strength of Russia,
+a strength it was not able to display in Manchuria, lies in its vast
+resources of mounted men. A set invasion of Prussia may be a matter of
+many weeks, but the raiding possibilities in Eastern Germany are
+enormous. It is difficult to guess how far the Russian attack will be
+guided by intelligence, and how far Russia will blunder, but Russia will
+have to blunder very disastrously indeed before she can be put upon the
+defensive. A Russian raid is far more likely to threaten Berlin than a
+German to reach Paris.
+
+Meanwhile there is the struggle on the sea. In that I am prepared for
+some rude shocks. The Germans have devoted an amount of energy to the
+creation of an aggressive navy that would have been spent more wisely in
+consolidating their European position. It is probably a thoroughly good
+navy and ship for ship the equal of our own. But the same lack of
+invention, the same relative uncreativeness that has kept the German
+behind the Frenchman in things aerial has made him, regardless of his
+shallow seas, follow our lead in naval matters, and if we have erred,
+and I believe we have erred, in overrating the importance of the big
+battleship, the German has at least very obligingly fallen in with our
+error. The safest, most effective place for the German fleet at the
+present time is the Baltic Sea. On this side of the Kiel Canal, unless I
+overrate the powers of the waterplane, there is no safe harbor for it.
+If it goes into port anywhere that port can be ruined, and the
+bottled-up ships can be destroyed at leisure by aerial bombs. So that if
+they are on this side of the Kiel Canal they must keep the sea and
+fight, if we let them, before their coal runs short. Battle in the open
+sea in this case is their only chance. They will fight against odds, and
+with every prospect of a smashing, albeit we shall certainly have to pay
+for that victory in ships and men. In the Baltic we shall not be able to
+get at them without the participation of Denmark, and they may have a
+considerable use against Russia. But in the end even there mine and
+aeroplane and destroyer should do their work.
+
+So I reckon that Germany will be held east and west, and that she will
+get her fleet practically destroyed. We ought also to be able to sweep
+her shipping off the seas, and lower her flag forever in Africa and Asia
+and the Pacific. All the probabilities, it seems to me, point to that.
+There is no reason why Italy should not stick to her present neutrality,
+and there is considerable inducement close at hand for both Denmark and
+Japan to join in, directly they are convinced of the failure of the
+first big rush on the part of Germany. All these issues will be more or
+less definitely decided within the next two or three months. By that
+time I believe German imperialism will be shattered, and it may be
+possible to anticipate the end of the armaments phase of European
+history. France, Italy, England, and all the smaller powers of Europe
+are now pacific countries; Russia, after this huge war, will be too
+exhausted for further adventure; a shattered Germany will be a
+revolutionary Germany, as sick of uniforms and the imperialist idea as
+France was in 1871, as disillusioned about predominance as Bulgaria is
+today. The way will be open at last for all these western powers to
+organize peace. That is why I, with my declared horror of war, have not
+signed any of these "stop-the-war" appeals and declarations that have
+appeared in the last few days. Every sword that is drawn against Germany
+now is a sword drawn for peace.
+
+
+
+
+*If the Germans Raid England*
+
+*By H.G. Wells.*
+
+*From The Times of London, Oct. 31, 1914.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: At the outset of the war I made a suggestion in your columns for
+the enrollment of all that surplus of manhood and patriotic feeling
+which remains after every man available for systematic military
+operations has been taken. My idea was that comparatively undrilled boys
+and older men, not sound enough for campaigning, armed with rifles, able
+to shoot straight with them, and using local means of transport,
+bicycles, cars, and so forth, would be a quite effective check upon an
+enemy's scouting, a danger to his supplies, and even a force capable of
+holding up a raiding advance--more particularly if that advance was poor
+in horses and artillery, as an overseas raid was likely to be. I
+suggested, too, that the mere enrollment and arming of the population
+would have a powerful educational effect in steadying and unifying the
+spirit of our people. My proposals were received with what seemed even a
+forced amusement by the "experts." I was told that I knew nothing about
+warfare, and that the Germans would not permit us to do anything of the
+sort. The Germans, it seems, are the authorities in these matters, a
+point I had overlooked. They would refuse to recognize men with only
+improvised uniforms, they would shoot their prisoners--not that I had
+proposed that my irregulars should become prisoners--and burn the
+adjacent villages. This seemed to be an entirely adequate reply from the
+point of view of the expert mind, and I gathered that the proper rôle
+for such an able-bodied civilian as myself was to keep indoors while the
+invader was about and supply him as haughtily as possible with light
+refreshments and anything else he chose to requisition. I was also
+reminded that if only men like myself had obeyed their expert advice and
+worked in the past for national service and the general submission of
+everything to expert military direction, these troubles would not have
+arisen. There would have been no surplus of manhood and everything would
+have gone as smoothly and as well for England as--the Press Censorship.
+
+
+*An Improbable Invasion.*
+
+For a time I was silenced. Under war conditions it is always a difficult
+question to determine how far it is better to obey poor, or even bad,
+directions or to criticise them in the hope of getting better. But the
+course of the war since that correspondence and the revival of the idea
+of a raid by your military correspondent provoke me to return to this
+discussion. Frankly, I do not believe in that raid, and I think we play
+the German game in letting our minds dwell upon it. I am supposed to be
+a person of feverish imagination, but even by lashing my imagination to
+its ruddiest I cannot, in these days of wireless telegraphy, see a
+properly equipped German force, not even so trivial a handful as 20,000
+of them, getting itself with guns, motors, ammunition, and provisions
+upon British soil. I cannot even see a mere landing of infantrymen. I
+believe in that raid even less than I do in the suggested raid of
+navigables that has darkened London. I admit the risk of a few aeroplane
+bombs in London, but I do not see why people should be subjected to
+danger, darkness, and inconvenience on account of that one-in-a-million
+risk. Still, as the trained mind does insist upon treating all
+unenlisted civilians as panicstricken imbeciles and upon frightening old
+ladies and influential people with these remote possibilities, and as it
+is likely that these alarms may even lead to the retention of troops in
+England when their point of maximum effectiveness is manifestly in
+France, it becomes necessary to insist upon the ability of our civilian
+population, if only the authorities will permit the small amount of
+organization and preparation needed, to deal quite successfully with any
+raid that in an extremity of German "boldness" may be attempted.
+
+And, in the first place, let the expert have no illusions as to what we
+ordinary people are going to do if we find German soldiers in England
+one morning. We are going to fight. If we cannot fight with rifles, we
+shall fight with shotguns, and if we cannot fight according to rules of
+war apparently made by Germans for the restraint of British military
+experts, we will fight according to our inner light. Many men, and not a
+few women, will turn out to shoot Germans. There will be no preventing
+them after the Belgian stories. If the experts attempt any pedantic
+interference, we will shoot the experts. I know that in this matter I
+speak for so sufficient a number of people that it will be quite useless
+and hopelessly dangerous and foolish for any expert-instructed minority
+to remain "tame." They will get shot, and their houses will be burned
+according to the established German rules and methods on our account, so
+they may just as well turn out in the first place, and get some shooting
+as a consolation in advance for their inevitable troubles. And if the
+raiders, cut off by the sea from their supports, ill-equipped as they
+will certainly be, and against odds, are so badly advised as to try
+terror-striking reprisals on the Belgian pattern, we irregulars will, of
+course, massacre every German straggler we can put a gun to. Naturally.
+Such a procedure may be sanguinary, but it is just the common sense of
+the situation. We shall hang the officers and shoot the men. A German
+raid to England will in fact not be fought--it will be lynched. War is
+war, and reprisals and striking terror are games that two can play at.
+This is the latent temper of the British countryside, and the sooner the
+authorities take it in hand and regularize it the better will be the
+outlook in the remote event of that hypothetical raid getting home to
+us. Levity is a national characteristic, but submissiveness is not.
+Under sufficient provocation the English are capable of very dangerous
+bad temper, and the expert is dreaming who thinks of a German expedition
+moving through an apathetic Essex, for example, resisted only by the
+official forces trained and in training.
+
+And whatever one may think of the possibility of raids, I venture to
+suggest that the time has come when the present exclusive specialization
+of our combatant energy upon the production of regulation armies should
+cease. The gathering of these will go on anyhow; there are unlimited men
+ready for intelligent direction. Now that the shortage of supplies and
+accommodation has been remedied the enlistment sluices need only be
+opened again. The rank and file of this country is its strength; there
+is no need, and there never has been any need, for press hysterics about
+recruiting. But there is wanted a far more vigorous stimulation of the
+manufacture of material--if only experts and rich people would turn
+their minds to that. It is the trading and manufacturing class that
+needs goading at the present time. It is very satisfactory to send
+troops to France, but in France there are still great numbers of
+able-bodied, trained Frenchmen not fully equipped. It is our national
+duty and privilege to be the storehouse and arsenal of the Allies. Our
+factories for clothing and material of all sorts should be working day
+and night. There is the point to which enthusiasm should be turned. It
+is just as heroic and just as useful to the country to kill yourself
+making belts and boots as it is to die in a trench. But our organization
+for the enrollment and utilization of people not in the firing line is
+still amazingly unsatisfactory. The one convenient alternative to
+enlistment as a combatant at present is hospital work. But it is really
+far more urgent to direct enthusiasm and energy now to the production of
+war material. If this war does not end, as all the civilized world hopes
+it will end, in the complete victory of the Allies, our failure will not
+be through any shortage of men, but through a shortage of gear and
+organizing ability. It will not be through a default of the people, but
+through the slackness of the governing class.
+
+
+*Arms and Equipment Needed.*
+
+Now so far as the enrollment of us goes, of the surplus people who are
+willing to be armed and to be used for quasi-military work at home, but
+who are not of an age or not of a physique or who are already in shop or
+office serving some quite useful purpose at home, we want certain very
+simple things from the authorities. We want the military status that is
+conferred by a specific enrollment and some sort of uniform. We want
+accessible arms. They need not be modern service weapons; the rifles of
+ten years ago are quite good enough for the possible need we shall have
+for them. And we want to be sure that in the possible event of an
+invasion the Government will have the decision to give every man in the
+country a military status by at once resorting to the levée en masse.
+Given a recognized local organization and some advice--it would not take
+a week of Gen. Baden-Powell's time, for example, to produce a special
+training book for us--we could set to work upon our own local drill,
+rifle practice, and exercises, in such hours and ways as best suited our
+locality. We could also organize the local transport, list local
+supplies, and arrange for their removal or destruction if threatened.
+Finally, we could set to work to convert a number of ordinary cars into
+fighting cars by reconstructing and armoring them and exercising crews.
+And having developed a discipline and self-respect as a fighting force,
+we should be available not only for fighting work at home, in the
+extremely improbable event of a raid, but also for all kinds of
+supplementary purposes, as a reserve of motor drivers, as a supply of
+physically exercised and half-trained recruits in the events of an
+extended standard, and as a guarantee of national discipline under any
+unexpected stress. Above all, we should be relieving the real fighting
+forces of the country for the decisive area, which is in France and
+Belgium now and will, I hope, be in Westphalia before the Spring.
+
+At present we non-army people are doing only a fraction of what we would
+like to do for our country. We are not being used. We are made to feel
+out of it, and we watch the not always very able proceedings of the
+military authorities and the international mischief-making of the
+Censorship with a bitter resentment that is restrained only by the
+supreme gravity of the crisis. For my own part I entertain three
+Belgians and make a young officer possible by supplementing his
+expenses, and my wife knits things. A neighbor, an able-bodied man of 42
+and an excellent shot, is occasionally permitted to carry a recruit to
+Chelmsford. If I try to use my pen on behalf of my country abroad, where
+I have a few friends and readers, what I write is exposed to the clumsy
+editing and delays of anonymous and apparently irresponsible officials.
+So practically I am doing nothing, and a great number of people are
+doing very little more. The authorities are concentrated upon the
+creation of an army numerically vast, and for the rest they seem to
+think that the chief function of government is inhibition. Their
+available energy and ability is taxed to the utmost in maintaining the
+fighting line, and it is sheer greed for direction that has led to their
+systematic thwarting of civilian co-operation. Let me warn them of the
+boredom and irritation they are causing. This is a people's war, a war
+against militarism; it is not a war for the greater glory of British
+diplomatists, officials, and people in uniforms. It is our war, not
+their war, and the last thing we intend to result from it is a
+permanently increased importance for the military caste.
+
+Yours very sincerely,
+
+H.G. WELLS.
+
+
+
+
+*Sir Oliver Lodge's Comment*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: In a strikingly vigorous letter Mr. H.G. Wells claims that a nation
+of which every individual prefers death to submission is unconquerable
+and cannot be successfully invaded. Ways of hampering an army are too
+numerous, if people are willing to run every risk, not only for
+themselves but for those dependent on them.
+
+This may be admitted. And we may also agree that the British race would
+be likely to risk everything if the consequences of carefully engendered
+hate were loosed upon us. But here comes a point worthy of
+consideration. An invasion of England is, to say the least, unlikely; an
+invasion of Germany may soon have to be undertaken. May it not add to
+the difficulties of our troops if a policy of "arming every woman,
+child, and cat and dog" is favorably regarded by us? Is not such a
+policy a sort of left-handed outcome of the Prussian contention that
+even their own unarmed civilian populace is contemptible and may be
+slaughtered without mercy if military procedure is resisted, or even if
+supplies are not forthcoming?
+
+It will be difficult, and I hope impossible, for the Allies to act in
+accordance with this latter view; though the German peasantry may have
+been so fed with lies that it will be unable to believe that our
+soldiers can be trusted to behave like civilized beings when the time
+has come for a forward march. It is clear that riotous license is
+subversive of discipline, and conduces to defeat--as it probably has in
+recent Continental experience. For, although ancient warriors used to
+ravage a country, and although women have occasionally intervened in
+order to stop a battle, surely never before in the history of the world
+have women and children been forced forward in defense of a fighting
+line! Yet undoubtedly war can be so conducted that foes mutually respect
+each other; indeed, save for the cowardly abomination of floating mines,
+this present war has been so conducted at sea. I suggest that the fair
+procedure in case of invasion is for each civilian to choose whether to
+be a combatant or not, and to incur the danger of an affirmative choice
+in a sufficiently conspicuous and permanent manner. I am, Sir,
+faithfully yours,
+
+*OLIVER LODGE,* The University, Birmingham, Oct. 31.
+
+
+
+
+*What the German Conscript Thinks*
+
+*By Arnold Bennett.*
+
+_Copyright_, 1914, _by The New York Times Company_.
+
+
+Some hold that this is a war of Prussian militarism, and not a war of
+the German people. This view has the merits of kindliness and
+convenience. Others warn us not to be misled by such sentimentalists,
+and assert that the heart of the German people is in the war. The point
+is of importance to us, because the work of the conscript in the field
+must be influenced by his private feelings. Notwithstanding all drill
+and sergeantry, the German Army remains a collection of human
+beings--and human beings more learned, if not better educated, than our
+own race! It is not a mere fighting machine, despite the efforts of its
+leaders to make it into one.
+
+Among those who assert that the heart of the German people is in the war
+are impartial and experienced observers who have carefully studied
+Germany for many years. For myself, I give little value to their
+evidence. To come at the truth by observation about a foreign country is
+immensely, overpoweringly difficult. I am a professional observer: I
+have lived in Paris and in the French provinces for nine years; I am
+fairly familiar with French literature and very familiar with the French
+language--and I honestly would not trust myself to write even a shilling
+handbook about French character and life. Nearly all newspapers are
+conservative; nearly all foreign correspondents adopt the official or
+conventional point of view; and the pictures of foreign life which get
+into the press are, as a rule--shall I say incomplete?
+
+Even when the honest observer says, "These things I saw with my own eyes
+and will vouch for," I am not convinced that he saw enough. An
+intelligent foreigner with first-class introductions might go through
+England and see with his own eyes that England was longing for
+protection, the death of home rule, and the repeal of the Insurance act.
+The unfortunate Prince Lichnowsky, after an exhaustive inquiry and
+access to the most secret sources of exclusive information telegraphed
+to the Kaiser less than a month ago that civil war was an immediate
+certainty throughout Ireland. Astounding fatuity? Not at all. English
+observers of England have made, and constantly do make, mistakes equally
+prodigious. See Hansard every month. So that when I read demonstrations
+of the thesis that the heart of the German people is in the war, I am
+not greatly affected by them.
+
+
+*German Heart Is In the War.*
+
+Still, I do myself believe that the heart of the German people is in the
+war, and that that heart is governed by two motives--the motive of
+self-defense against Russia and the motive of overbearing
+self-aggrandizement. I do not base my opinion on phenomena which I have
+observed. Beyond an automobile journey through Schleswig-Holstein, which
+was formidably tedious, and a yacht journey through the Kiel Canal and
+Kiel Bay, which was somewhat impressive, I have never traveled in
+Germany at all. I base my opinion on general principles. In a highly
+educated and civilized country such as Germany (the word "civilized"
+must soon take on a new significance!) it is impossible that an
+autocracy, even a military autocracy, could exist unrooted in the
+people. "Prussian militarism" may annoy many Germans, but it pleases
+more than it annoys, and there can be few Germans who are not flattered
+by it. That the lower classes have an even more tremendous grievance
+against the upper classes in Germany than in England or France is a
+certitude. But the existence and power of the army are their reward,
+their sole reward, for all that they have suffered in hardship and
+humiliation at the hands of the autocracy. It is the autocracy's bribe
+and sweetmeat to them.
+
+The Germans are a great nation; they have admirable qualities, but they
+have also defects, and among their defects is a clumsy arrogance, which
+may be noticed in any international hotel frequented by Germans. It is a
+racial defect, and to try to limit it to the military autocracy is
+absurd. An educated and civilized nation has roughly the Government that
+it wants and deserves. And it has in the end ways of imposing itself on
+its apparent rulers that are more effective than the ballot box or the
+barricade, and just as sure. No election was needed to prove to the
+Italian Government that Italy did not want to fight for the Triple
+Alliance, and would not fight for it. The fact was known; it was
+immanent in the air, beyond all arguments and persuasions. Italy
+breathed a negative, and war was not. So in Germany the mass of Germans
+have for years breathed war, and war is. The war may be autocratic,
+dynastic, what you will; but it is also national, and it symbolizes the
+national defect.
+
+
+*How About the Leaders?*
+
+Does the German conscript believe in the efficacy of his leaders? I mean
+when he is lying awake and fatigued at night, not when he is shouting
+"Hoch!" or watching the demeanor of women in front of him. Does no doubt
+ever lancinate him? Again I would answer the question from general
+principles and not from observation. The German conscript must know what
+everybody knows--that in almost every bully there is a coward. And he
+must know that he is led by bullies. He learned that in the barrack
+yard. An enormous number of conscripts must also know that there is
+something seriously wrong with a system that for the sake of its own
+existence has killed freedom of the press. And the million little things
+that are wrong in the system he also knows out of his own daily life as
+a conscript. Further, he must be aware that there is a dearth of really
+great men in his system. In the past there were in Germany men great
+enough to mesmerize Europe--Bismarck and von Moltke. There is none today
+that appeals to the popular imagination as Kitchener does in England or
+Joffre in France. Alone, in Germany, the Kaiser has been able to achieve
+a Continental renown. The Kaiser has good qualities. But twenty-four
+years ago he committed an act of folly and (one may say) "bad form"
+which nothing but results could justify, and which results have not
+justified. Whatever his good qualities may be it is an absolute
+certainty that common sense, foresight, and mental balance are not among
+them. The conscript feels that, if he does not state it clearly to
+himself. And as for the military organization of which the Kaiser is the
+figurehead, it has shown for many years past precisely those signs which
+history teaches us are signs of decay. It has not withstood the fearful
+ordeal of success. Just lately, if not earlier, the conscript must have
+felt that, too.
+
+What is the conclusion? Take the average conscript, the member of the
+lower middle class. He is accustomed to think politically, because at
+least fifty out of every hundred of him are professed Socialists with a
+definite and bitter political programme against certain manifestations
+of the autocracy. (It is calculated that two-fifths of the entire army
+is Socialist.) He may not argue very closely while in the act of war;
+indeed, he could not. But enormous experience is accumulated in his
+subconsciousness--experience of bullying and cowardice, of humiliation,
+of injustice, of lying, and of his own most secret shortcomings--for he,
+too, is somewhat of the bully, out for self-aggrandisement as well as
+for self-defense, and his conscience privately tells him so. The
+organization is still colossal, magnificent, terrific. In the general
+fever of activity he persuades himself that nothing can withstand the
+organization; but at the height of some hand-to-hand crisis, when
+one-hundredth of a dogged grain of obstinacy will turn the scale, he may
+remember an insult from an incompetent officer, or the protectionism at
+home which puts meat beyond his purse in order to enrich the landowner,
+or even the quite penal legislation of the autocracy against the
+co-operative societies of the poor, and the memory (in spite of him) may
+decide a battle. Men think of odd matters in a battle, and it is a
+scientific certainty that, at the supreme pinch, the subconscious must
+react.
+
+
+
+
+*Felix Adler's Comment*
+
+*From The Standard, Oct. 14, 1914.*
+
+
+Apropos of a recent article by Mr. Arnold Bennett, wherein he speaks of
+the resentment which the German soldiers--two-fifths of them
+Socialists--must feel against the bullying discipline to which they have
+been subjected, the following reflections are jotted down. The reader
+who is interested in pursuing the subject further may profitably consult
+a book entitled "Imperial Germany," by Prince von Bülow, which contains
+some penetrating observations on the workings of the German mind, as
+well as the chapter on Germany in Alfred Fouillée's notable work,
+"Esquisse Psychologique des Peuples Européens."
+
+The precision which characterizes the operations of the German military
+machine is due to the German notion of discipline. Discipline in Germany
+is based on the peculiar place assigned to the expert. Military experts
+exercise in their branch an authority different in degree but not in
+kind from that belonging to experts in other departments--strategy,
+tactics, improvements of armament, methods of mobilization. The inexpert
+soldier submits to the military expert as a person about to undergo a
+necessary operation would submit to a surgeon. It is a mistake to
+suppose that the Germans, a highly intelligent and educated people, are
+being cowed into submission by brutal non-commissioned officers.
+Brutality, when it occurs, is looked upon as exceptional and incidental
+to a system on the whole approved. The Germans would never tolerate the
+severe discipline to which they are subjected did they not willingly
+submit to it. They regard a highly efficient army as necessary to the
+safety of the Fatherland, and they are willing to leave the
+responsibility for the means of securing efficiency to the experts.
+During the Franco-German war, when a student in the University of
+Berlin, I talked with some of the brightest of the younger men about
+their military obligations, and I found that they took precisely the
+view just stated. The Pomeranian peasant may submit to military
+dictation in a dull, half-instinctive fashion. The flower and élite of
+German intelligence submit to it no less--from conviction.
+
+How shall we account for the unique predominance of the expert in German
+life? The explanation would seem to lie in the phrase invented by a
+brilliant writer of the last century, "Deutschland ist Hamlet" (Germany
+is Hamlet). The Germans are a resolute people--not at all, as has been
+erroneously supposed, a nation of dreamers--just as Hamlet, according to
+recent criticism, was essentially of a resolute character. In the days
+of the Hansa and of the Hohenstaufen the Germans cut a great figure in
+oversea commerce and in war. They were great doers of deeds. The Germans
+are intensely volitional, but also intensely intellectual. Hence the
+native hue of resolution has sometimes been sicklied o'er by too much
+thinking. The intellect of the German refuses to sanction action until
+the successive steps to be taken have been worked out with logical
+accuracy, and a scientific groove, so to speak, has been hollowed out
+along which action can proceed. As soon as this is accomplished, the
+flood of volitional impulse enters gladly into the channel prepared for
+it and moves on in it with irresistible force. Bismarck represents the
+active side, as the eminent philosophers of the German people represent
+the side of logical construction. The two sides must be taken together
+to understand German history and the tendencies prevailing in Germany
+today.
+
+Underneath it all, of course, is German sentiment, but of this we need
+take no account in discussing German discipline, except in so far as
+love for the Fatherland enters in to sustain the patience of the people
+under the burden of their military establishment.
+
+Discipline, or the subordination of the inexpert to the expert, likewise
+accounts for certain peculiarities of the German political parties.
+Prince von Bülow mentions three examples of supremely efficient
+organization--the Prussian Army, the Roman Catholic hierarchy, and the
+German Social Democracy. There are some 4,200 Socialist associations,
+subject to the orders of forty-two district associations, these in turn
+being ruled by the Central Committee. The working of the Social
+Democratic machine is almost flawless. The discipline, it is said, is
+iron.
+
+Again, the conception of Government in Germany, unlike that which
+prevails in England, France, or America, is determined by the idea of
+expertness. The Government is the political expert par excellence. Its
+business is to study the interests of the State as a whole. In all
+matters of economic theory, of finance, of administration, of social
+reform, it invokes the advice of specialists. But it is itself the
+supreme political specialist. It stands high above all the political
+parties. It does not depend for its existence on majorities in
+Parliament. It seeks the co-operation of Parliament, but reserves to
+itself the right of initiative and leadership.
+
+The object of the above remarks is to explain, not to justify, and in
+the face of much uninstructed criticism to point out the deep sources in
+the nature of the German people from which spring the influences that
+have molded their life. The chief objections to their system may be
+summarized in the statements, that it takes too little account of the
+value of the inexpert; that it tends to suppress latent spontaneity;
+and, especially in the sphere of government, that it ascribes to the
+expert a knowledge of the needs of the people such as no ruling class
+can ever possess. And it overlooks the highest aim of political life and
+activity, which is the education of the inexpert to such a point that
+they may become more or less expert in understanding and promoting the
+public weal.
+
+FELIX ADLER.
+
+[Illustration: MAURICE MAETERLINCK. _See Page_ 144]
+
+[Illustration: EMILE BOUTROUX. _(Photo from Bain News Service.) See Page
+160_]
+
+
+
+
+*When Peace Is Seriously Desired*
+
+*By Arnold Bennett.*
+
+*From The Daily News of London.*
+
+
+When peace is seriously desired in any quarter, the questions to be
+discussed by the plenipotentaries will fall into three groups:
+
+1. Those which affect all Europe.
+
+2. Those which chiefly affect Western Europe.
+
+3. Those which chiefly affect Eastern Europe.
+
+The first group is, of course, the most important, both practically and
+sentimentally. And the main question in it is the question of Belgium.
+The original cause of the war was Germany's deliberate and advertised
+bellicosity, and it might be thought that the first aim of peace would
+be by some means to extinguish that bellicosity. But relative values may
+change during the progress of a war, and the question of Belgium--which
+means the question of the sanction of international pledges--now stands
+higher in the general view than the question of disarmament. Germany has
+outraged the public law of Europe, and she has followed up her outrage
+with a series of the most cowardly and wanton crimes. She ought to pay,
+and she ought to apologize. Only by German payment and German apology
+can international law be vindicated. Germany should pay a sum large
+enough to do everything that money can do toward the re-establishment of
+Belgium's well-being. I have no competence to suggest the amount of the
+indemnity. A hundred million pounds does not appear to me too large.
+
+Then the apology. It may be asked: Why an apology? Would not an apology
+be implied in the payment of an indemnity?
+
+It is undeniable that Germany is now directed by hysteric stupidity
+wielding a bludgeon. Granted, if you will, that half the nation is at
+heart against the stupidity and the bludgeon. So much the worse for the
+half. Citizens who have not had the wit to get rid of the Prussian
+franchise law must accept all the consequences of their political
+ineffectiveness. The peacemakers will not be able to divide Germany into
+two halves.
+
+For Potsdam a first-rate spectacular effect is needed, and that effect
+would best be produced by a German national apology carried by a
+diplomatic mission with ceremony to Brussels and published in all German
+official papers, and emphasized by a procession of Belgian troops down
+Unter den Linden. This visible abasement of German arms in front of the
+Socialists of Berlin would be an invaluable aid to the breaking of
+military tyranny in Prussia.
+
+So much for the Belgium question and the sanction of international
+pledges. The other question affecting the whole of Europe is the hope of
+a universal limitation of armaments. But there is a particular question,
+touching France, which in practice would come before that. I mean
+Alsace-Lorraine. Unless Germany conquers Europe, Alsace-Lorraine should
+be restored to France. A profound national sentiment, to which all
+conceivable considerations of expediency or ultimate advantage are
+unimportant, demands imperatively the return of the plunder. And in the
+councils of the Allies, either alone or with German representatives, the
+attitude of French diplomacy would be: "Is it clear about
+Alsace-Lorraine? If so, we may proceed. If not, it's no use going any
+further."
+
+
+*Question of Armaments.*
+
+We now come to armaments. I have seen it suggested that the destruction
+of Essen, Wilhelmshaven, and Heligoland ought to be a condition of peace
+with Germany. Certainly the disappearance of these phenomena would be a
+gain to the world. So would the disappearance of Rosyth and Toulon. It
+seems to me, however, very improbable that their destruction or
+dismantling by international command would occur after hostilities have
+ceased, or could usefully so occur. If the French Army on its way to
+Berlin can treat the Krupp factory as the German Army on its way to
+Paris treated Rheims Cathedral, well and good! In fact, most excellent!
+And if the British Navy can somehow emasculate Wilhelmshaven and
+Heligoland I shall not complain that its behavior has been purely
+doctrinaire. But otherwise I see nothing practical in the
+Essen-Wilhelmshaven-Heligoland suggestion. Nor in the project for
+dethroning the Kaiser and sending him and his eldest son to settle their
+differences in St. Helena! The Kaiser--happily--is not a Napoleon, nor
+has he yet himself accomplished anything big enough or base enough to
+merit Napoleon's fate. Any dethroning that may enliven the gray monotony
+of the post-bellum era at Potsdam should and will be done by the German
+soldiers themselves. Even in international politics it is futile to try
+to meddle in other people's private affairs.
+
+Disarmament in Germany can be achieved by the exercise of one principle,
+and one principle only. That principle is the principle of mutuality. A
+scheme in which every nation will proportionately share should be
+presented to Germany, and she should be respectfully but quite firmly
+asked to participate in it. There would be no sense in saying to
+Germany: "You must disarm." The magic words would be: "We are going to
+disarm, and so are you, whether you want to or not." As to the procedure
+of disarmament--whether it shall be slow or fast, whether it shall
+include destruction or be content with mere omission to renew, how the
+proportions shall be decided, who shall give the signal to begin--here
+are matters which I am without skill or desire to discuss. All I know
+about them is that they are horribly complicated, unprecedentedly
+difficult, and bursting with danger; and that they will strain the
+wisdom, patience, and ingenuity of the negotiators to the very utmost.
+
+
+*Three Vital Points.*
+
+Compared to disarmament, all remaining questions whatsoever affecting
+peace are simple and secondary. Indemnities for France or Russia, or
+both, a Polish Kingdom, a Balkan United States, the precise number of
+nations into which Austria-Hungary is to be shattered, the ownership of
+the east coast of the Adriatic, even the reparation of the infamy by
+which Denmark was robbed of Schleswig-Holstein--what are these but
+favorable ground for the art of compromise? The vital points, at any
+rate for us Westerners, are only three: Belgium, Alsace-Lorraine, and
+disarmament. * * * Stay, there is another. It is vital to Great
+Britain's reputation that she should accept nothing--neither indemnity,
+nor colonies; not a single pound, not a single square mile.
+
+Many persons, I gather, find it hard to believe that Prussia will ever
+admit that she is beaten or consent to her own humiliation. Naturally
+her conduct will depend upon the degree to which she is beaten. She has
+admitted defeat and swallowed the leek before, though it is a long time
+ago. Meanwhile she has forgotten, and her opponents seem to have
+forgotten also, that though her name is Prussia she is subject to the
+limitations of the human race. Out of her prodigious score off little
+Denmark, her thrashing of Austria--a country which never wins a war--and
+her victory over France, there grew a legend that Prussia, and therefore
+Germany, was not as other nations. This legend is contrary to fact.
+Every nation must yield to force--here, indeed, is Germany's
+contribution to our common knowledge.
+
+If in July, 1870, it had been prophesied that France would give up
+Alsace-Lorraine and pay two hundred millions to get rid of a foreign
+army of occupation, France would have protested that she would fight to
+the last man and to the last franc first. But nations don't do these
+things. If Germany won the present war and fulfilled her dream of
+establishing an army in this island, we should yield, and we should
+submit to her terms, we who have never been beaten save by our own
+colonies--that is a scientific certainty. And Germany's terms would not
+be amusing; in their terribleness they would outrun our poor Anglo-Saxon
+imagination. Similarly, if Germany is beaten, she will bow the head, and
+to precisely the extent to which she is walloped. We need not worry
+about that. Were she recalcitrant we need not even murmur in her ear:
+"What would you have extorted if you'd won?" A gesture of the still
+uplifted sword would suffice to convince her that facts are facts.
+
+Assuming that the tide turns not again, the chances of a thorough,
+workmanlike common sense peace can only be imperiled by one thing--the
+deep desire of France and of Belgium for repose and recuperation. We in
+England do not know what war is. We have not lived in hell. Our plains
+have not been devastated, nor our women and children shot, nor our ears
+deafened by the boom of cannon, nor our cathedrals shelled, nor our land
+turned into a vast and bloody hospital; and we have not experienced the
+appalling terror and shame of the foe's absolute dominion in our streets
+and lanes. We have suffered; we shall suffer; but our suffering is
+nought and less than nought weighed against the suffering on the
+Continent. Why, in the midst of a war of unparalleled horror, we grumble
+if a train is late! We can talk calmly of fighting Germany to a
+stand-still, even if the job takes two years, and it behooves us to talk
+so, and to prepare for the task; and for myself I am convinced that we
+could make good the word. But France and Belgium will not use that tone,
+if Russia does. Once the German armies are across the frontiers, the
+instinctive pressure in favor of peace would be enormous, and
+considerations of the distant future, of the welfare of our descendants
+and the progress of mankind, would count little in the scale. In that
+moment, if it happily comes, our part and Russia's would be to sustain
+and encourage and salve the supreme victims of fate. A tremendous factor
+in our favor would be the exhaustion of Germany; and the measure of our
+power and of the fear we inspire is the furious intensity of Germany's
+anger against our inconvenient selves. Without us the war could not last
+beyond the end of this year, and the peace would be unsatisfactory.
+
+And even with us, insisting on our own terms of reconciliation, I do not
+see how it can last over six months more on anything like the present
+scale, for the Kaiser, despite his kinship with Deity, can neither
+create men nor extract gold coins out of an empty hat. Military
+arguments, in Germany as elsewhere, hold good only for a certain period.
+
+
+
+
+*Barrie at Bay: Which Was Brown?*
+
+
+*An Interview on the War.*
+
+*From The New York Times, Oct. 1, 1914.*
+
+
+As our reporter entered Sir James Barrie's hotel room by one door, the
+next door softly closed. "I was alone," writes our reporter. "I sprang
+into the corridor and had just time to see him fling himself down the
+elevator. Then I understood what he had meant when he said on the
+telephone that he would be ready for me at 10:30.
+
+I returned thoughtfully to the room, where I found myself no longer
+alone. Sir James Barrie's "man" was there; a stolid Londoner, name of
+Brown, who told me he was visiting America for the first time.
+
+"Sir James is very sorry, but has been called away," he assured me
+without moving a muscle. Then he added: "But this is the pipe," and he
+placed a pipe of the largest size on the table.
+
+"The pipe he smokes?" I asked.
+
+Brown is evidently a very truthful man, for he hesitated. "That is the
+interview pipe," he explained. "When we decided to come to America, Sir
+James said he would have to be interviewed, and that it would be wise to
+bring something with us for the interviewers to take notice of. So he
+told me to buy the biggest pipe I could find, and he practiced holding
+it in his mouth in his cabin on the way across. He is very pleased with
+the way the gentlemen of the press have taken notice of it."
+
+"So that is not the pipe he really smokes?" I said, perceiving I was on
+the verge of a grand discovery. "I suppose he actually smokes an
+ordinary small pipe."
+
+Again Brown hesitated, but again truth prevailed.
+
+"He does not smoke any pipe," he said, "nor cigars, nor cigarettes; he
+never smokes at all; he just puts that one in his mouth to help the
+interviewers."
+
+"It has the appearance of having been smoked," I pointed out.
+
+"I blackened it for him," the faithful fellow replied.
+
+"But he has written a book in praise of My Lady Nicotine."
+
+"So I have heard," Brown said guardedly. "I think that was when he was
+hard up and had to write what people wanted; but he never could abide
+smoking himself. Years after he wrote the book he read it; he had quite
+forgotten it, and he was so attracted by what it said about the delights
+of tobacco that he tried a cigarette. But it was no good; the mere smell
+disgusted him."
+
+
+*Strange Forgetfulness.*
+
+"Odd that he should forget his own book," I said.
+
+"He forgets them all," said Brown. "There is this Peter Pan foolishness,
+for instance. I have heard people talking to him about that play and
+mentioning parts in it they liked, and he tried to edge them off the
+subject; they think it is his shyness, but I know it is because he has
+forgotten the bits they are speaking about. Before strangers call on him
+I have seen him reading one of his own books hurriedly, so as to be able
+to talk about it if that is their wish. But he gets mixed up, and thinks
+that the little minister was married to Wendy."
+
+"Almost looks as if he hadn't written his own works," I said.
+
+"Almost," Brown admitted uncomfortably.
+
+I asked a leading question. "You don't suppose," I said, "that any one
+writes them for him? Such things have been. You don't write them for him
+by any chance, just as you blackened the pipe, you know?"
+
+Brown assured me stolidly that he did not. Suddenly, whether to get away
+from a troublesome subject I cannot say, he vouchsafed me a startling
+piece of information. "The German Kaiser was on our boat coming across,"
+he said.
+
+"Sure?" I asked, wetting my pencil.
+
+He told me he had Sir James's word for it. There was on board, it seems,
+a very small, shrunken gentleman with a pronounced waist and tiny,
+turned-up mustache, who strutted along the deck trying to look fierce
+and got in the other passengers' way to their annoyance until Sir James
+discovered that he was the Kaiser Reduced to Life Size. After that Sir
+James liked to sit with him and talk to him.
+
+Sir James is a great admirer of the Kaiser, though he has not, like Mr.
+Carnegie, had the pleasure of meeting him in society. When he read in
+the papers on arriving here that the Kaiser had wept over the
+destruction of Louvain, he told Brown a story. It was of a friend who
+had gone to an oculist to be cured of some disease in one eye. Years
+afterward he heard that the oculist's son had been killed in some Indian
+war, and he called on the oculist to commiserate with him.
+
+"You cured my eye," he said to him, "and when I read of your loss I wept
+for you, Sir; I wept for you with that eye."
+
+"Sir James," Brown explained, "is of a very sympathetic nature, and he
+wondered which eye it was that the Kaiser wept with."
+
+I asked Brown what his own views were about the war, and before replying
+he pulled a paper from his pocket and scanned it. "We are strictly
+neutral," he then replied.
+
+"Is that what is written on the paper?" I asked. He admitted that Sir
+James had written out for him the correct replies to possible questions.
+"Why was he neutral?" I asked, and he again found the reply on the piece
+of paper: "Because it is the President's wish."
+
+
+*Brown Must Be Neutral.*
+
+So anxious, I discovered, is Sir James to follow the President's bidding
+that he has enjoined Brown to be neutral on all other subjects besides
+the war; to express no preference on matters of food, for instance, and
+always to eat oysters and clams alternately, so that there can be no
+ill-feeling. Also to walk in the middle of the streets lest he should
+seem to be favoring either sidewalk, and to be very cautious about
+admitting that one building in New York is higher than another. I
+assured him that the Woolworth Building was the highest, but he replied
+politely, "that he was sure the President would prefer him to remain
+neutral." I naturally asked if Sir James had given him any further
+instructions as to proper behavior in America, and it seems that he had
+done so. They amount, I gather, to this, that Americans have a sense of
+humor which they employ, when they can, to the visitor's undoing.
+
+"When we reach New York," Sir James seems to have told Brown in effect,
+"we shall be met by reporters who will pretend that America is eager to
+be instructed by us as to the causes and progress of the war; then, if
+we are fools enough to think that America cannot make up its mind for
+itself, we shall fall into the trap and preach to them, and all the time
+they are taking down our observations they will be saying to themselves,
+'Pompous asses.'
+
+"It is a sort of game between us and the reporters. Our aim is to make
+them think we are bigger than we are, and theirs is to make us smaller
+than we are; and any chance we have of succeeding is to hold our
+tongues, while they will probably succeed if they make us jabber. Above
+all, oh, Brown, if you write to the papers giving your views of why we
+are at war--and if you don't you will be the only person who
+hasn't--don't be lured into slinging vulgar abuse at our opponents, lest
+America takes you for another university professor."
+
+There is, I learned, only one person in America about whom it is
+impossible, even in Sir James's opinion, to preserve a neutral attitude.
+This is the German Ambassador, whose splendid work for England day by
+day and in every paper and to all reporters cannot, Sir James thinks, be
+too cordially recognized. Brown has been told to look upon the German
+Ambasador as England's greatest asset in America just now, and to hope
+heartily that he will be long spared to carry on his admirable work.
+
+Lastly, it was pleasant to find that Brown has not a spark of sympathy
+with those who say that, because Germany has destroyed art treasures in
+Belgium and France, the Allies should retaliate with similar rudeness if
+they reach Berlin. He holds that if for any reason best known to
+themselves (such as the wish for a sunnier location) the Hohenzollerns
+should by and by vacate their present residence, a nice villa should be
+provided for them, and that all the ancestral statues in the
+Sieges-Allee should be conveyed to it intact, and perhaps put up in the
+back garden. There the Junkers could drop in of an evening, on their way
+home from their offices, and chat pleasantly of old times. Brown thinks
+they should be allowed to retain all their iron crosses, and even given
+some more, with which, after smart use of their pocket combs, they would
+cut no end of a dash among the nursemaids.
+
+As for the pipe, I was informed that it had now done its work, and I
+could take it away as a keepsake. I took it, but wondered afterward at
+Brown's thinking he had the right to give it me.
+
+A disquieting feeling has since come over me that perhaps it was Sir
+James I had been interviewing all the time, and Brown who had escaped
+down the elevator.
+
+
+
+
+*A "Credo" for Keeping Faith*
+
+*By John Galsworthy.*
+
+
+I believe in peace with all my heart. I believe that war is outrage--a
+black stain on the humanity and the fame of man. I hate militarism and
+the god of force. I would go any length to avoid war for material
+interests, war that involved no principles, distrusting profoundly the
+common meaning of the phrase "national honor."
+
+But I believe there is a national honor charged with the future
+happiness of man, that loyalty is due from those living to those that
+will come after; that civilization can only wax and flourish in a world
+where faith is kept; that for nations, as for individuals, there are
+laws of duty, whose violation harms the whole human race; in sum, that
+stars of conduct shine for peoples, as for private men.
+
+And so I hold that without tarnishing true honor, endangering
+civilization present and to come, and ruining all hope of future
+tranquillity, my country could not have refused to take up arms for the
+defense of Belgium's outraged neutrality, solemnly guaranteed by herself
+and France.
+
+I believe, and claim in proof, the trend of events and of national
+character during the last century, that in democracy alone lies any
+coherent hope of progressive civilization or any chance of lasting peace
+in Europe, or the world.
+
+I believe that this democratic principle, however imperfectly developed,
+has so worked in France, in England, in the United States, that these
+countries are already nearly safe from inclination to aggress, or to
+subdue other nationalities.
+
+And I believe that while there remain autocratic Governments basing
+themselves on militarism, bitterly hostile to the democratic principle,
+Europe will never be free of the surcharge of swollen armaments, the
+nightmare menace of wars like this--the paralysis that creeps on
+civilizations which adore the god of force.
+
+And so I hold that, without betrayal of trusteeship, without shirking
+the elementary defense of beliefs coiled within its fibre, or beliefs
+vital to the future welfare of all men, my country could not stand by
+and see the triumph of autocratic militarism over France, that very
+cradle of democracy.
+
+I believe that democratic culture spreads from west to east, that only
+by maintenance of consolidate democracy in Western Europe can democracy
+ever hope to push on and prevail till the Eastern powers have also that
+ideal under which alone humanity can flourish.
+
+And so I hold that my country is justified at this juncture in its
+alliance with the autocratic power of Russia, whose people will never
+know freedom till her borders are joined to the borders of democracy.
+
+I do not believe that jealous, frightened jingoism has ever been more
+than the dirty fringe of England's peace-loving temper, and I profess my
+sacred faith that my country has gone to war at last, not from fear, not
+from hope of aggrandizement, but because she must--for honor, for
+democracy, and for the future of mankind.
+
+
+
+
+*Hard Blows, Not Hard Words*
+
+*By Jerome K. Jerome.*
+
+*From The London Daily News.*
+
+
+In one of Shaw's plays--I think it is "Superman"--one of the characters
+hints, toward the end of the last act, that the hero is a gentleman
+somewhat prone to talking. The hero admits it, but excuses himself on
+the ground that it is the only way he knows of explaining his opinions.
+
+Times of stress and struggle, whether individual or national, afford men
+and women other methods of expressing their views, and a large number of
+our citizens are, very creditably, taking the present opportunity to act
+instead of shout. There are the young fellows who in their thousands are
+pressing around the door of the recruiting offices. They are throwing
+up, many of them, good jobs for the privilege of drilling for the next
+six months for eight hours a day. Their reward will be certain hardship,
+their share of sickness and wounds, the probability of lying ten deep in
+a forgotten grave, their chance of glory a name printed in small type
+among a thousand others on a War Office report.
+
+There are the mothers and wives and children who are encouraging them to
+go; to whom their going means semi-starvation. The old, bent crones
+whose feeble hands will have to grasp again the hoe and the scrubbing
+brush. The young women who know only too well what is before them--the
+selling of the home just got together; first the easy chair and the
+mirror, and then the bed and the mattress; the weary tramping of the
+streets, looking for work. The children awestruck and wondering.
+
+There are the men who are quietly going on with their work, doing their
+best with straitened means to keep their business going; giving
+employment; getting ready to meet the income tax collector, who next
+year one is inclined to expect will be demanding anything from half a
+crown to five shillings in the pound. There are others. But there is a
+certain noisy and, to me, particularly offensive man (and with him, I am
+sorry to say, one or two women) very much to the fore just now with
+whose services the country could very well dispense. He is the man who
+does his fighting with his mouth. Unable for reasons of his own to get
+at the foe in the field, he thirsts for the blood of the unfortunate
+unarmed and helpless Germans that the fortunes of war have left stranded
+in England. He writes to the paper thoughtfully suggesting plans that
+have occurred to him for making their existence more miserable than it
+must be. He generally concludes his letter with a short homily directed
+against the Prussian Military Staff for their lack of the higher
+Christian principles.
+
+He has spies on the brain. Two quite harmless English citizens have
+already been shot in consequence of the funk this spy mania has created
+among us. The vast majority of Germans in England have come to live in
+England because they dislike Germany. That a certain number of spies are
+among us I take to be highly probable. I take it that if the Allies know
+their business a certain number of English spies are doing what they can
+for us at great personal risk to themselves in Germany. Until the German
+Army has landed on our shores German spies can do little or no harm to
+us. The police can be trusted to know something about them, and if any
+are caught red-handed the rules of war are not likely to be strained for
+their benefit.
+
+
+*A Story from the South.*
+
+From a small town in the South of England comes a story I can vouch for.
+A couple of Boy Scouts had been set to guard the local reservoir. About
+noon one sunny day they remarked the approach, somewhat ostentatious, of
+a desperate-looking character. Undoubtedly a German spy! What can he be
+up to! The boys approached him and he fled, leaving behind him the
+damning evidence--a tin suggestive of sardines and labeled "Poison!"
+That the gentleman should have chosen broad daylight for his nefarious
+design, should have been careful to label his tin, seemed to the good
+townsfolk under present scare conditions proof that they had at last
+discovered the real German spy, full of his devilish cunning. The tin
+was taken possession of by the police. And then the Sergeant's little
+daughter, who happened to have had a few lessons in French, suggested
+that the word on the tin was "Poisson," and the town now breathes again.
+
+So long as the war continues the spy will be among us. I suggest that we
+face the problem of his activities without blue funk and hysteria. The
+men and women who are shrieking for vicarious vengeance upon all the
+Germans remaining in our midst must remember that there are thousands of
+English families at the present moment residing in Germany and Austria.
+The majority of them, comparatively poor people, with all their
+belongings around them, were unable to get away. I shall, until I
+receive convincing proof to the contrary, continue to believe that they
+are living among their German neighbors unmolested. Even were it not so,
+I would suggest our setting the example of humanity rather than our
+slavishly following an example of barbarity.
+
+We are fighting for an idea--an idea of some importance to the
+generations that will come after us. We are fighting to teach the
+Prussian Military Staff that other laws have come to stay--laws
+superseding those of Attila the Hun. We are fighting to teach the German
+people that, free men with brains to think with, they have no right to
+hand themselves over body and soul to their rulers to be used as mere
+devil's instruments; that if they do so they shall pay the penalty, and
+the punishment shall go hard. We are fighting to teach the German Nation
+respect for God! Our weapons have got to be hard blows, not hard words.
+We are tearing at each other's throats; it has got to be done. It is not
+a time for yelping.
+
+Jack Johnson as a boxer I respect. The thing I do not like about him is
+his habit of gibing and jeering at his opponent while he is fighting
+him. It isn't gentlemanly, and it isn't sporting. The soldiers are
+fighting in grim silence. When one of them does talk, it is generally to
+express admiration of German bravery. It is our valiant stay-at-homes,
+our valiant clamorers for everybody else to enlist but themselves, who
+would have us fight like some drunken fish hag, shrieking and spitting
+while she claws.
+
+
+*Incredible Reports of Atrocities.*
+
+Half of these stories of atrocities I do not believe. I remember when I
+was living in Germany at the time of the Boer war the German papers were
+full of accounts of Tommy Atkins's brutality. He spent his leisure time
+in tossing babies on bayonets. There were photographs of him doing it.
+Detailed accounts certified by most creditable witnesses. Such lies are
+the stock in trade of every tenth-rate journalist, who, careful not to
+expose himself to danger, slinks about the byways collecting hearsay. In
+every war each side, according to the other, is supposed to take a
+fiendish pleasure in firing upon hospitals--containing always a
+proportion of their own wounded. An account comes to us from a
+correspondent with the Belgian Army. He tells us that toward the end of
+the day a regrettable incident occurred. The Germans were taking off
+their wounded in motor cars. The Belgian sharpshooters, not noticing the
+red flag in the dusk, kept up a running fire, and a large number of the
+wounded were killed. Had the incident been the other way about it would
+have been cited as a deliberate piece of villainy on the part of the
+Germans. According to other accounts, the Germans always go into action
+with screens of women and children before them. The explanation, of
+course, is that a few poor terrified creatures are rushing along the
+road. They get between the approaching forces, and I expect the bullets
+that put them out of their misery come pretty even from both sides.
+
+The men are mad. Mad with fear, mad with hate, blinded by excitement.
+Take a mere dog fight. If you interfere you have got to be prepared for
+your own dog turning upon you. In war half the time the men do not know
+what they are doing. They are little else than wild beasts. There was
+great indignation at the dropping of bombs into Antwerp. One now hears
+that a French dirigible has been dropping bombs into Luxembourg--a much
+more dignified retort. War is a grim game. Able editors and club-chair
+politicians have been clamoring for it for years past. They thought it
+was all goose-step and bands.
+
+The truth is bad enough, God knows. There is no sense in making things
+out worse than they are. When this war is over we have got to forget it.
+To build up barriers of hatred that shall stand between our children and
+our foemen's children is a crime against the future.
+
+These stories of German naval officers firing on their wounded sailors
+in the water! They are an insult to our intelligence. At Louvain fifty
+of the inhabitants were taken out and shot. On Monday the fifty had
+grown to five hundred; both numbers vouched for by eye-witnesses,
+"Dutchmen who would have had no interest," &c. That the beautiful old
+town has been laid in ashes is undoubted. Some criminal lunatic
+strutting in pipeclay and mustachios was given his hour of authority and
+took the chance of his life. If I know anything of the German people it
+will go hard with him when the war is over, if he has not had the sense
+to get killed. But that won't rear again the grand old stones or wipe
+from Germany's honor the stain of that long line of murdered men and
+women--whatever its actual length may have been. War puts a premium on
+brutality and senselessness. Men with the intelligence and instincts of
+an ape suddenly find themselves possessed of the powers of a god. And we
+are astonished that they do not display the wisdom of a god!
+
+There are other stories that have filtered through to us. There was a
+dying Uhlan who caught a child to his arms and kissed him. One would
+like to be able to kiss one's own child before one dies, but failing
+that--well, after all, there is a sort of family likeness between them.
+The same deep wondering eyes, the same--and then the mist grows deeper.
+Perhaps after all it was Baby Fritz that he kissed.
+
+And of a Belgian woman. She had seen her two sons killed before her
+eyes. She tells of that and of other horrors. Among such, of the German
+lads she had stepped over, their blue eyes quiet in death. The passion
+and the fear and the hate cleansed out of them. Just boys with their
+clothes torn--so like boys.
+
+"They, too, have got mothers, poor lads!" is all she says, thinking of
+them lying side by side with her own.
+
+When the madness and the folly are over, when the tender green is
+creeping in and out among the blackened ruins, it will be well for us to
+think of that dying Uhlan who had to put up with a French baby instead
+of his own; of that Belgian mother to whom the German youngsters were
+just "poor lads"--with their clothes torn.
+
+And the savagery and the cruelty and the guiltiness that go to the
+making of war we will seek to forget.
+
+
+
+
+*"As They Tested Our Fathers"*
+
+*By Rudyard Kipling.*
+
+ _Following is the text of an address by Mr. Kipling to a mass
+ meeting at Brighton, Sept. 8, 1914:_
+
+
+Through no fault nor wish of ours we are at war with Germany, the power
+which owes its existence to three well-thought-out wars; the power which
+for the last twenty years has devoted itself to organizing and preparing
+for this war; the power which is now fighting to conquer the civilized
+world.
+
+For the last two generations the Germans in their books, teachers,
+speeches, and schools have been carefully taught that nothing less than
+this world conquest was the object of their preparations and their
+sacrifices. They have prepared carefully and sacrificed greatly.
+
+We must have men, and men, and men, if we with our allies are to check
+the onrush of organized barbarism.
+
+Have no illusions. We are dealing with a strong and magnificently
+equipped enemy, whose avowed aim is our complete destruction.
+
+The violation of Belgium, the attack on France, and the defense against
+Russia are only steps by the way. The Germans' real objective, as she
+has always told us, is England and England's wealth, trade, and
+worldwide possessions.
+
+If you assume for an instant that that attack will be successful,
+England will not be reduced, as some people say, to the rank of a
+second-rate power, but we shall cease to exist as a nation. We shall
+become an outlying province of Germany, to be administered with what
+severity German safety and interest require.
+
+We arm against such a fate. We enter into a new life in which all the
+facts of war that we had put behind or forgotten for the past hundred
+years have returned to the front and test us as they tested our fathers.
+It will be a long and a hard road, beset with difficulties and
+discouragements, but we tread it together and we will tread it together
+to the end.
+
+Our petty social divisions and barriers have been swept away at the
+outset of our mighty struggle. All the interests of our life of six
+weeks ago are dead. We have but one interest now, and that touches the
+naked heart of every man in this island and in the empire.
+
+If we are to win the right for ourselves and for freedom to exist on
+earth, every man must offer himself for that service and that sacrifice.
+
+
+
+
+*Kipling and "The Truce of the Bear"*
+
+ _STAUNTON, Va., Sept. 25, 1914.--On Sept. 5 The Staunton News
+ printed some verses by Dr. Charles Minor Blackford, an associate
+ editor, addressed to Rudyard Kipling, calling attention to the
+ apparent inconsistency of his attitude of distrust of Russia as
+ shown in his well-known poem, "The Truce of the Bear," and his
+ present advocacy of the alliance between Russia and Great Britain.
+ A copy of the verses was sent to Mr. Kipling and the following
+ reply was received from him:_
+
+Bateman's Burwash, Sussex.
+
+Dear Sir: I am much obliged for your verses of Sept. 4. "The Truce of
+the Bear," to which they refer, was written sixteen years ago, in 1898.
+It dealt with a situation and a menace which have long since passed
+away, and with issues that are now quite dead.
+
+The present situation, as far as England is concerned, is Germany's
+deliberate disregard of the neutrality of Belgium, whose integrity
+Germany as well as England guaranteed. She has filled Belgium with every
+sort of horror and atrocity, not in the heat of passion, but as a part
+of settled policy of terrorism. Her avowed object is the conquest of
+Europe on these lines.
+
+As you may prove for yourself if you will consult her literature of the
+last generation, Germany is the present menace, not to Europe alone, but
+to the whole civilized world. If Germany, by any means, is victorious
+you may rest assured that it will be a very short time before she turns
+her attention to the United States. If you could meet the refugees from
+Belgium flocking into England and have the opportunity of checking their
+statements of unimaginable atrocities and barbarities studiously
+committed, you would, I am sure, think as seriously on these matters as
+we do, and in your unpreparedness for modern war you would do well to
+think very seriously indeed. Yours truly,
+
+RUDYARD KIPLING.
+
+
+
+
+*On the Impending Crisis*
+
+*By Norman Angell.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The London Times:_
+
+Sir: A nation's first duty is to its own people. We are asked to
+intervene in the Continental war because unless we do so we shall be
+"isolated." The isolation which will result for us if we keep out of
+this war is that, while other nations are torn and weakened by war, we
+shall not be, and by that fact might conceivably for a long time be the
+strongest power in Europe, and, by virtue of our strength and isolation,
+its arbiter, perhaps, to useful ends.
+
+We are told that if we allow Germany to become victorious she would be
+so powerful as to threaten our existence by the occupation of Belgium,
+Holland, and possibly the North of France. But, as your article of
+today's date so well points out, it was the difficulty which Germany
+found in Alsace-Lorraine which prevented her from acting against us
+during the South African War. If one province, so largely German in its
+origin and history, could create this embarrassment, what trouble will
+not Germany pile up for herself if she should attempt the absorption of
+a Belgium, a Holland, and a Normandy? She would have created for herself
+embarrassments compared with which Alsace and Poland would be a trifle;
+and Russia, with her 160,000,000, would in a year or two be as great a
+menace to her as ever.
+
+The object and effect of our entering into this war would be to insure
+the victory of Russia and her Slavonic allies. Will a dominant Slavonic
+federation of, say, 200,000,000 autocratically governed people, with a
+very rudimentary civilization, but heavily equipped for military
+aggression, be a less dangerous factor in Europe than a dominant Germany
+of 65,000,000 highly civilized and mainly given to the arts of trade and
+commerce?
+
+The last war we fought on the Continent was for the purpose of
+preventing the growth of Russia. We are now asked to fight one for the
+purpose of promoting it. It is now universally admitted that our last
+Continental war--the Crimean war--was a monstrous error and
+miscalculation. Would this intervention be any wiser or likely to be
+better in its results?
+
+On several occasions Sir Edward Grey has solemnly declared that we are
+not bound by any agreement to support France, and there is certainly no
+moral obligation on the part of the English people so to do. We can best
+serve civilization, Europe--including France--and ourselves by remaining
+the one power in Europe that has not yielded to the war madness.
+
+This, I believe, will be found to be the firm conviction of the
+overwhelming majority of the English people.
+
+Yours faithfully,
+
+NORMAN ANGELL.
+
+4 Kings Bench Walk, Temple, E.C., July 31.
+
+
+
+
+*Why England Came To Be In It*
+
+*By Gilbert K. Chesterton.*
+
+
+*I.*
+
+
+Unless we are all mad, there is at the back of the most bewildering
+business a story; and if we are all mad, there is no such thing as
+madness. If I set a house on fire, it is quite true that I may
+illuminate many other people's weaknesses as well as my own. It may be
+that the master of the house was burned because he was drunk; it may be
+that the mistress of the house was burned because she was stingy, and
+perished arguing about the expense of the fire-escape. It is,
+nevertheless, broadly true that they both were burned because I set fire
+to their house. That is the story of the thing. The mere facts of the
+story about the present European conflagration are quite as easy to
+tell.
+
+Before we go on to the deeper things which make this war the most
+sincere war of human history, it is easy to answer the question of why
+England came to be in it at all; as one asks how a man fell down a coal
+hole, or failed to keep an appointment. Facts are not the whole truth.
+But facts are facts, and in this case the facts are few and simple.
+
+Prussia, France, and England had all promised not to invade Belgium,
+because it was the safest way of invading France. But Prussia promised
+that if she might break in through her own broken promise and ours she
+would break in and not steal. In other words, we were offered at the
+same instant a promise of faith in the future and a proposal of perjury
+in the present.
+
+Those interested in human origins may refer to an old Victorian writer
+of English, who in the last and most restrained of his historical essays
+wrote of Frederick the Great, the founder of this unchanging Prussian
+policy. After describing how Frederick broke the guarantee he had signed
+on behalf of Maria Theresa he then describes how Frederick sought to put
+things straight by a promise that was an insult. "If she would but let
+him have Silesia, he would, he said, stand by her against any power
+which should try to deprive her of her other dominions; as if he was not
+already bound to stand by her, or as if his new promise could be of more
+value than the old one." That passage was written by Macaulay; but so
+far as the mere contemporary facts are concerned, it might have been
+written by me.
+
+
+*Diplomacy That Might Have Been.*
+
+Upon the immediate logical and legal origin of the English interest
+there can be no rational debate. There are some things so simple that
+one can almost prove them with plans and diagrams, as in Euclid. One
+could make a kind of comic calendar of what would have happened to the
+English diplomatist if he had been silenced every time by Prussian
+diplomacy. Suppose we arrange it in the form of a kind of diary:
+
+ July 24--Germany invades Belgium.
+
+ July 25--England declares war.
+
+ July 26--Germany promises not to annex Belgium.
+
+ July 27--England withdraws from the war.
+
+ July 28--Germany annexes Belgium. England declares war.
+
+ July 29--Germany promises not to annex France. England withdraws
+ from the war.
+
+ July 30--Germany annexes France. England declares war.
+
+ July 31--Germany promises not to annex England.
+
+ Aug. 1--England withdraws from the war. Germany invades England.
+
+How long is anybody expected to go on with that sort of game, or keep
+peace at that illimitable price? How long must we pursue a road in which
+promises are all fetiches in front of us and all fragments behind us?
+No; upon the cold facts of the final negotiations, as told by any of the
+diplomatists in any of the documents, there is no doubt about the story.
+And no doubt about the villain of the story.
+
+These are the last facts, the facts which involved England. It is
+equally easy to state the first facts--the facts which involved Europe.
+The Prince who practically ruled Austria was shot by certain persons
+whom the Austrian Government believed to be conspirators from Servia.
+The. Austrian Government piled up arms and armies, but said not a word
+either to Servia, their suspect, or Italy, their ally. From the
+documents it would seem that Austria kept everybody in the dark, except
+Prussia. It is probably nearer the truth to say that Prussia kept
+everybody in the dark, including Austria.
+
+
+*The Demands on Servia.*
+
+But all that is what is called opinion, belief, conviction, or common
+sense, and we are not dealing with it here. The objective fact is that
+Austria told Servia to permit Servian officers to be suspended by the
+authority of Austrian officers, and told Servia to submit to this within
+forty-eight hours. In other words, the Sovereign of Servia was
+practically told to take off not only the laurels of two great
+campaigns, but his own lawful and national crown, and to do it in a time
+in which no respectable citizen is expected to discharge a hotel bill.
+Servia asked for time for arbitration--in short, for peace. But Russia
+had already begun to mobilize, and Prussia, presuming that Servia might
+thus be rescued, declared war.
+
+
+Between these two ends of fact, the ultimatum to Servia, the ultimatum
+to Belgium, any one so inclined can, of course, talk as if everything
+were relative. If any one asks why the Czar should rush to the support
+of Servia, it is easy to ask why the Kaiser should rush to the support
+of Austria. If any one say that that the French would attack the
+Germans, it is sufficient to answer that the Germans did attack the
+French.
+
+There remain, however, two attitudes to consider, even perhaps two
+arguments to counter, which can best be considered and countered under
+this general head of facts. First of all, there is a curious, cloudy
+sort of argument, much affected by the professional rhetoricans of
+Prussia, who are sent out to instruct and correct the minds of Americans
+or Scandinavians. It consists of going into convulsions of incredulity
+and scorn at the mention of Russia's responsibility for Servia or
+England's responsibility for Belgium; and suggesting that, treaty or no
+treaty, frontier or no frontier, Russia would be out to slay Teutons or
+England to steal colonies.
+
+
+*England Kept Her Contracts.*
+
+Here, as elsewhere, I think the professors dotted all over the Baltic
+plain fail in lucidity and in the power of distinguishing ideas. Of
+course, it is quite true that England has material interests to defend,
+and will probably use the opportunity to defend them; or, in other
+words, of course England, like everybody else, would be more comfortable
+if Prussia were less predominant. The fact remains that we did not do
+what the Germans did. We did not invade Holland to seize a naval and
+commercial advantage; and whether they say that we wished to do it in
+our greed or feared to do it in our cowardice, the fact remains that we
+did not do it. Unless this common sense principle be kept in view, I
+cannot conceive how any quarrel can possibly be judged. A contract may
+be made between two persons solely for material advantages on each side;
+but the moral advantage is still generally supposed to lie with the
+person who keeps the contract. Surely, it cannot be dishonest to be
+honest--even if honesty is the best policy. Imagine the most complex
+maze of indirect motives, and still the man who keeps faith for money
+cannot possibly be worse than the man who breaks faith for money.
+
+It will be noted that this ultimate test applies in the same way to
+Servia as to Belgium and Britain. The Servians may not be a very
+peaceful people; but on the occasion under discussion it was certainly
+they who wanted peace. You may choose to think the Serb a sort of a born
+robber; but on this occasion it was certainly the Austrian who was
+trying to rob. Similarly, you may call England perfidious as a sort of
+historical summary, and declare your private belief that Mr. Asquith was
+vowed from infancy to the ruin of the German Empire--a Hannibal and
+hater of the eagles. But when all is said, it is nonsense to call a man
+perfidious because he keeps his promise. It is absurd to complain of the
+sudden treachery of a business man in turning up punctually to his
+appointment, or the unfair shock given to a creditor by the debtor
+paying his debts. Lastly, there is an attitude not unknown in the crisis
+against which I should particularly like to protest. I should address my
+protest especially to those lovers and pursuers of peace who, very
+shortsightedly, have occasionally adopted it. I mean the attitude which
+is impatient of these preliminary details about who did this or that and
+whether it was right or wrong. They are satisfied with saying that an
+enormous calamity called war has been begun by some or all of us, and
+should be ended by some or all of us. To these people this preliminary
+chapter about the precise happenings must appear not only dry (and it
+must of necessity be the dryest part of the task), but essentially
+needless and barren. I wish to tell these people that they are wrong;
+that they are wrong upon all principles of human justice and historic
+continuity; but that they are especially and supremely wrong upon their
+own principles of arbitration and international peace.
+
+
+*As to Certain Peace Lovers.*
+
+These sincere and high-minded peace lovers are always telling us that
+citizens no longer settle their quarrels by private violence, and that
+nations should no longer settle theirs by public violence. They are
+always telling us that we no longer fight duels, and need no longer wage
+wars. In short, they perpetually base their peace proposals on the fact
+that an ordinary citizen no longer avenges himself with an axe.
+
+But how is he prevented from avenging himself with an axe? If he hits
+his neighbor on the head with the kitchen chopper what do we do? Do we
+all join hands, like children playing mulberry bush, and say: "We are
+all responsible for this, but let us hope it will not spread. Let us
+hope for the happy, happy day when he shall leave off chopping at the
+man's head, and when nobody shall ever chop anything forever and ever."
+Do we say: "Let bygones be bygones. Why go back to all the dull details
+with which the business began? Who can tell with what sinister motives
+the man was standing there within reach of the hatchet?"
+
+We do not. We keep the peace in private life by asking for the facts of
+provocation and the proper object of punishment. We do not go into the
+dull details; we do inquire into the origins; we do emphatically inquire
+who it was that hit first. In short, we do what I have done very briefly
+in this place.
+
+Given this, it is indeed true that behind these facts there are
+truths--truths of a terrible, of a spiritual sort. In mere fact the
+Germanic power has been wrong about Servia, wrong about Russia, wrong
+about Belgium, wrong about England, wrong about Italy. But there was a
+reason for its being wrong everywhere, and of that root reason, which
+has moved half the world against it, I shall speak later in this series.
+For that is something too omnipresent to be proved, too indisputable to
+be helped by detail. It is nothing less than the locating, after more
+than a hundred years of recriminations and wrong explanations, of the
+modern European evil--the finding of the fountain from which poison has
+flowed upon all the nations of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+*II.*
+
+*Russian or Prussian Barbarism?*
+
+
+It will hardly be denied that there is one lingering doubt in many who
+recognize unavoidable self-defense in the instant parry of the English
+sword and who have no great love for the sweeping sabre of Sadowa and
+Sedan. That doubt is the doubt of whether Russia, as compared with
+Prussia, is sufficiently decent and democratic to be the ally of liberal
+and civilized powers. I take first, therefore, this matter of
+civilization.
+
+It is vital in a discussion like this that we should make sure we are
+going by meanings and not by mere words. It is not necessary in any
+argument to settle what a word means or ought to mean. But it is
+necessary in every argument to settle what we propose to mean by the
+word. So long as our opponent understands what is the thing of which we
+are talking, it does not matter to the argument whether the word is or
+is not the one he would have chosen. A soldier does not say, "We were
+ordered to go to Mechlin, but I would rather go to Malines." He may
+discuss the etymology and archaeology of the difference on the march,
+but the point is that he knows where to go. So long as we know what a
+given word is to mean in a given discussion, it does not even matter if
+it means something else in some other and quite distinct discussion. We
+have a perfect right to say that the width of a window comes to four
+feet, even if we instantly and cheerfully change the subject to the
+larger mammals and say that an elephant has four feet. The identity of
+the words does not matter, because there is no doubt at all about the
+meanings, because nobody is likely to think of an elephant as four feet
+long, or of a window as having tusks and a curly trunk.
+
+
+*Two Meanings of "Barbarian."*
+
+It is essential to emphasize this consciousness of the thing under
+discussion in connection with two or three words that are, as it were,
+the keywords of this war. One of them is the word "barbarian." The
+Prussians apply it to the Russians, the Russians apply it to the
+Prussians. Both, I think, really mean something that really exists, name
+or no name. Both mean different things. And if we ask what these
+different things are we shall understand why England and France prefer
+Russia, and consider Prussia the really dangerous barbarian of the two.
+
+To begin with, it goes so much deeper even than atrocities; of which, in
+the past, at least, all the three empires of Central Europe have
+partaken pretty equally; as they partook of Poland. An English writer,
+seeking to avert the war by warnings against Russian influence, said
+that the flogged backs of Polish women stood between us and the
+Alliance. But not long before the flogging of women by an Austrian
+General led to that officer being thrashed in the streets of London by
+Barclay and Perkins draymen. And as for the third power, the Prussians,
+it seems clear that they have treated Belgian women in a style compared
+with which flogging might be called an official formality.
+
+But, as I say, something much deeper than any such recrimination lies
+behind the use of the word on either side. When the German Emperor
+complains of our allying ourselves with a barbaric and half Oriental
+power, he is not (I assure you) shedding tears over the grave of
+Kosciusko. And when I say (as I do most heartily) that the German
+Emperor is a barbarian, I am not merely expressing any prejudices I may
+have against the profanation of churches or of children. My countrymen
+and I mean a certain and intelligible thing when we call the Prussians
+barbarians. It is quite different from the thing attributed to Russians;
+and it could not possibly be attributed to Russians. It is very
+important that the neutral world should understand what this thing is.
+
+If the German calls the Russian barbarous, he presumably means
+imperfectly civilized. There is a certain path along which Western
+nations have proceeded in recent times; and it is tenable that Russia
+has not proceeded so far as the others; that she has less of the special
+modern system in science, commerce, machinery, travel, or political
+constitution. The Russ plows with an old plow; he wears a wild beard; he
+adores relics; his life is as rude and hard as that of a subject of
+Alfred the Great. Therefore, he is, in the German sense, a barbarian.
+Poor fellows, like Gorky and Dostoieffsky, have to form their own
+reflections on the scenery, without the assistance of large quotations
+from Schiller on garden seats; or inscriptions directing them to pause
+and thank the All-Father for the finest view in Hesse-Pumpernickel. The
+Russians, having nothing but their faith, their fields, their great
+courage, and their self-governing communes, are quite cut off from what
+is called (in the fashionable street in Frankfort) the true, the
+beautiful, and the good. There is a real sense in which one can call
+such backwardness barbaric, by comparison with the Kaiserstrasse; and in
+that sense it is true of Russia.
+
+Now we, the French and English, do not mean this when we call the
+Prussians barbarians. If their cities soared higher than their flying
+ships, if their trains traveled faster than their bullets, we should
+still call them barbarians. We should know exactly what we meant by it;
+and we should know that it is true. For we do not mean anything that is
+an imperfect civilization by accident. We mean something that is the
+enemy of civilization by design. We mean something that is willfully at
+war with the principles by which human society has been made possible
+hitherto. Of course, it must be partly civilized even to destroy
+civilization. Such ruin could not be wrought by the savages that are
+merely undeveloped or inert. You could not have even Huns without horses
+or horses without horsemanship. You could not have even Danish pirates
+without ships, or ships without seamanship.
+
+
+*The "Positive Barbarian."*
+
+This person, whom I may call the positive barbarian, must be rather more
+superficially up to date than what I may call the negative barbarian.
+Alaric was an officer in the Roman legions, but for all that he
+destroyed Rome. Nobody supposes that Eskimos could have done it at all
+neatly. But (in our meaning) barbarism is not a matter of methods but of
+aims. We say that these veneered vandals have the perfectly serious aim
+of destroying certain ideas which, as they think, the world has
+outgrown; without which, as we think, the world will die.
+
+It is essential that this perilous peculiarity in the Pruss, or positive
+barbarian, should be seized. He has what he fancies is a new idea, and
+he is going to apply it to everybody. As a fact, it is simply a false
+generalization, but he is really trying to make it general. This does
+not apply to the negative barbarian; it does not apply to the Russian or
+the Servian, even if they are barbarians. If a Russian peasant does beat
+his wife, he does it because his fathers did it before him; he is likely
+to beat less rather than more as the past fades away. He does not think,
+as the Prussian would, that he has made a new discovery in physiology in
+finding that a woman is weaker than a man. If a Servian does knife his
+rival without a word, he does it because other Servians have done it. He
+may regard it even as piety--but certainly not as progress. He does not
+think, as the Prussian does, that he founds a new school of horology by
+starting before the word "Go." He does not think he is in advance of the
+world in militarism--merely because he is behind it in morals.
+
+No; the danger of the Pruss is that he is prepared to fight for old
+errors as if they were new truths. He has somehow heard of certain
+shallow simplifications, and imagines that we have never heard of them.
+And, as I have said, his limited but very sincere lunacy concentrates
+chiefly in a desire to destroy two ideas, the twin root ideas, of
+national society. The first is the idea of record and promise; the
+second is the idea of reciprocity.
+
+It is plain that the promise, or extension of responsibility through
+time, is what chiefly distinguishes us, I will not say from savages, but
+from brutes and reptiles. This was noted by the shrewdness of the Old
+Testament when it summed up the dark, irresponsible enormity of
+Leviathan in the words, "Will he make a pact with thee?" The promise,
+like the wind, is unknown in nature and is the first mark of man.
+Referring only to human civilization, it may be said with seriousness
+that in the beginning was the Word. The vow is to the man what the song
+is to the bird or the bark to the dog; his voice, whereby he is known.
+Just as a man who cannot keep an appointment is not fit to fight a duel,
+so the man who cannot keep an appointment with himself is not sane
+enough even for suicide. It is not easy to mention anything on which the
+enormous apparatus of human life can be said to depend. But if it
+depends on anything it is on this frail cord, flung from the forgotten
+hills of yesterday to the invisible mountains of tomorrow. On that
+solitary string hangs everything from Armageddon to an almanac, from a
+successful revolution to a return ticket. On that solitary string the
+barbarian is hacking heavily with a sabre which is fortunately blunt.
+
+
+*Prussia's Great Discovery.*
+
+Any one can see this well enough merely by reading the last negotiations
+between London and Berlin. The Prussians had made a new discovery in
+international politics--that it may often be convenient to make a
+promise, and yet curiously inconvenient to keep it. They were charmed,
+in their simple way, with this scientific discovery and desired to
+communicate it to the world. They therefore promised England a promise
+on condition that she broke a promise, and on the implied condition that
+the new promise might be broken as easily as the old one. To the
+profound astonishment of Prussia, this reasonable offer was refused. I
+believe that the astonishment of Prussia was quite sincere. That is what
+I mean when I say that the barbarian is trying to cut away that cord of
+honesty and clear record on which hangs all that men have made.
+
+The friends of the German cause have complained that Asiatics and
+Africans upon the very verge of savagery have been brought against them
+from India and Algiers. And in ordinary circumstances I should
+sympathize with such a complaint made by a European people. But the
+circumstances are not ordinary. Here again the quite unique barbarism of
+Prussia goes deeper than what we call barbarities. About mere
+barbarities, it is true, the Turco and the Sikh would have very good
+reply to the superior Teuton. The general and just reason for not using
+non-European tribes against Europeans is that given by Chatham against
+the use of the red Indian--that such allies might do very diabolical
+things. But the poor Turco might not unreasonably ask, after a week-end
+in Belgium, what more diabolical things he could do than the highly
+cultured Germans were doing themselves.
+
+Nevertheless, as I say, the justification of any extra-European aid goes
+deeper than by any such details. It rests upon the fact that even other
+civilizations, even much lower civilizations, even remote and repulsive
+civilizations, depend as much as our own on this primary principle on
+which the supermorality of Potsdam declares open war. Even savages
+promise things, and respect those who keep their promises. Even
+Orientals write things down; and though they write them from right to
+left, they know the importance of a scrap of paper. Many merchants will
+tell you that the word of the sinister and almost unhuman Chinaman is
+often as good as his bond; and it was amid palm trees and Syrian
+pavilions that the great utterance opened the tabernacle to him that
+sweareth to his hurt and changeth not. There is doubtless a dense
+labyrinth of duplicity in the East; and perhaps more guile in the
+individual Asiatic than in the individual German. But we are not talking
+of the violations of human morality in various parts of the world.
+
+
+*A Fight Against Anarchy.*
+
+We are talking about a new inhuman morality which denies altogether the
+day of obligation. The Prussians have been told by their literary men
+that everything depends upon "mood," and by their politicians that all
+arrangements dissolve before "necessity." That is the importance of the
+German Chancellor's phrase. He did not allege some special excuse in the
+case of Belgium, which might make it seem an exception that proved the
+rule. He distinctly argued, as on a principle applicable to other cases,
+that victory was a necessity and honor was a scrap of paper. And it is
+evident that the half-educated Prussian imagination really cannot get
+any further than this. It cannot see that if everybody's action were
+entirely incalculable from hour to hour, it would not only be the end of
+all promises but the end of all projects.
+
+In not being able to see that, the Berlin philosopher is really on a
+lower mental level than the Arab who respects the salt, or the Brahmin
+who preserves the caste. And in this quarrel we have a right to come
+with scimitars as well as sabres, with bows as well as rifles, with
+assegai and tomahawk and boomerang, because there is in all these at
+least a seed of civilization that these intellectual anarchists would
+kill. And if they should find us in our last stand girt with such
+strange swords and following unfamiliar ensigns and ask us for what we
+fight in so singular a company, we shall know what to reply: "We fight
+for the trust and for the tryst; for fixed memories and the possible
+meeting of men; for all that makes life anything but an uncontrollable
+nightmare. We fight for the long arm of honor and remembrance; for all
+that can lift a man above the quicksands of his needs and give him the
+mastery of time."
+
+
+
+
+*III.*
+
+*Disposing of Germany's Civilizing Mission*
+
+
+In the last summary I suggested that barbarism, as we mean it, is not
+mere ignorance or even mere cruelty. It has a more precise sense, and
+means militant hostility to certain necessary human ideas. I took the
+case of the vow or the contract which Prussian intellectualism would
+destroy. I urged that the Prussian is a spiritual barbarian, because he
+is not bound by his own past, any more than a man in a dream. He avows
+that when he promised to respect a frontier on Monday he did not foresee
+what he calls "the necessity" of not respecting it on Tuesday. In short,
+he is like a child who at the end of all reasonable explanations and
+reminders of admitted arrangements has no answer except "But I want to."
+
+There is another idea in human arrangements so fundamental as to be
+forgotten, but now for the first time denied. It may be called the idea
+of reciprocity; or, in better English, of give and take. The Prussian
+appears to be quite intellectually incapable of this thought. He cannot,
+I think, conceive the idea that is the foundation of all comedy--that in
+the eyes of the other man he is only the other man. And if we carry this
+clue through the institutions of Prussianized Germany we shall find how
+curiously his mind has been limited in the matter. The German differs
+from other patriots in the inability to understand patriotism. Other
+European peoples pity the Poles or the Welsh for their violated borders,
+but Germans only pity themselves. They might take forcible possession of
+the Severn or the Danube, of the Thames or the Tiber, of the Garry or
+the Garonne--and they would still be singing sadly about how fast and
+true stands the watch on the Rhine and what a shame it would be if any
+one took their own little river away from them. That is what I mean by
+not being reciprocal; and you will find it in all that they do, as in
+all that is done by savages.
+
+
+*"Laughs When He Hurts You."*
+
+Here again it is very necessary to avoid confusing this soul of the
+savage with mere savagery in the sense of brutality or butchery, in
+which the Greeks, the French, and all the most civilized nations have
+indulged in hours of abnormal panic or revenge. Accusations of cruelty
+are generally mutual. But it is the point about the Prussian that with
+him nothing is mutual. The definition of the true savage does not
+concern itself even with how much more he hurts strangers or captives
+than do the other tribes of men. The definition of the true savage is
+that he laughs when he hurts you and howls when you hurt him. This
+extraordinary inequality in the mind is in every act and word that comes
+from Berlin.
+
+For instance, no man of the world believes all he sees in the
+newspapers, and no journalist believes a quarter of it. We should
+therefore be quite ready in the ordinary way to take a great deal off
+the tales of German atrocities; to doubt this story or deny that. But
+there is one thing that we cannot doubt or deny--the seal and authority
+of the Emperor. In the imperial proclamation the fact that certain
+"frightful" things have been done is admitted and justified on the
+ground of their frightfulness. It was a military necessity to terrify
+the peaceful populations with something that was not civilized,
+something that was hardly human.
+
+
+*"Howls When You Hurt Him."*
+
+Very well. That is an intelligible policy; and in that sense an
+intelligible argument. An army endangered by foreigners may do the most
+frightful things. But then we turn the next page of the Kaiser's public
+diary, and we find him writing to the President of the United States to
+complain that the English are using dumdum bullets and violating various
+regulations of The Hague Conference. I pass for the present the question
+of whether there is a word of truth in these charges. I am content to
+gaze rapturously at the blinking eyes of the true, or positive,
+barbarian. I suppose he would be quite puzzled if we said that violating
+The Hague Conference was "a military necessity" to us; or that the rules
+of the conference were only a scrap of paper. He would be quite pained
+if we said that dumdum bullets "by their very frightfulness" would be
+very useful to keep conquered Germans in order. Do what he will, he
+cannot get outside the idea that he, because he is he and not you, is
+free to break the law and also to appeal to the law. It is said that the
+Prussian officers play at a game called Kriegspiel, or the war game. But
+in truth they could not play at any game, for the essence of every game
+is that the rules are the same on both sides.
+
+But, taking every German institution in turn, the case is the same; and
+it is not a case of mere bloodshed or military bravado. The duel, for
+example, can legitimately be called a barbaric thing, but the word is
+here used in another sense. There are duels in Germany; but so there are
+in France, Italy, Belgium, Spain; indeed, there are duels wherever there
+are dentists, newspapers, Turkish baths, time tables, and all the curses
+of civilization--except in England and a corner of America. You may
+happen to regard the duel as a historic relic of the more barbaric
+States on which these modern States were built. It might equally well be
+maintained that the duel is everywhere the sign of high civilization,
+being the sign of its more delicate sense of honor, its more vulnerable
+vanity, or its greater dread of social disrepute. But whichever of the
+two views you take, you must concede that the essence of the duel is an
+armed equality. I should not, therefore, apply the word barbaric, as I
+am using it, to the duels of German officers, or even the broadsword
+combats that are conventional among the German students. I do not see
+why a young Prussian should not have scars all over his face if he likes
+them; nay, they are often the redeeming points of interest on an
+otherwise somewhat unenlightening countenance. The duel may be defended;
+the sham duel may be defended.
+
+
+*The One-Sided Prussian Duel.*
+
+What cannot be defended is something really peculiar to Prussia, of
+which we hear numberless stories, some of them certainly true. It might
+be called the one-sided duel. I mean the idea that there is some sort of
+dignity in drawing the sword upon a man who has not got a sword--a
+waiter, or a shop assistant, or even a schoolboy. One of the officers of
+the Kaiser in the affair at Zabern was found industriously hacking at a
+cripple. In all these matters I would avoid sentiment. We must not lose
+our tempers at the mere cruelty of the thing, but pursue the strict
+psychological distinction. Others besides German soldiers have slain the
+defenseless, for loot or lust or private malice, like any other
+murderer. The point is that nowhere else but in Prussian Germany is any
+theory of honor mixed up with such things, any more than with poisoning
+or picking pockets. No French, English, Italian, or American gentleman
+would think he had in some way cleared his own character by sticking his
+sabre through some ridiculous greengrocer who had nothing in his hand
+but a cucumber. It would seem as if the word which is translated from
+the German as "honor" must really mean something quite different in
+German. It seems to mean something more like what we should call
+"prestige."
+
+
+*Absence of the Reciprocal Idea.*
+
+The fundamental fact, however, is the absence of the reciprocal idea.
+The Prussian is not sufficiently civilized for the duel. Even when he
+crosses swords with us his thoughts are not as our thoughts; when we
+both glorify war we are glorifying different things. Our medals are
+wrought like his, but they do not mean the same thing; our regiments are
+cheered as his are, but the thought in the heart is not the same; the
+Iron Cross is on the bosom of his King, but it is not the sign of our
+God. For we, alas! follow our God with many relapses and
+self-contradictions, but he follows his very consistently. Through all
+the things that we have examined, the view of national boundaries, the
+view of military methods, the view of personal honor and self-defense,
+there runs in their case something of an atrocious simplicity; something
+too simple for us to understand; the idea that glory consists in holding
+the steel, and not in facing it.
+
+If further examples were necessary it would be easy to give hundreds of
+them. Let us leave, for the moment, the relations between man and man in
+the thing called the duel. Let us take the relation between man and
+woman, in that immortal duel which we call a marriage. Here again we
+shall find that other Christian civilizations aim at some kind of
+equality, even if the balance be irrational or dangerous. Thus, the two
+extremes of the treatment of women might be represented by what are
+called the respectable classes in America and in France. In America they
+choose the risk of comradeship, in France the compensation of courtesy.
+In America it is practically possible for any young gentleman to take
+any young lady for what he calls (I deeply regret to say) a joy ride;
+but at least the man goes with the woman as much as the woman with the
+man. In France the young woman is protected like a nun while she is
+unmarried; but when she is a mother she is really a holy woman; and when
+she is a grandmother she is a holy terror.
+
+By both extremes the woman gets something back out of life. There is
+only one place where she gets little or nothing back, and that is the
+north of Germany. France and America aim alike at equality; America by
+similarity, France by dissimilarity. But North Germany does definitely
+aim at inequality. The woman stands up with no more irritation than a
+butler; the man sits down with no more embarrassment than a guest. This
+is the cool affirmation of inferiority, as in the case of the sabre and
+the tradesmen. "Thou goest with women; forget not thy whip," said
+Nietzsche. It will be observed that he does not say "poker," which might
+come more naturally to the mind of a more common or Christian
+wife-beater. But, then, a poker is a part of domesticity, and might be
+used by the wife as well as the husband. In fact, it often is. The sword
+and the whip are the weapons of a privileged caste.
+
+Pass from the closest of all differences, that between husband and wife,
+to the most distant of all differences, that of the remote and unrelated
+races who have seldom seen each other's faces, and never been tinged
+with each other's blood. Here we still find the same unvarying Prussian
+principle. Any European might feel a genuine fear of the Yellow Peril,
+and many Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Russians have felt and expressed it.
+Many might say, and have said, that the heathen Chinee is very heathen
+indeed; that if he ever advances against us he will trample and torture
+and utterly destroy, in a way that Eastern people do, but Western people
+do not. Nor do I doubt the German Emperor's sincerity when he sought to
+point out to us how abnormal and abominable such a nightmare campaign
+would be, supposing that it could come.
+
+But now comes the comic irony, which never fails to follow on the
+attempt of the Prussian to be philosophic. For the Kaiser, after
+explaining to his troops how important it was to avoid Eastern
+barbarism, instantly commanded them to become Eastern barbarians. He
+told them, in so many words, to be Huns, and leave nothing living or
+standing behind them. In fact, he frankly offered a new army corps of
+aboriginal Tartars to the Far East, within such time as it may take a
+bewildered Hanoverian to turn into a Tartar. Any one who has the painful
+habit of personal thought will perceive here at once the non-reciprocal
+principle again. Boiled down to its bones of logic, it means simply
+this: "I am a German and you are a Chinaman. Therefore, I being a
+German, have a right to be a Chinaman. But you have no right to be a
+Chinaman, because you are only a Chinaman." This is probably the highest
+point to which the German culture has risen.
+
+
+*"The Principle of Being Unprincipled."*
+
+The principle here neglected, which may be called mutuality by those who
+misunderstand and dislike the word equality, does not offer so clear a
+distinction between the Prussian and the other peoples as did the first
+Prussian principle of an infinite and destructive opportunism; or, in
+other words, the principle of being unprincipled. Nor upon this second
+can one take up so obvious a position touching the other civilizations
+or semi-civilizations of the world. Some idea of oath and bond there is
+in the rudest tribes, in the darkest continents. But it might be
+maintained, of the more delicate and imaginative element of reciprocity,
+that a cannibal in Borneo understands it almost as little as a professor
+in Berlin. A narrow and one-sided seriousness is the fault of barbarians
+all over the world. This may have been the meaning, for aught I know, of
+the one eye of the Cyclops; that the barbarian cannot see around things
+or look at them from two points of view, and thus becomes a blind beast
+and an eater of men. Certainly there can be no better summary of the
+savage than this, which, as we have seen, unfits him for the duel. He is
+the man who cannot love--no, nor even hate--his neighbor as himself.
+
+But this quality in Prussia does have one effect which has reference to
+the same question of the lower civilizations. It disposes once and for
+all at least of the civilizing mission of Germany. Evidently the Germans
+are the last people in the world to be trusted with the task. They are
+as short-sighted morally as physically. What is their sophism of
+"necessity" but an inability to imagine tomorrow morning? What is their
+non-reciprocity but an inability to imagine, not a god or devil, but
+merely another man? Are these to judge mankind? Men of two tribes in
+Africa not only know that they are all men but can understand that they
+are all black men. In this they are quite seriously in advance of the
+intellectual Prussian, who cannot be got to see that we are all white
+men. The ordinary eye is unable to perceive in the Northeast Teuton
+anything that marks him out especially from the more colorless classes
+of the rest of Aryan mankind. He is simply a white man, with a tendency
+to the gray or the drab. Yet he will explain in serious official
+documents that the difference between him and us is a difference between
+"the master race and the inferior race."
+
+
+*How to Know "The Master Race."*
+
+The collapse of German philosophy always occurs at the beginning rather
+than the end of an argument, and the difficulty here is that there is no
+way of testing which is a master race except by asking which is your own
+race. If you cannot find out, (as is usually the case,) you fall back on
+the absurd occupation of writing history about prehistoric times. But I
+suggest quite seriously that if the Germans can give their philosophy to
+the Hottentots there is no reason why they should not give their sense
+of superiority to the Hottentots. If they can see such fine shades
+between the Goth and the Gaul, there is no reason why similar shades
+should not lift the savage above other savages; why any Ojibway should
+not discover that he is one tint redder than the Dakotas, or any nigger
+in the Kameruns say he is not so black as he is painted. For this
+principle of a quite unproved racial supremacy is the last and worst of
+the refusals of reciprocity. The Prussian calls all men to admire the
+beauty of his large blue eyes. If they do, it is because they have
+inferior eyes; if they don't, it is because they have no eyes.
+
+Wherever the most miserable remnant of our race, astray and dried up in
+deserts or buried forever under the fall of bad civilization, has some
+feeble memory that men are men, that bargains are bargains, that there
+are two sides to a question, or even that it takes two to make a
+quarrel--that remnant has the right to assist the New Culture, to the
+knife and club and the splintered stone. For the Prussian begins all his
+culture by that act which is the destruction of all creative thought and
+constructive action. He breaks that mirror in the mind in which a man
+can see the face of his friend or foe.
+
+
+
+
+*IV.*
+
+*Russia Less Despotic Than Prussia*
+
+
+The German Emperor has reproached this country (England) with allying
+itself with "barbaric and semi-Oriental power." We have already
+considered in what sense we use the word barbaric; it is in the sense of
+one who is hostile to civilization, not one who is insufficient in it.
+But when we pass from the idea of the barbaric to the idea of the
+Oriental, the case is even more curious. There is nothing particularly
+Tartar in Russian affairs, except the fact that Russia expelled the
+Tartars. The Eastern invader occupied and crushed the country for many
+years; but that is equally true of Greece, of Spain, and even of
+Austria. If Russia has suffered from the East, she has suffered in order
+to resist it; and it is rather hard that the very miracle of her escape
+should make a mystery about her origin. Jonah may or may not have been
+three days inside a fish; but that does not make him a merman. And in
+all the other cases of European nations who escaped the monstrous
+captivity, we do admit the purity and continuity of the European type.
+We consider the old Eastern rule as a wound, but not as a stain.
+Copper-colored men out of Africa overruled for centuries the religion
+and patriotism of Spaniards. Yet I have never heard that "Don Quixote"
+was an African fable on the lines of "Uncle Remus." I have never heard
+that the heavy black in the pictures of Velasquez was due to a negro
+ancestry. In the case of Spain, which is close to us, we can recognize
+the resurrection of a Christian and cultured nation after its age of
+bondage. But Russia is rather remote; and those to whom nations are but
+names in newspapers can really fancy, like Mr. Baring's friend, that all
+Russian churches are "mosques." Yet the land of Turgenev is not a
+wilderness of fakirs; and even the fanatical Russian is as proud of
+being different from the Mongol as the fanatical Spaniard was proud of
+being different from the Moor.
+
+
+*"Scratch a Russian."*
+
+The town of Reading, as it exists, offers few opportunities for piracy
+on the high seas; yet it was the camp of the pirates in Alfred's days. I
+should think it hard to call the people of Berkshire half Danish merely
+because they drove out the Danes. In short, some temporary submergence
+under the savage flood was the fate of many of the most civilized States
+of Christendom, and it is quite ridiculous to argue that Russia, which
+wrestled hardest, must have recovered least. Everywhere, doubtless, the
+East spread a sort of enamel over the conquered countries; but
+everywhere the enamel cracked. Actual history, in fact, is exactly
+opposite to the cheap proverb invented against the Muscovite. It is not
+true to say, "Scratch a Russian and you find a Tartar." In the darkest
+hour of the barbaric dominion it was truer to say, "Scratch a Tartar and
+you find a Russian." It was the civilization that survived under all the
+barbarism. This vital romance of Russia, this revolution against Asia,
+can be proved in pure fact; not only from the almost superhuman activity
+of Russia during the struggle, but also (which is much rarer as human
+history goes) by her quite consistent conduct since. She is the only
+great nation which has really expelled the Mongol from her country and
+continued to protest against presence of the Mongol in her continent.
+Knowing what he had been in Russia, she knew what he would be in Europe.
+In this she pursued a logical line of thought, which was, if anything,
+too unsympathetic with the energies and religions of the East. Every
+other country, one may say, has been an ally of the Turk--that is, of
+the Mongol and the Moslem. The French played them as pieces against
+Austria; the English warmly supported them under the Palmerston régime;
+even the young Italians sent troops to the Crimea; and of Russia and her
+Austrian vassal it is nowadays needless to speak. For good or evil, it
+is the fact of history that Russia is the only power in Europe that has
+never supported the Crescent against the Cross.
+
+That doubtless will appear an unimportant matter, but it may become
+important under certain peculiar conditions. Suppose, for the sake of
+argument, that there were a powerful Prince in Europe who had gone
+ostentatiously out of his way to pay reverence to the remains of the
+Tartar, Mongol, and Moslem left as an outpost in Europe. Suppose there
+were a Christian Emperor who could not even go to the tomb of the
+crucified without pausing to congratulate the last and living crucifier.
+If there were an Emperor who gave guns and guides and maps and drill
+instructors to defend the remains of the Mongol in Christendom, what
+would we say to him? I think at least we might ask him what he meant by
+his impudence when he talked about supporting a semi-Oriental power.
+That we support a semi-Oriental power we deny. That he has supported an
+entirely Oriental power cannot be denied, no, not even by the man who
+did it.
+
+
+_Whom Has Prussia Emancipated?_
+
+But here is to be noted the essential difference between Russia and
+Prussia; especially by those who use the ordinary liberal arguments
+against the latter Russia has a policy, which she pursues, if you will,
+through evil and good; but at least so as to produce good as well as
+evil. Let it be granted that the policy has made her oppressive to the
+Finns, the Poles--though the Russian Poles feel far less oppressed than
+do the Prussian Poles. But it is a mere historic fact, that if Russia
+has been a despot to some small nations, she has been a deliverer to
+others. She did, so far as in her lay, emancipate the Servians or the
+Montenegrins. But whom did Prussia ever emancipate--even by accident? It
+is, indeed, somewhat extraordinary that in the perpetual permutations of
+international politics the Hohenzollerns have never gone astray into the
+path of enlightenment. They have been in alliance with almost everybody
+off and on; with France, with England, with Austria, with Russia. Can
+any one candidly say that they have left on any one of these people the
+faintest impress of progress or liberation? Prussia was the enemy of the
+French monarchy, but a worse enemy of the French Revolution. Prussia had
+been an enemy of the Czar, but she was a worse enemy of the Duma.
+Prussia totally disregarded Austrian rights; but she is today quite
+ready to inflict Austrian wrongs. This is the strong particular
+difference between the one empire and the other. Russia is pursuing
+certain intelligible and sincere ends, which to her at least are ideals,
+and for which, therefore, she will make sacrifices and will protect the
+weak. But the North German soldier is a sort of abstract tyrant;
+everywhere and always on the side of materialistic tyranny. This Teuton
+in uniform has been found in strange places; shooting farmers before
+Saratoga and flogging soldiers in Surrey, hanging niggers in Africa and
+raping girls in Wicklow, but never, by some mysterious fatality, lending
+a hand to the freeing of a single city or the independence of one
+solitary flag. Wherever scorn and prosperous oppression are, there is
+the Prussian; unconsciously consistent, instinctively restrictive,
+innocently evil; "following darkness like a dream."
+
+
+*Disinterested Despotism.*
+
+Suppose we heard of a person (gifted with some longevity) who had helped
+Alva to persecute Dutch Protestants, then helped Cromwell to persecute
+Irish Catholics, and then helped Claverhouse to persecute Scotch
+Puritans--we should find it rather easier to call him a persecutor than
+to call him a Protestant or a Catholic. Curiously enough, this is
+actually the position in which the Prussian stands in Europe. No
+arguments can alter the fact that in three converging and conclusive
+cases he has been on the side of three distinct rulers of different
+religions, who had nothing whatever in common except that they were
+ruling oppressively. In these three Governments, taken separately, one
+can see something excusable, or at least human. When the Kaiser
+encouraged the Russian rulers to crush the revolution, the Russian
+rulers undoubtedly believed they were wrestling with an inferno of
+atheism and anarchy. A Socialist of the ordinary English kind cried out
+upon me when I spoke of Stolypin and said he was chiefly known by the
+halter called "Stolypin's Necktie." As a fact, there were many other
+things interesting about Stolypin besides his necktie--his policy of
+peasant proprietorship, his extraordinary personal courage, and
+certainly none more interesting than that movement in his death agony,
+when he made the sign of the cross toward the Czar, as the crown and
+captain of his Christianity. But the Kaiser does not regard the Czar as
+the captain of Christianity. Far from it. What he supported in Stolypin
+was the necktie, and nothing but the necktie; the gallows, and not the
+cross. The Russian ruler did believe that the Orthodox Church was
+orthodox. The Austrian Archduke did really desire to make the Catholic
+Church catholic. He did really believe that he was being pro-Catholic in
+being pro-Austrian. But the Kaiser cannot be pro-Catholic, and,
+therefore, cannot have been really pro-Austrian; he was simply and
+solely anti-Servian; nay, even in the cruel and sterile strength of
+Turkey, any one with imagination can see something of the tragedy, and,
+therefore, of the tenderness of true belief. The worst that can be said
+of the Moslems is, as the poet put it, they offered to man the choice of
+the Koran or the sword. The best that can be said for the German is that
+he does not care about the Koran, but is satisfied if he can have the
+sword. And for me, I confess, even the sins of these three other
+striving empires take on, in comparison, something that is sorrowful and
+dignified; and I feel they do not deserve that this little Lutheran
+lounger should patronize all that is evil in them, while ignoring all
+that is good. He is not Catholic; he is not Orthodox; he is not
+Mohammedan. He is merely an old gentleman who wishes to share the crime,
+though he cannot share the creed. He desires to be a persecutor by the
+pang without the palm. So strongly do all the instincts of the Prussian
+drive against liberty that he would rather oppress other peoples'
+subjects than think of anybody going without the benefits of oppression.
+He is a sort of disinterested despot. He is as disinterested as the
+devil, who is ready to do any one's dirty work.
+
+
+*The Paradox of Prussia.*
+
+This would seem obviously fantastic were it not supported by solid facts
+which cannot be explained otherwise. Indeed it would be inconceivable if
+we were thinking of a whole people, consisting of free and varied
+individuals. But in Prussia the governing class is really a governing
+class, and a very few people are needed to think along these lines to
+make all the other people act along them. And the paradox of Prussia is
+this: That while its princes and nobles have no other aim on this earth
+but to destroy democracy wherever it shows itself, they have contrived
+to get themselves trusted, not as wardens of the past, but as
+forerunners of the future. Even they cannot believe that their theory is
+popular, but they do believe that it is progressive. Here again we find
+the spiritual chasm between the two monarchies in question. The Russian
+institutions are, in many cases, really left in the rear of the Russian
+people, and many of the Russian people know it. But the Prussian
+institutions are supposed to be in advance of the Prussian people, and
+most of the Prussian people believe it. It is thus much easier for the
+war lords to go everywhere and impose a hopeless slavery upon every one,
+for they have already imposed a sort of hopeful slavery on their own
+simple race.
+
+
+*A Factory of Thumbscrews.*
+
+And when men shall speak to us of the hoary iniquities of Russia and of
+how antiquated is the Russian system we shall answer, "Yes; that is the
+superiority of Russia." Their institutions are part of their history,
+whether as relics or fossils. Their abuses have really been uses; that
+is to say, they have been used up. If they have old engines of terror or
+torment, they may fall to pieces from mere rust, like an old coat of
+armor. But in the case of the Prussian tyranny, if it be tyranny at all,
+it is the whole point of its claim that it is not antiquated, but just
+going to begin, like the showman. Prussia has a whole thriving factory
+of thumbscrews, a whole humming workshop of wheels and racks, of the
+newest and neatest pattern, with which to win Europe back to reaction
+* * * infandum renovare dolorem. And if we wish to test the truth of this,
+it can be done by the same method which showed us that Russia, if her
+race or religion could sometimes make her an invader and an oppressor,
+could also be made an emancipator and a knight errant. In the same way,
+if the Russian institutions are old-fashioned, they honestly exhibit the
+good as well as the bad that can be found in old-fashioned things. In
+their police system they have an inequality which is against our ideas
+of law. But in their commune system they have an equality that is older
+than law itself. Even when they flogged each other like barbarians, they
+called each other by their Christian names like children. At their
+worst, they retained all the best of a rude society. At their best, they
+are simply good, like good children or good nuns. But in Prussia, all
+that is best in the civilized machinery is put at the service of all
+that is worst in the barbaric mind. Here again the Prussian has no
+accidental merits, none of those lucky survivals, none of those late
+repentances, which make the patchwork glory of Russia. Here all is
+sharpened to a point and pointed to a purpose; and that purpose, if
+words and acts have any meaning at all, is the destruction of liberty
+throughout the world.
+
+
+
+
+*V.*
+
+*The "Bond of Teutonism"*
+
+
+In considering the Prussian point of view we have been considering what
+seems to be mainly a mental limitation--a kind of knot in the brain.
+Toward the problem of Slav population, of English colonization, of
+French armies, and of reinforcements it shows the same strange
+philosophic sulks. So far as I can follow it, it seems to amount to
+saying, "It is very wrong that you should be superior to me, because I
+am superior to you." The spokesman of this system seems to have a
+curious capacity for concentrating this entanglement or contradiction
+sometimes into a single paragraph, or even a single sentence. I have
+already referred to the German Emperor's celebrated suggestion that in
+order to avert the peril of Hunnishness we should all become Huns. A
+much stronger instance is his more recent order to his troops touching
+the war in Northern France. As most people know, his words ran: "It is
+my royal and imperial command that you concentrate your energies, for
+the immediate present, upon one single purpose, and that is that you
+address all your skill and all the valor of my soldiers to exterminate
+first the treacherous English and to walk over Gen. French's
+contemptible little army." The rudeness of the remark an Englishman can
+afford to pass over. What I am interested in is the mentality, the train
+of thought that can manage to entangle itself even in so brief a space.
+If French's little army is contemptible it would seem clear that all the
+skill and valor of the German Army had better not be concentrated on it,
+but on the larger and less contemptible allies. If all the skill and
+valor of the German Army are concentrated on it it is not being treated
+as contemptible. But the Prussian rhetorician had two incompatible
+sentiments in his mind, and he insisted on saying them both at once. He
+wanted to think of an English Army as a small thing; but he also wanted
+to think of an English defeat as a big thing. He wanted to exult, at the
+same moment, in the utter weakness of the British Nation in their attack
+and the supreme skill and valor of the Germans in repelling such an
+attack. Somehow it must be made a common and obvious collapse for
+England and yet a daring and unexpected triumph for Germany. In trying
+to express these contradictory conceptions simultaneously he got rather
+mixed. Therefore he bade Germania fill all her vales and mountains with
+the dying agonies of this almost invisible earwig, and let the impure
+blood of this cockroach redden the Rhine down to the sea.
+
+
+*Prof. Harnack's Reproach*.
+
+But it would be unfair to base the criticism on the utterance of any
+accidental and hereditary Prince; and it is quite equally clear in the
+case of the philosophers who have been held up to us, even in England,
+as the very prophets of progress. And in nothing is it shown more
+sharply than in the curious, confused talk about race, and especially
+about the Teutonic race. Prof. Harnack and similar people are
+reproaching us, I understand, for having broken "the bond of
+Teutonism"--a bond which the Prussians have strictly observed, both in
+breach and observance. We note it in the open annexation of lands wholly
+inhabited by negroes, such as Denmark. We note it equally in their
+instant and joyful recognition of the flaxen hair and light blue eyes of
+the Turks. But it is still the abstract principle of Prof. Harnack which
+interests me most, and in following it I have the same complexity of
+inquiry, but the same simplicity of result. Comparing the professor's
+concern about "Teutonism" with his unconcern about Belgium, I can only
+reach the following result: "A man need not keep a promise he has made.
+But a man must keep a promise he has not made." There certainly was a
+treaty binding Britain to Belgium, if it was only a scrap of paper. If
+there was any treaty binding Britain with Teutonism it is, to say the
+least of it, a lost scrap of paper--almost what one might call a scrap
+of waste paper. Here again the pedants under consideration exhibit the
+illogical perversity that makes the brain reel. There is obligation and
+there is no obligation; sometimes it appears that Germany and England
+must keep faith with each other; sometimes that Germany need not keep
+faith with anybody and anything; sometimes that we, alone among European
+peoples, are almost entitled to be Germans; sometimes that besides us
+Russians and Frenchmen almost rise to a Germanic loveliness of
+character. But through all there is, hazy but not hypocritical, this
+sense of some common Teutonism.
+
+Prof. Haeckel, another of the witnesses raised up against us, attained
+to some celebrity at one time through proving the remarkable resemblance
+between two different things by printing duplicate pictures of the same
+thing. Prof. Haeckel's contribution to biology, in this case, was
+exactly like Prof. Harnack's contribution to ethnology. Prof. Harnack
+knows what a German is like. When he wants to imagine what an Englishman
+is like he simply photographs the same German over again. In both cases
+there is probably sincerity, as well as simplicity. Haeckel was so
+certain that the species illustrated in embryo really are closely
+related and linked up that it seemed to him a small thing to simplify it
+by mere repetition. Harnack is so certain that the German and Englishman
+are almost alike that he really risks the generalization that they are
+exactly alike. He photographs, so to speak, the same fair and foolish
+face twice over, and calls it a remarkable resemblance between cousins.
+Thus he can prove the existence of Teutonism just about as conclusively
+as Haeckel has proved the more tenable proposition of the non-existence
+of God.
+
+
+*Germans and English.*
+
+Now, the German and the Englishman are not in the least alike--except in
+the sense that neither of them are negroes. They are, in everything good
+and evil, more unlike than any other two men we can take at random from
+the great European family. They are opposite from the roots of their
+history--nay, of their geography. It is an understatement to call
+Britain insular. Britain is not only an island, but an island slashed by
+the sea till it nearly splits into three islands, and even the midlands
+can almost smell the salt. Germany is a powerful, beautiful, and fertile
+inland country, which can only find the sea by one or two twisted and
+narrow paths, as people find a subterranean lake. Thus the British Navy
+is really national because it is natural. It has cohered out of hundreds
+of accidental adventures of ships and shipmen before Chaucer's time and
+after it. But the German Navy is an artificial thing, as artificial as a
+constructed Alp would be in England. William II. has simply copied the
+British Navy, as Frederick II. copied the French Army, and this Japanese
+or antlike assiduity in imitation is one of the hundred qualities which
+the Germans have and the English markedly have not. There are other
+German superiorities which are very much superior. The one or two really
+jolly things that the Germans have got are precisely the things which
+the English haven't got, notably a real habit of popular music and of
+the ancient songs of the people; not merely spreading from the towns or
+caught from the professionals. In this the Germans rather resemble the
+Welsh, though heaven knows what becomes of Teutonism if they do. But the
+difference between the Germans and the English goes deeper than all
+these signs of it. They differ more than any other two Europeans in the
+normal posture of the mind.
+
+Above all, they differ in what is the most English of all English
+traits--that shame which the French may be right in calling "the bad
+shame," for it is certainly mixed up with pride and suspicion, the
+upshot of which we call shyness. Even an Englishman's rudeness is often
+rooted in his being embarrassed. But a German's rudeness is rooted in
+his never being embarrassed. He eats and makes love noisily. He never
+feels a speech or a song or a sermon or a large meal to be what the
+English call "out of place" in particular circumstances. When Germans
+are patriotic and religious they have no reactions against patriotism
+and religion, as have the English and the French. Nay, the mistake of
+Germany in the modern disaster largely arose from the facts that she
+thought England was simple, when England is very subtle. She thought
+that because our politics have become largely financial they had become
+wholly financial; that because our aristocrats had become pretty cynical
+they had become entirely corrupt. They could not seize the subtlety by
+which a rather used-up English gentleman might sell a coronet when he
+could not sell a fortress; might lower the public standards and yet
+refuse to lower the flag. In short, the Germans are quite sure that they
+understand us entirely because they do not understand us at all.
+Possibly, if they began to understand us they might hate us even more,
+but I would rather be hated for some small but real reason than pursued
+with love on account of all kinds of qualities which I do not possess
+and which I do not desire. And when the Germans get their first genuine
+glimpses of what modern England is like they will discover that England
+has a very broken, belated, and inadequate sense of having an obligation
+to Europe; but no sort of sense whatever of having any obligation to
+Teutonism.
+
+
+*Slippery Strength of Stupidity.*
+
+This is the last and strongest of the Prussian qualities we have here
+considered. There is in stupidity of this sort a strange, slippery
+strength, because it can be not only outside rules, but outside reason.
+The man who really cannot see that he is contradicting himself has a
+great advantage in controversy, though the advantage breaks down when he
+tries to reduce it to simple addition, to chess--or to the game called
+war. It is the same about the stupidity of the one-sided kinship. The
+drunkard who is quite certain that a total stranger is his long-lost
+brother has a great advantage until it comes to matters of detail. "We
+must have chaos within," said Nietzsche, "that we may give birth to a
+dancing star."
+
+In these slight notes I have suggested the principal strong points of
+the Prussian character--a failure in honor which almost amounts to a
+failure in memory; an egomania that is honestly blind to the fact that
+the other party is an ego, and, above all, an actual itch for tyranny
+and interference, the devil which everywhere torments the idle and the
+proud. To these must be added a certain mental shapelessness, which can
+expand or contract without reference to reason or record--a potential
+infinity of excuses. If the English had been on the German side the
+German professors would have noted what irresistible energies had
+evolved the Teutons. As the English are on the other side, the German
+professors will say that these Teutons were not sufficiently evolved; or
+they will say they were just sufficiently evolved to show that they were
+not Teutons. Probably they will say both. But the truth is that all that
+they call evolution should rather be called evasion. They tell us they
+are opening windows of enlightenment and doors of progress. The truth is
+that they are breaking up the whole house of the human intellect that
+they may abscond in any direction. There is an ominous and almost
+monstrous parallel between the position of their overrated philosophers
+and of their comparatively underrated soldiers. For what their
+professors call roads of progress are really routes of escape.
+
+
+
+
+*South Africa's Boers and Britons*
+
+*By H. Rider Haggard.*
+
+
+The heart of South Africa, Boer and Briton, is with England in this war.
+Here and there you will find an individual who cherishes bitter and
+hostile memories, of which there has been an example in Mr. Beyers
+letter the other day, so effectually answered by Gen. Botha. But such
+instances, I believe, are so rare that really they are the exceptions
+which seem to prove the rule. Of course, it goes without saying that
+every person of English descent is heartily with the mother country, and
+I do not suppose it would be an overestimate to add that quite 80 per
+cent, of the Dutch are of the same way of thinking.
+
+Still, there is a party among the South African Dutch that sees no
+necessity for the invasion of German Southwest Africa. This party
+overlooks the fact that the Germans have for long been preparing to
+invade them; also that if by any chance Germany should conquer in this
+war South Africa would be one of the first countries that they would
+seize.
+
+In speaking of this I talk of what I understand, since for the last two
+and a half years it has been my duty to travel around the British Empire
+upon the service of his Majesty. In addition to South Africa, I have
+visited India, Australia, New Zealand, Newfoundland, and Canada. I have
+recently traveled throughout South Africa as a member of the Dominion's
+Royal Commission. It was my first visit there after the lapse of a whole
+generation, and I can only say that everywhere I have found the most
+intense loyalty and devotion to the old mother land. The empire is one
+and indivisible; together it will stand or together it will fall.
+
+South Africa is united; it has forgotten its recent labor troubles. I
+answer "absolutely" all such things are past history, blown away and
+destroyed by this great wind of war. South Africa, down to its lowest
+Hottentot, has, I believe, but one object, to help England to win in
+this vast battle of the nations. Why, even the natives, as you may have
+noticed, are sending subscriptions from their scanty hoards and praying
+to be allowed "to throw a few stones for the King." Did not Poutsma say
+as much the other day?
+
+In the old days, of course, there were very strained relations between
+the English and Boers, which had their roots in foolish and inconsistent
+acts carried out by the Home Government, generally to forward party
+ends. I need not go into them because they are too long.
+
+Then came the Boer war, which, as you know, proved a much bigger
+enterprise than the Home Government had anticipated. It cost Britain
+20,000 lives and £300,000,000 of English money before the Boers were
+finally subdued. Only about half a score of years have gone by since
+peace was declared. Within two or three years of that peace the British
+Government made up its mind to a very bold step and one which was viewed
+with grave doubts by many people--namely, to give full self-government
+to the Transvaal and the Orange River Colonies.
+
+
+*Astonished at Results.*
+
+When I traveled through South Africa the other day this new Constitution
+had been working for a few years, and I can only say that I was
+astonished at the results. Here and there in the remoter districts, it
+is true, some racial feeling still prevailed, but taken as a whole this
+seems absolutely to have died away. Briton and Boer have come together
+in a manner for which I believe I am right in saying there is no
+precedent in the history of the world, so shortly, at any rate, after a
+prolonged and bitter struggle to the death. I might give many instances,
+but I will only take one. At Pretoria I was asked to inspect a company
+of Boy Scouts, and there I found English and Dutch lads serving side by
+side with the utmost brotherhood. Again I met most of the men who had
+been leaders of the Boers in the war. One and all professed the greatest
+loyalty to England. Moreover, I am certain that this was not lip
+loyalty; it was from the heart. Especially was I impressed by that great
+man, Gen. Botha, with whom I had several conversations. I am convinced
+that at this moment the King has no truer or more faithful servant than
+Gen. Botha. Again and again did I hear from prominent South Africans of
+Dutch or Huguenot extraction that never more was there any chance of
+trouble between Boer and Briton.
+
+I know it is alleged by some that this is because the Dutch feel that
+they have on the whole made a good bargain, having won absolute
+constitutional liberty and the fullest powers of self-government, plus
+the protection of the British fleet. There may be something in this
+view, but I am sure that the feeling goes a great deal deeper than
+self-interest. Mutual respect has arisen between those who ten years ago
+were enemies fighting each other.
+
+
+*Appeal to People's Imagination.*
+
+Moreover, the Boer now knows a great deal more of the British Empire and
+what it means than he did then. Lastly, the supreme generosity evinced
+by Britain in giving their enemy of the day before every right and
+privilege that is owned by her other oversea dominions with whom she has
+never had a quarrel appeals deeply to the imagination of the Dutch
+people. Now, the world sees the results. Germany, which has
+miscalculated so much in connection with this war and the part that the
+British Empire would play in it, miscalculated nowhere more than it did
+in the case of South Africa. The German war lords hoped that India and
+Egypt would rise, they trusted that Canada and Australia would prove
+lukewarm, but they were certain that South Africa would seize the
+opportunity to rebel. How could it be otherwise, they thought, seeing
+that but yesterday she was at death grips with us. Then came the great
+surprise. Lo and behold! instead of rebelling, South Africa promptly
+cabled to England saying that every British soldier might be withdrawn
+from her shores, and, further, that the burghers of the land would
+themselves undertake the conquest of the German possessions of Southwest
+Africa for the Crown. They are doing so at this moment. I believe that
+today there is no British soldier left at the Cape, and I know that now
+a great force is moving on Southwest Africa furnished by Boer and Briton
+alike. Can the history of the world tell us of any parallel case to
+this--that a country conquered within a dozen years should not only need
+no garrison, but by its own free will undertake war against the enemies
+of its late victor? Surely this is something of which Britain may feel
+proud.
+
+
+*Deep Distrust of Germany.*
+
+Now, some of your readers may ask: "Why is it? How did this miracle, for
+it is little less, happen?" My answer is that it has been caused first
+by a supreme and glorious trust in the justice and generosity of
+England, which knows how to rule colonies as no other nation has done in
+the history of the earth, and secondly by a deep distrust of Germany. To
+my own knowledge, Germany has been intriguing in South Africa for the
+last quarter of a century. I remember, I suppose it must be almost
+twenty years ago, sending to the late Mr. Chamberlain, who was then
+Colonial Secretary, information to this effect which reached me from
+undoubted sources in South Africa. Again, not long ago, I was shown a
+document which was found among the papers of the Zulu Prince Dinizulu,
+son of King Cetewayo, who died the other day. It was concluded between
+himself and Germans, and under it the poor man had practically sold his
+country nominally to a German firm, but doubtless to more powerful
+persons behind. In short, there is no question that for many years
+Germany has had its eye upon South Africa as a desirable field of
+settlement for its subjects under the German and not the British flag.
+Now, the Boers are perfectly well acquainted with this fact and have no
+wish to exchange the beneficent rule of Britain for that of Potsdam, the
+King Log of George V. for the King Stork of Kaiser Wilhelm.
+
+You ask me if I think that the Boers are likely to succeed in their
+attack on Southwest Africa, where it must be remembered that the Germans
+have a very formidable force; indeed, I have been told, I do not know
+with what accuracy, that they have accumulated there the vast arsenal of
+war material that was obviously intended to be used on some future
+occasion in the invasion of the Cape. I answer: "Certainly, they will
+succeed, though not easily." Remember what stock these Boers come from.
+They are descendants of the men who withstood and beat Alva in the
+sixteenth century.
+
+
+*Botha of Huguenot Descent.*
+
+I happen to be well acquainted with that period of history. I wrote a
+story called "Lysbeth" concerning it, and to do this I found it
+necessary not only to visit Holland on several occasions, but to read
+all the contemporary records. In the light of the information which I
+thus obtained, I state positively that the world has no record of a more
+glorious and heroic struggle than that made by the Dutch against all the
+power of Spain. Well, the Boers are descended from these men and women
+(for both fought). Also, they include a very large dash of some of the
+best blood of Europe, namely, that of the Huguenots. For instance, Botha
+himself is of Huguenot descent. It is impossible for a person like
+myself, who have that same blood in me, to talk with him for five
+minutes without becoming aware of his origin. Long before he told me so
+I knew that he was in part a Frenchman. Men so great are not easily
+conquered, as we know to our cost. Why, it took quite 250,000 soldiers
+and three years of strenuous guerrilla warfare to enable Britain to
+defeat 40,000 or 50,000 Dutch farmers. Therefore I have personally not
+the least fear of the ultimate result of the campaign against Southwest
+Africa.
+
+I went as a lad as Secretary to the Governor of Natal. That was in 1875.
+Subsequently I accompanied Sir Theophilus Shepstone, one of the greatest
+men that ever lived in South Africa, on his famous mission to the
+Transvaal. I am now, I believe, the only survivor of that mission, and
+certainly the only man who knows all the inner political history of that
+event. Afterward I held office in the Transvaal, and was in the country
+during all the disastrous period of the first Boer war. For instance, I
+dined with Gen. Colley the night before he started on his ill-fated
+expedition. I think there were thirteen of us present at that historical
+dinner. Within a few weeks six or eight of these were dead, including
+Colley himself, killed in the fight of Majuba, of which I heard the
+guns. Of those present at that dinner party there now survive only Lady
+Colley, my wife, and myself.
+
+
+*Felt Like Rip Van Winkle.*
+
+After this I left Africa, and more than thirty years went by before I
+returned as a commissioner in the service of the Crown. It was a very
+extraordinary experience; indeed, I felt like a new Rip Van Winkle, for
+nearly all my old chiefs and colleagues were dead, and another
+generation had arisen. I can only say that I was deeply touched by the
+reception which I received throughout the country. It was with strange
+feelings that almost on the very spot where I helped to read the
+proclamation of annexation of the Transvaal, in 1877, and with my own
+hands hoisted the British flag over the land, I listened to my health
+being proposed by the Dutch Chief Justice of the Transvaal territory,
+once more a part of the British Empire. Such was my greeting everywhere.
+Three and thirty years before I had left the shores of Africa, believing
+that soon or late the British power was doomed to failure and probably
+to extinction there. When I left them again, six months ago, it was with
+the glad knowledge that, by the united wish of the inhabitants of South
+Africa, it was re-established, never again to pass away. It is a
+wonderful thing for a man in his own lifetime to see a country pass
+through so many vicissitudes, and in the end to appear in the face of
+the world no longer as England's enemy, but as a constituent part of the
+great British Empire, one of her best friends and supporters, glorying
+in her flag, which now floats from Cape Agalhas to the Zambesi, and soon
+will float over those contingent regions that have been seized by the
+mailed fist of Germany.
+
+
+
+
+*Capt. Mark Haggard's Death in Battle*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: In various papers throughout England has appeared a letter, or part
+of a letter, written by Private C. Derry of the Second Battalion, Welsh
+Regiment. It concerns the fall of my much-loved nephew, Capt. Mark
+Haggard, of the same regiment, on Sept. 13 in the battle of the Aisne.
+
+Since this letter has been published and, vivid, pathetic, and
+pride-inspiring as it is, does not tell all the tale, I have been
+requested, on behalf of Mark's mother, young widow, and other members of
+our family, to give the rest of it as it was collected by them from the
+lips of Lieut. Somerset, who lay wounded by him when he died. Therefore
+I send this supplementary account to you in the hope that the other
+journals which have printed the first part of the story will copy it
+from your columns.
+
+It seems that after he had given the order to fix bayonets, as told by
+Private Derry, my nephew charged the German Maxims at the head of his
+company, he and his soldier servant outrunning the other men. Arrived at
+the Maxim in front of him, with the rifle which he was using as Derry
+describes, he shot and killed
+
+[Illustration: GERHART HAUPTMANN
+
+_See Page_ 175]
+
+[Illustration: LUDWIG FULDA.
+
+_See Page 180_ ]
+
+the three soldiers who were serving it, and then was seen "fighting and
+laying out" the Germans with the butt end of his empty gun, "laughing"
+as he did so, until he fell mortally wounded in the body and was carried
+away by his servant.
+
+His patient and heroic end is told by Private Derry, and I imagine that
+the exhortation to "Stick it, Welsh!" which from time to time he uttered
+in his agony, will not soon be forgotten in his regiment. Of that end we
+who mourn him can only say in the simple words of Derry's letter, that
+he "died as he had lived--an officer and a gentleman."
+
+Perhaps it would not be inappropriate to add as a thought of consolation
+to those throughout the land who day by day see their loved ones thus
+devoured by the waste of war, that of a truth these do not vainly die.
+Not only are they crowned with fame, but by the noble manner of their
+end they give the lie to Bernhardi and his school, who tell us that we
+English are an effete and worn-out people, befogged with mean ideals;
+lost in selfishness and the lust of wealth and comfort. Moreover, the
+history of these deeds of theirs will surely be as a beacon to those
+destined to carry on the traditions of our race in that new England
+which shall arise when the cause of freedom for which we must fight and
+die has prevailed--to fall no more.
+
+I am, Sir, your obedient servant,
+
+H. RIDER HAGGARD.
+
+Ditchingham, Norfolk, Oct. 9.
+
+
+
+
+*An Anti-Christian War*
+
+*By Robert Bridges.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: Since the beginning of this war the meaning of it has in one
+respect considerably changed, and I hope that our people will see that
+it is primarily a holy war. It is manifestly a war declared between
+Christ and the devil.
+
+The conduct of the German conscripts has demonstrated that they have
+been instructed to adopt in full practice the theories of their
+political philosophers, and that they have heartily consented to do this
+and freely commit every cruelty that they think will terrorize the
+people whom they intend to crush. The details of their actions are too
+beastly to mention.
+
+Their philosophers, as I read them, teach openly that the law of love is
+silly and useless, but that brutal force and cruelty are the useful and
+proper means of attaining success in all things. Shortly, you are not to
+do to others as you wish they should do to you, but you should do
+exactly what you wish they should not do to you; that is, you should cut
+their throats and seize their property, and then you will get on.
+
+As for these enlightened philosophers, their doctrines are plainly an
+apostasy from the Gospel--and this they do not scruple to avow; and
+their tenets are only a recrudescence or reassertion of the barbarism
+which we hoped we had grown out of; it is all merely damnable. But it
+seems to me that, judged only as utilitarian policy, it is stupid; and
+that they blundered in neglecting the moral force (for that is also a
+force) of the antagonism that they were bound to arouse in all gentle
+minds, whether simple or cultured. It was stupid of them not to perceive
+that their hellish principles would shock everything that is most
+beloved and living in modern thought, both the "humanitarian" tendency
+of the time and the respect which has grown up for the rights of
+minorities and nationalities. Now, not to reckon with such things was
+stupid, unless they can win temporary justification by immediate
+success.
+
+What success is possible for those who thus openly outrage humanity
+remains to be seen; but they cannot be allowed the advantage of any
+doubt as to what they are about. Those who fight for them will fight for
+"the devil and all his works"; and those who fight against them will be
+fighting in the holy cause of humanity and the law of love. If the
+advocacy of their bad principles and their diabolical conduct do not set
+the whole world against them, then the world is worse than I think. My
+belief is that there are yet millions of their own countrymen who have
+not bowed the knee to Satan, and who will be as much shocked as we are;
+and that this internal moral disruption will much hamper them. This
+morning I have a legal notice sent me from a German resident in England
+announcing that he has changed his name, for shame (I suppose) of his
+Fatherland.
+
+All their apology throughout has been a clumsy tissue of
+self-contradictory lies, and their occasional hypocrisy has been hastily
+pretended and ill-conceived. The particular contention against us--that
+we were betraying the cause of civilization by supporting the barbarous
+Slav--does not come very convincingly from them if their apostle is
+Nietzsche, while the Russian prophet is Tolstoy.
+
+The infernal machine which has been scientifically preparing for the
+last twenty-five years is now on its wild career like one of Mr. Wells's
+inventions, and wherever it goes it will leave desolation behind it and
+put all material progress back for at least half a century. There was
+never anything in the world worthier of extermination, and it is the
+plain duty of all civilized nations to unite to drive it back into its
+home and exterminate it there. I am, &c.,
+
+ROBERT BRIDGES.
+
+Sept. 1.
+
+
+
+
+*English Artists' Protest*
+
+
+ _Art lovers in Great Britain have drawn up a protest against the
+ vandalism of German soldiers. Copies of this protest have been sent
+ to the Comte de Lalaing, Belgian Minister in London; the American
+ Ambassador, with a humble request that it may be forwarded to the
+ President of the United States; and Baron Kervyn de Lettenhove, Art
+ Adviser to the Belgian Government. Those who have signed include
+ well-known collectors, Trustees of the British Museum, the National
+ Gallery, the National Portrait Gallery, and the National Galleries
+ of Scotland; the Director and Principal Librarian of the British
+ Museum; the Directors of the National Gallery, the Victoria and
+ Albert Museum, and the National Galleries of Scotland and Ireland;
+ the Keepers of the Wallace Collection and the National Gallery of
+ British Art; Keepers in the British Museum; the Joint Honorary
+ Secretaries of the National Art Collections Fund, and many critics
+ and others prominent in the art world._
+
+The whole civilized world has witnessed with horror the terrible effects
+of modern warfare on helpless inhabitants of Belgium and France, and on
+ancient buildings and other works of art which are the abiding monuments
+of the piety and culture of their ancestors.
+
+Some of the acts of the invading German army against buildings may be
+defensible from the military standpoint; but it seems certain from
+present information that in some signal instances, notably at Louvain
+and Rheims, this defense cannot hold good against the mass of evidence
+to the contrary.
+
+The signatories of this protest claim that they are in no sense a
+partisan body. Their contention in this matter is that the splendid
+monuments of the arts of the Middle Ages which have been destroyed or
+damaged are the inheritance of the whole world, and that it is the duty
+of all civilized communities to endeavor to preserve them for the
+benefit and instruction of posterity. While France and Belgium are
+individually the poorer from such wanton destruction, the world at large
+is no less impoverished.
+
+On these grounds, therefore, we desire to express our strong indignation
+and abhorrence at the gratuitous destruction of ancient buildings that
+has marked the invasion of Belgium and France by the German Army, and we
+wish to enter a protest in the strongest terms against the continuance
+of so barbarous and reckless a policy. That it is the result of a
+policy, and not of an accident, is shown by the similarity of the fate
+of Louvain, Malines, Termonde, Senlis, and finally Rheims.
+
+Many of us have had the opportunity of showing that our love and respect
+for art are not bounded by our nationality, but we feel compelled to
+publish to the world our horror and detestation of the barbarous acts
+committed by the army that represents a country which has done so much
+to promote and advance the study of art and its history.
+
+The signatories are:
+
+ DEVONSHIRE.
+ CHOLMONDELEY.
+ LANSDOWNE.
+ FEVERSHAM.
+ MABEL FEVERSHAM.
+ LEICESTER.
+ LONSDALE.
+ NORMANTON.
+ NORTHBROOK.
+ PLYMOUTH.
+ DILLON.
+ ALINGTON.
+ D'ABERNON.
+ ISABEL SOMERSET.
+ FREDERICK L. COOK.
+ AUDLEY D. NEELD.
+ HERBERT RAPHAEL.
+ SIDNEY COLVIN.
+ MARTIN CONWAY.
+ CHARLES HOLROYD.
+ FREDERIC G. KENYON.
+ HUGH LANE.
+ FRANCIS BEAUFORT PALMER.
+ C. HERCULES READ.
+ CECIL HARCOURT SMITH.
+ ISIDORE SPIELMANN.
+ HERBERT B. TREE.
+ WHITWORTH WALLIS.
+ CHARLES AITKEN.
+ OTTO BEIT.
+ MAURICE W. BROCKWELL.
+ A.H. BUTTERY.
+ C.S. CARSTAIRS.
+ JAMES L. CAW.
+ HERBERT COOK.
+ D.H.S. CRANAGE.
+ LIONEL CUST.
+ CAMPBELL DODGSON.
+ CHARLES DOWDESWELL.
+ DAVID ERSKINE.
+ H.A.L. FISHER.
+ J.L. GARVIN.
+ PERCIVAL GASKELL.
+ ALGERNON GRAVES.
+ JAMES GREIG.
+ O. GUTEKUNST.
+ EDWARD HUTTON.
+ G.B. CROFT-LYONS.
+ D.S. MACCOLL.
+ ERIC MACLAGAN.
+ G. MAYER.
+ MORTIMER MENPES.
+ ALMERIC H. PAGET.
+ J.S.R. PHILLIPS.
+ G.N. COUNT PLUNKETT.
+ JANET ROSS.
+ ROBERT ROSS.
+ M.E. SADLER.
+ MARION SPIELMANN.
+ A.J. SULLEY.
+ D. CROAL THOMSON.
+ T. HUMPHRY WARD.
+ W.H. JAMES WEALE.
+ FREDERICK A. WHITE.
+ R.C. WITT.
+
+
+
+
+*To Arms!*
+
+*By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.*
+
+
+Is it possible that there are still some of our people who do not
+understand the causes of this war, and are ignorant of the great stakes
+at issue which will speedily have so important a bearing upon the lives
+of each and all of them? It is hard to believe it, and yet it is so
+stated by some who profess to know. Let me try, in the shortest space
+and in the clearest words that I can command, to lay before them both
+the causes and the possible effects, and to implore them now, now, at
+this very moment, before it is too late, to make those efforts and
+sacrifices which the occasion demands. In Germany, every man from the
+ages of sixteen to fifty-five is with the colors. The last man has been
+called up. And yet we hear--we could not bear to see--that young
+athletic men in this country are playing football or cricket, while our
+streets are full of those who should be in our camps. All our lives have
+been but a preparation for this supreme moment. All our future lives
+will be determined by how we bear ourselves in these few months to come.
+Shame, shame on the man who fails his country in this its hour of need!
+I would not force him to serve. I could not think that the service of
+such a man was of any avail. Let the country be served by free men, and
+let them deal with the coward or the sluggard who flinches.
+
+The causes of the war are only of moment to us, at this stage, in that
+we gain more strength in our arms and more iron in our souls by a
+knowledge that it is for all that is honorable and sacred for which we
+fight. What really concerns us is that we are in a fight for our
+national life, that we must fight through to the end, and that each and
+all of us must help, in his own fashion, to the last ounce of his
+strength, that this end may be victory. That is the essence of the
+situation. It is not words and phrases that we need, but men, men--and
+always more men. If words can bring the men then they are of avail. If
+not they may well wait for the times to mend. But if there is a doubt in
+the mind of any man as to the justice of his country's quarrel, then
+even a writer may find work ready to his hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let us cast our minds back upon the events which have led up to this
+conflict. They may be divided into two separate classes, those which
+prepared the general situation, and those which caused the special
+quarrel. Each of these I will treat in its turn.
+
+
+*Teuton Intoxication.*
+
+It is a matter of common knowledge, one which a man must be blind and
+deaf not to understand, that for many years Germany, intoxicated by her
+success in war and by her increase of wealth, has regarded the British
+Empire with eyes of jealousy and hatred. It has never been alleged by
+those who gave expression to this almost universal national passion that
+Great Britain had in any way, either historically or commercially, done
+Germany a mischief. Even our most bitter traducers, when asked to give
+any definite historical reasons for their dislike, were compelled to put
+forward such ludicrous excuses as that the British had abandoned the
+Prussian King in the year 1761, quite oblivious of the fact that the
+same Prussian King had abandoned his own allies in the same war under
+far more damaging circumstances, acting up to his own motto that no
+promises are binding where the vital interests of a State are in
+question. With all their malevolence they could give no examples of any
+ill turn done by us until their deliberate policy had forced us into
+antagonism. On the other hand, a long list of occasions could very
+easily be compiled on which we had helped them in some common cause,
+from the days of Marlborough to those of Blucher. Until the twentieth
+century had turned they had no possible cause for political hatred
+against us. In commerce our record was even more clear. Never in any way
+had we interfered with that great development of trade which has turned
+them from one of the poorest to one of the richest of European States.
+Our markets were open to them untaxed, while our own manufactures paid
+20 per cent. in Germany. The markets of India, of Egypt, and of every
+portion of the empire which had no self-appointed tariff, were as open
+to German goods as to British ones. Nothing could possibly have been
+more generous than our commercial treatment. No doubt there was some
+grumbling when cheap imitations of our own goods were occasionally found
+to oust the originals from their markets. Such a feeling was but natural
+and human. But in all matters of commerce, as in all matters political
+before the dawn of this century, they have no shadow of a grievance
+against us.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And yet they hated us with a most bitter hatred, a hatred which long
+antedates the days when we were compelled to take a definite stand
+against them. In all sorts of ways this hatred showed itself, in the
+diatribes of professors, in the pages of books, in the columns of the
+press. Usually it was a sullen, silent dislike. Sometimes it would flame
+up suddenly into bitter utterance, as at the time of the unseemly
+dispute around the deathbed of the Emperor's father, or on the occasion
+of the Jameson Raid. And yet this bitter antagonism was in no way
+reciprocated in this country. If a poll had been taken at any time up to
+the end of the century as to which European country was our natural
+ally, the vote would have gone overwhelmingly for Germany. "America
+first and then Germany" would have been the verdict of nine men out of
+ten. But then occurred two events which steadied the easy-going Briton,
+and made him look more intently and with a more questioning gaze at his
+distant cousin over the water. Those two events were the Boer war and
+the building of the German fleet. The first showed us, to our amazement,
+the bitter desire which Germany had to do us some mischief, the second
+made us realize that she was forging a weapon with which that desire
+might be fulfilled.
+
+
+_The Boer War and Germany._
+
+We are most of us old enough to remember the torrent of calumny and
+insult which was showered upon us in the day of our temporary distress
+by the nation to whom we had so often been a friend and an ally. It is
+true that other nations treated us little better, and yet their
+treatment hurt us less. The difference as it struck men at the time may
+be summarized in this passage from a British writer of the period.
+
+"But it was very different with Germany," he says. "Again and again in
+the world's history we have been the friends and the allies of these
+people. It was so in the days of Marlborough, in those of the Great
+Frederick, and in those of Napoleon. When we could not help them with
+men we helped them with money. Our fleet has crushed their enemies. And
+now, for the first time in history, we have had a chance of seeing who
+were our friends in Europe, and nowhere have we met more hatred and more
+slander than from the German press and the German people. Their most
+respectable journals have not hesitated to represent the British
+troops--troops every bit as humane and as highly disciplined as their
+own--not only as committing outrages on person and property, but even as
+murdering women and children.
+
+"At first this unexpected phenomenon merely surprised the British
+people, then it pained them, and finally, after two years of it, it has
+roused a deep, enduring anger in their minds."
+
+He goes on to say: "The continued attacks upon us have left an enduring
+feeling of resentment, which will not and should not die away in this
+generation. It is not too much to say that five years ago a complete
+defeat of Germany in a European war would have certainly caused British
+intervention. Public sentiment and racial affinity would never have
+allowed us to see her really go to the wall. And now it is certain that
+in our lifetime no British guinea and no soldier's life would under any
+circumstances be spent for such an end. That is one strange result of
+the Boer war, and in the long run it is possible that it may prove not
+the least important."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such was the prevailing mood of the nation when they perceived Germany,
+under the lead of her Emperor, following up her expressions of enmity by
+starting with restless energy to build up a formidable fleet, adding
+programme to programme, out of all possible proportion to the German
+commerce to be defended or to the German coastline exposed to attack.
+Already vainglorious boasts were made that Germany was the successor to
+Britain upon the seas. "The Admiral of the Atlantic greets the Admiral
+of the Pacific," said the Kaiser later in a message to the Czar. What
+was Britain to do under this growing menace? So long as she was isolated
+the diplomacy of Germany might form some naval coalition against her.
+She took the steps which were necessary for her own safety, and without
+forming an alliance she composed her differences with France and Russia
+and drew closer the friendship which united her with her old rival
+across the Channel. The first fruit of the new German fleet was the
+entente cordiale. We had found our enemy. It was necessary that we
+should find our friends. Thus we were driven into our present
+combination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And now we had to justify our friendship. For the first time we were
+compelled to openly oppose Germany in the deep and dangerous game of
+world politics. They wished to see if our understanding was a reality or
+a sham. Could they drive a wedge between us by showing that we were a
+fair-weather friend whom any stress would alienate? Twice they tried it,
+once in 1906 when they bullied France into a conference at Algeciras but
+found that Britain was firm at her side, and again in 1911 when in a
+time of profound peace they stirred up trouble by sending a gunboat to
+Agadir, and pushed matters to the very edge of war. But no threats
+induced Britain to be false to her mutual insurance with France. Now for
+the third and most fatal time they have demanded that we forswear
+ourselves and break our own bond lest a worse thing befall us. Blind and
+foolish, did they not know by past experience that we would keep our
+promise given? In their madness they have wrought an irremediable evil
+to themselves, to us, and to all Europe.
+
+I have shown that we have in very truth never injured nor desired to
+injure Germany in commerce nor have we opposed her politically until her
+own deliberate actions drove us into the camp of her opponents. But it
+may well be asked why then did they dislike us, and why did they weave
+hostile plots against us? It was that, as it seemed to them, and as
+indeed it actually may have been, we, independently of our own wills,
+stood between Germany and that world empire of which she dreamed. This
+was caused by circumstances over which we had no control and which we
+could not modify if we had wished to do so. Britain, through her
+maritime power and the energy of her merchants and people, had become a
+great world power when Germany was still unformed. Thus, when she had
+grown to her full stature, she found that the choice places of the world
+and those most fitted for the spread of a transplanted European race
+were already filled up. It was not a matter which we could help nor
+could we alter it, since Canada, Australia, and South Africa would not,
+even if we could be imagined to have wished it, be transferred to German
+rule. And yet the Germans chafed, and if we can put ourselves in their
+places we may admit that it was galling that the surplus of their
+manhood should go to build up the strength of an alien and possibly a
+rival State. So far we could see their grievance, or, rather their
+misfortune, since no one was in truth to blame in the matter. Had their
+needs been openly and reasonably expressed, and had the two States moved
+in concord in the matter, it is difficult to think that no helpful
+solution of any kind could have been found.
+
+
+*As Germans See England.*
+
+But the German method of approaching the problem has never been to ask
+sympathy and co-operation, but to picture us as a degenerate race from
+whom anything might be gained by playing upon our imagined weakness and
+cowardice. A nation which attends quietly to its own sober business
+must, according to their mediaeval notions, be a nation of decadent
+poltroons. If we fight our battles by means of free volunteers instead
+of enforced conscripts then the military spirit must be dead among us.
+Perhaps, even in this short campaign, they have added this delusion also
+to the dust-bin of their many errors. But such was their absurd
+self-deception about the most virile of European races. Did we propose
+disarmament, then it was not humanitarianism but cowardice that prompted
+us, and their answer was to enlarge their programme. Did we suggest a
+navy-building holiday, it was but a cloak for our weakness and an
+incitement that they should redouble their efforts. Our decay had become
+a part of their national faith. At first the wish may have been the
+father to the thought, but soon under the reiterated assertions of their
+crazy professors the proposition became indisputable. Bernhardi in his
+book upon the next war cannot conceal the contempt in which he has
+learned to hold us. Neibuhr long ago had prophesied the coming fall of
+Britain, and every year was believed to bring it nearer and to make it
+more certain. To these jaundiced eyes all seemed yellow, when the
+yellowness lay only in themselves. Our army, our navy, our colonies, all
+were equally rotten. "Old England, old, indeed, and corrupt, rotten
+through and through." One blow and the vast sham would fly to pieces,
+and from those pieces the victor could choose his reward. Listen to
+Prof. Treitschke, a man who, above all others, has been the evil genius
+of his country, and has done most to push it toward this abyss: "A thing
+that is wholly a sham," he cried, in allusion to our empire, "cannot, in
+this universe of ours, endure forever. It may endure for a day, but its
+doom is certain." Were ever words more true when applied to the narrow
+bureaucracy and swaggering Junkerdom of Prussia, the most artificial and
+ossified sham that ever our days have seen? See which will crack first,
+our democracy or this, now that both have been plunged into the furnace
+together. The day of God's testing has come, and we shall see which can
+best abide it.
+
+
+*The Blame Not England's.*
+
+I have tried to show that we are in no way to blame for the hostility
+which has grown up between us. So far as it had any solid cause at all
+it has arisen from fixed factors, which could no more be changed by us
+than the geographical position which has laid us right across their exit
+to the oceans of the world. That this deeply rooted national sentiment,
+which forever regarded us as the Carthage to which they were destined to
+play the part of Rome, would, sooner or later, have brought about war
+between us, is, in my opinion, beyond all doubt. But it was planned to
+come at the moment which was least favorable for Britain. "Even English
+attempts at a rapprochement must not blind us to the real situation,"
+says Bernhardi. "We may, at most, use them to delay the necessary and
+inevitable war until we may fairly imagine we have some prospect of
+success." A more shameless sentence was never penned, and one stands
+marveling which is the more grotesque--the cynicism of the sentiment or
+the folly which gave such a warning to the victim. For be it remembered
+that Bernhardi's words are to be taken very seriously, for they are not
+the ravings of some Pan-German monomaniac, but the considered views of
+the foremost military writer of Germany, one who is in touch with those
+inner circles whose opinions are the springs of national policy. "Our
+last and greatest reckoning is to be with Great Britain," said the
+bitter Treitschke. Sooner or later the shock was to come. Germany sat
+brooding over the chessboard of the world waiting for the opening which
+should assure a winning game.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was clear that she should take her enemies separately rather than
+together. If Britain were attacked it was almost certain that France and
+Russia would stand by her side. But if, on the contrary, the quarrel
+could be made with these two powers, and especially with Russia, in the
+first instance, then it was by no means so certain that Great Britain
+would be drawn into the struggle. Public opinion has to be strongly
+moved before our country can fight, and public opinion under a Liberal
+Government might well be divided upon the subject of Russia. Therefore,
+if the quarrel could be so arranged as to seem to be entirely one
+between Teuton and Slav there was a good chance that Britain would
+remain undecided until the swift German sword had done its work. Then,
+with the grim acquiescence of our deserted allies, the still bloody
+sword would be turned upon ourselves, and that great final reckoning
+would have come.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such was the plan, and fortune favored it. A brutal murder had, not for
+the first time, put Servia into a position where a State may be blamed
+for the sins of individuals. An ultimatum was launched so phrased that
+it was impossible for any State to accept it as it stood and yet remain
+an independent State. At the first sign of argument or remonstrance the
+Austrian Army marched upon Belgrade. Russia, which had been already
+humiliated in 1908 by the forcible annexation of Bosnia, could not
+possibly submit a second time to the Caudine Forks. She laid her hand
+upon her sword hilt. Germany sprang to the side of her ally. France
+ranged herself with Russia. Like a thunderclap the war of the nations
+had begun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So far all had worked well for German plans. Those of the British public
+who were familiar with the past and could look into the future might be
+well aware that our interests were firmly bound with those of France,
+and that if our faggots were not tied together they would assuredly be
+snapped each in its turn. But the unsavory assassination which had been
+so cleverly chosen as the starting point of the war bulked large in the
+eyes of our people, and, setting self-interest to one side, the greater
+part of the public might well have hesitated to enter into a quarrel
+where the cause seemed remote and the issues ill-defined. What was it to
+us if a Slav or a Teuton collected the harbor due of Saloniki! So the
+question might have presented itself to the average man who in the long
+run is the ruler of this country and the autocrat of its destinies. In
+spite of all the wisdom of our statesmen, it is doubtful if on such a
+quarrel we could have gained that national momentum which might carry us
+to victory. But at that very moment Germany took a step which removed
+the last doubt from the most cautious of us and left us in a position
+where we must either draw our sword or stand forever dishonored and
+humiliated before the world. The action demanded of us was such a
+compound of cowardice and treachery that we ask ourselves in dismay what
+can we ever have done that could make others for one instant imagine us
+to be capable of so dastardly a course. Yet that it was really supposed
+that we could do it, and that it was not merely put forward as an excuse
+for drawing us into war, is shown by the anger and consternation of the
+Kaiser and his Chancellor when we drew back from what the British Prime
+Minister had described as "an infamous proposal." One has only to read
+our Ambassador's description of his interview with the German Chancellor
+after our decision was announced, "so evidently overcome by the news of
+our action," to see that through some extraordinary mental aberration
+the German rulers did actually believe that a vital treaty with
+Britain's signature upon it could be regarded by this country as a mere
+"scrap of paper."
+
+
+*The Treaty of 1839.*
+
+What was this treaty which it was proposed so lightly to set aside? It
+was the guarantee of the neutrality of Belgium signed in 1839 (confirmed
+verbally and in writing by Bismarck in 1870) by Prussia, France, and
+Britain, each of whom pledged their word to observe and to enforce it.
+On the strength of it Belgium had relied for her security amid her
+formidable neighbors. On the strength of it also France had lavished all
+her defenses upon her eastern frontier, and left her northern exposed to
+attack. Britain had guaranteed the treaty, and Britain could be relied
+upon. Now, on the first occasion of testing the value of her word it was
+supposed that she would regard the treaty as a worthless scrap of paper,
+and stand by unmoved while the little State which had trusted her was
+flooded by the armies of the invader. It was unthinkable, and yet the
+wisest brains of Germany seem to have persuaded themselves that we had
+sunk to such depths of cowardly indolence that even this might go
+through. Surely they also have been hypnotized by those foolish dreams
+of Britain's degeneration, from which they will have so terrible an
+awakening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As a matter of fact the General Staff had got ahead of the diplomatists,
+and the German columns were already over the border while the point was
+being debated at Berlin. There was no retreat from the position which
+had been taken up. "It is to us a vital matter of strategy and is beyond
+argument," said the German soldier. "It is to us a vital matter of honor
+and, is beyond argument," answered the British statesman. The die was
+cast. No compromise was possible. Would Britain keep her word or would
+she not? That was the sole question at issue. And what answer save one
+could any Briton give to it? "I do not believe," said our Prime
+Minister, "that any nation ever entered into a great controversy with a
+clearer conscience and stronger conviction that it is fighting, not for
+aggression, not for the maintenance of its own selfish interest, but in
+defense of principles the maintenance of which is vital to the
+civilization of the world." So he spoke, and history will indorse his
+words, for we surely have our quarrel just.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So much for the events which have led us to war. Now for a moment let us
+glance at what we may have to hope for, what we may have to fear, and,
+above all, what we must each of us do that we win through to a lasting
+peace.
+
+What have we to gain if we win? That we have nothing material to gain,
+no colonies which we covet, no possessions of any sort that we desire,
+is the final proof that the war has not been provoked by us. No nation
+would deliberately go out of its way to wage so hazardous and costly a
+struggle when there is no prize for victory. But one enormous indirect
+benefit we will gain if we can make Germany a peaceful and harmless
+State. We will surely break her naval power and take such steps that it
+shall not be a menace to us any more. It was this naval power, with its
+rapid increase and the need that we should ever, as Mr. Churchill has so
+well expressed it, be ready at our average moment to meet an attack at
+their chosen moment--it was this which has piled up our war estimates
+during the last ten years until they have bowed us down. With such
+enormous sums spent upon ships and guns, great masses of capital were
+diverted from the ordinary channels of trade, while an even more serious
+result was that our programmes of social reform had to be curtailed from
+want of the money which could finance them. Let the menace of that
+lurking fleet be withdrawn--the nightmare of those thousand hammers
+working day and night in forging engines for our destruction--and our
+estimates will once again be those of a civilized Christian country,
+while our vast capital will be turned from measures of self-protection
+to those of self-improvement. Should our victory be complete, there is
+little which Germany can yield to us save the removal of that shadow
+which has darkened us so long. But our children and our children's
+children will never, if we do our work well now, look across the North
+Sea with the sombre thoughts which have so long been ours, while their
+lives will be brightened and elevated by money which we, in our darker
+days, have had to spend upon our ships and our guns.
+
+Consider, on the other hand, what we should suffer if we were to lose.
+All the troubles of the last ten years would be with us still, but in a
+greatly exaggerated form. A larger and stronger Germany would dominate
+Europe and would overshadow our lives. Her coast line would be
+increased, her ports would face our own, her coaling stations would be
+in every sea, and her great army, greater then than ever, would be
+within striking distance of our shores. To avoid sinking forever into
+the condition of a dependant, we should be compelled to have recourse to
+rigid compulsory service, and our diminished revenues would be all
+turned to the needs of self-defense. Such would be the miserable
+condition in which we should hand on to our children that free and
+glorious empire which we inherited in all the fullness of its richness
+and its splendor from those strong fathers who have built it up. What
+peace of mind, what self-respect could be left for us in the remainder
+of our lives! The weight of dishonor would lie always upon our hearts.
+And yet this will be surely our fate and our future if we do not nerve
+our souls and brace our arms for victory. No regrets will avail, no
+excuses will help, no after-thoughts can profit us. It is now--now--even
+in these weeks and months that are passing that the final reckoning is
+being taken, and when once the sum is made up no further effort can
+change it. What are our lives or our labors, our fortunes or even our
+families, when compared with the life or death of the great mother of us
+all? We are but the leaves of the tree. What matter if we flutter down
+today or tomorrow, so long as the great trunk stands and the burrowing
+roots are firm. Happy the man who can die with the thought that in this
+greatest crisis of all he has served his country to the uttermost, but
+who would bear the thoughts of him who lives on with the memory that he
+had shirked his duty and failed his country at the moment of her need?
+
+There is a settled and assured future if we win. There is darkness and
+trouble if we lose. But if we take a broader sweep and trace the
+meanings of this contest as they affect others than ourselves, then ever
+greater, more glorious are the issues for which we fight. For the whole
+world stands at a turning point of its history, and one or other of two
+opposite principles, the rule of the soldier or the rule of the citizen,
+must now prevail. In this sense we fight for the masses of the German
+people, as some day they will understand, to free them from that
+formidable military caste which has used and abused them, spending their
+bodies in an unjust war and poisoning their minds by every device which
+could inflame them against those who wish nothing save to live at peace
+with them. We fight for the strong, deep Germany of old, the Germany of
+music and of philosophy, against this monstrous modern aberration the
+Germany of blood and of iron, the Germany from which, instead of the old
+things of beauty, there come to us only the rant of scolding professors
+with their final reckonings, their Weltpolitik, and their Godless
+theories of the Superman who stands above morality and to whom all
+humanity shall be subservient. Instead of the world-inspiring phrases of
+a Goethe or a Schiller, what are the words in the last decade which have
+been quoted across the sea? Are they not always the ever-recurring words
+of wrath from one ill-balanced man? "Strike them with the mailed fist."
+"Leave such a name behind you as Attila and his Huns." "Turn your
+weapons even upon your own flesh and blood at my command." These are the
+messages which have come from this perversion of a nation's soul.
+
+
+*A Mighty Despotism.*
+
+But the matter lies deep. The Hohenzollerns and the Hapsburgs have used
+their peoples as a great landowner might use the serfs upon his estate.
+It was, and is, their openly expressed theory that they were in their
+position by the grace of God, that they owed no reckoning to any man,
+and that kingdom and folk were committed for better or worse to their
+charge. Round this theory of the Dark Ages there gathered all the forces
+of the many courts of the empire, all the nobility who make so huge a
+class in Germanic countries, all the vast army to whom strict discipline
+and obedience were the breath of life, all the office-holders of the
+State, all the purveyors of warlike stores. These and their like were
+the natural setting to such a central idea. Court influence largely
+controlled the teaching at school and universities, and so the growing
+twig could be bent. But all these forces together could not have upheld
+so dangerous and unnatural a theory had it not been for the influence of
+a servile press. How that press was managed, how the thoughts of the
+people could be turned to the right or the left with the same precision
+as a platoon of grenadiers, has been shown clearly enough in the memoirs
+of Bismarck. Public opinion was poisoned at its very roots. The average
+citizen lived in a false atmosphere where everything was distorted to
+his vision. He saw his Kaiser, not as an essentially weak and impetuous
+man with a dangerous entourage who were ever at his ear, but as Germany
+personified, an angel with a flaming sword, beating back envious
+assailants from the beloved Fatherland. He saw his neighbors not as
+peaceful nations who had no possible desire to attack him, but on the
+contrary lived in constant fear of him, but as a band, of envious and
+truculent conspirators who could only be kept in order by the sudden
+stamp of the jackboot and the menacing clatter of the sabre. He
+insensibly imbibed the Nietzsche doctrine that the immorality of the
+Superman may be as colossal as his strength and that the slave-evangel
+of Christianity was superseded by a sterner law. Thus, when he saw acts
+which his reason must have told him were indefensible he was still
+narcotized by this conception of some new standard of right. He saw his
+Kaiser at the time of a petty humiliation to Great Britain sending a
+telegram of congratulation to the man who had inflicted this rebuff.
+Could that be approved by reason? At a time when all Europe was
+shuddering over the Armenian massacres he saw this same Kaiser paying a
+complimentary visit to the Sultan whose hands were still wet with the
+blood of murdered Christians. Could that be reconciled with what is
+right? A little later he saw the Kaiser once again pushing himself into
+Mediterranean politics, where no direct German interest lay, and
+endeavoring to tangle up the French developments in Northern Africa by
+provocative personal appearances at Morocco, and, later, by sending a
+gunboat to intrude upon a scene of action which had already by the
+Treaty of Algeciras been allotted to France. How could an honest German
+whose mind was undebauched by a controlled press justify such an
+interference as that? He is or should be aware that, in annexing Bosnia,
+Austria was tearing up a treaty without the consent of the other
+signatories, and that his own country was supporting and probably
+inciting her ally to this public breach of faith. Could he honestly
+think that this was right? And, finally, he must know, for his own
+Chancellor has publicly proclaimed it, that the invasion of Belgium was
+a breach of international right, and that Germany, or, rather, Prussia,
+had perjured herself upon the day that the first of her soldiers passed
+over the frontier. How can he explain all this to himself save on a
+theory that might is right, that no moral law applies to the Superman,
+and that so long as one hews one's way through, the rest can matter
+little? To such a point of degradation have public morals been brought
+by the infernal teachings of Prussian military philosophy, dating back
+as far as Frederick II., but intensified by the exhortations of press
+and professors during our own times. The mind of the average kindly
+German citizen has been debauched and yet again debauched until it
+needed just such a world crisis as this to startle him at last from his
+obsession and to see his position and that of his country in its true
+relation with humanity and progress.
+
+
+*The Final Stakes.*
+
+Thus I say, that for the German who stands outside the ruling classes,
+our victory would bring a lasting relief, and some hope that in future
+his destiny should be controlled by his own judgment and not by the
+passions or interests of those against whom he has at present no appeal.
+A system which has brought disaster to Germany and chaos to all Europe
+can never, one would think, be resumed, and amid the debris of his
+empire the German may pick up that precious jewel of personal freedom
+which is above the splendor of foreign conquest. A Hapsburg or a
+Hohenzollern may find his true place as the servant rather than the
+master of a nation. But apart from Germany, look at the effects which
+our victory must have over the whole wide world. Everywhere it will mean
+the triumph of reasoned democracy, of public debate, of ordered freedom
+in which every man is an active unit in the system of his own
+Government, while our defeat would stand for a victory to a priviliged
+class, the thrusting down of the civilian by the arrogance and
+intolerance of militarism, and the subjection of all that is human and
+progressive to all that is cruel, narrow, and reactionary. This is the
+stake for which we play, and the world will lose or gain as well as we.
+You may well come, you democratic oversea men of our blood, to rally
+round us now, for all that you cherish, all that is bred in your very
+bones, is that for which we fight. And you, lovers of freedom in every
+land, we claim at least your prayers and your wishes, for if our sword
+be broken you will be the poorer. But fear not, for our sword will not
+be broken, nor shall it ever drop from our hands until this matter is
+forever set in order. If every ally we have upon earth were to go down
+in blood and ruin, still would we fight through to the appointed end.
+Defeat shall not daunt us. Inconclusive victory shall not turn us from
+our purpose. The grind of poverty and the weariness of hopes deferred
+shall not blunt the edge of our resolve. With God's help we shall go to
+the end, and when that goal is reached it is our prayer that a new era
+shall come as our reward, an era in which, by common action of State
+with State, mutual hatreds and strivings shall be appeased, land shall
+no longer be estranged from land, and huge armies and fleets will be
+nightmares of the past. Thus, as ever, the throes of evil may give birth
+to good. Till then our task stands clear before us--a task that will ask
+for all we have in strength and resolution. Have you who read this
+played your part to the highest? If not, do it now, or stand forever
+shamed.
+
+
+
+
+*Conan Doyle on British Militarism*
+
+
+Early last year, in the course of some comments which I made upon the
+slighting remarks about our army by Gen. von Bernhardi, I observed: "It
+may be noted that Gen. von Bernhardi has a poor opinion of our troops.
+This need not trouble us. We are what we are, and words will not alter
+it. From very early days our soldiers have left their mark upon
+Continental warfare, and we have no reason to think that we have
+declined from the manhood of our forefathers." Since then he has
+returned to the attack.
+
+With that curious power of coming after deep study to the absolutely
+diametrically wrong conclusion which the German expert, political or
+military, appears to possess, he says in his "War of Today": "The
+English Army, trained more for purposes of show than for modern war,"
+adding in the same sentence a sneer at our "inferior colonial levies."
+
+He will have an opportunity of reconsidering his views presently upon
+the fighting value of our oversea troops, and surely, so far as our own
+are concerned, he must already be making some interesting notes for his
+next edition, or, rather, for the learned volume upon "Germany and the
+Last War," which will, no doubt, come from his pen. He is a man to whom
+we might well raise a statue, for I am convinced that his frank
+confession of German policy has been worth at least an army corps to
+this country. We may address to him John Davidson's lines to his enemy:
+
+ Unwilling friend, let not your spite abate.
+ Spur us with scorn and strengthen us with hate.
+
+There is another German gentleman who must be thinking rather furiously.
+He is a certain Col. Gadke, who appeared officially at Aldershot some
+years ago, was hospitably entertained, being shown all that he desired
+to see, and on his return to Berlin published a most deprecatory
+description of our forces. He found no good thing in them. I have some
+recollection that Gen. French alluded in a public speech to this
+critic's remarks, and expressed a modest hope that he and his men would
+some day have the opportunity of showing how far they were deserved.
+Well, he has had his opportunity, and Col. Gadke, like so many other
+Germans, seems to have made a miscalculation.
+
+
+*Germans Untried in War.*
+
+An army which has preserved the absurd parade schritt, an exercise which
+is painful to the bystander, as he feels that it is making fools of
+brave men, must have a tendency to throw back to earlier types. These
+Germans have been trained in peace and upon the theory of books. In all
+that vast host there is hardly a man who has stood at the wrong end of a
+loaded gun. They live on traditions of close formations, vast cavalry
+charges, and other things which will not fit into modern warfare. Braver
+men do not exist, but it is the bravery of men who have been taught to
+lean upon each other, and not the cold, self-contained, resourceful
+bravery of the man who has learned to fight for his own hand. The
+British have had the teachings of two recent campaigns fought with
+modern weapons--that of the Tirah and of South Africa. Now that the
+reserves have joined the colors there are few regiments which have not a
+fair sprinkling of veterans from these wars in their ranks. The Pathan
+and the Boer have been their instructors in something more practical
+than those imperial grand manoeuvres where the all-highest played with
+his puppets in such a fashion that one of his Generals remarked that the
+chief practical difficulty of a campaign so conducted would be the
+disposal of the dead.
+
+Boers and Pathans have been hard masters and have given many a slap to
+their admiring pupils, but the lesson has been learned. It was not show
+troops, General, who, with two corps, held five of your best day after
+day from Mons to Compiègne. It is no reproach to your valor, but you
+were up against men who were equally brave and knew a great deal more of
+the game. This must begin to break upon you, and will surely grow
+clearer as the days go by. We shall often in the future take the knock
+as well as give it, but you will not say that we are a slow army if you
+live to chronicle this war, nor will your imperial master be proud of
+the adjective which he has demeaned himself in using before his troops
+had learned their lesson.
+
+
+*The South African Lesson.*
+
+The fact is that the German Army, with all its great traditions, has
+been petrifying for many years back. They never learned the lesson of
+South Africa. It was not for want of having it expounded to them, for
+their military attache--"'im with the spatchcock on 'is 'elmet,'" as I
+heard him described by a British orderly--missed nothing of what
+occurred, as is evident from their official history of the war. And yet
+they missed it, and with all those ideas of individual efficiency and
+elastic independent formation which are the essence of modern
+soldiering. Their own more liberal thinkers were aware of it. Here are
+the words which were put into the mouth of Güntz, the representative of
+the younger school, in Beverlein's famous novel:
+
+"The organization of the German Army rested upon foundations which had
+been laid a hundred years ago. Since the great war they had never
+seriously been put to the proof, and during the last three decades they
+had only been altered in the most trifling details. In three long
+decades! And in one of those decades the world at large had advanced as
+much as in the previous century.
+
+"Instead of turning this highly developed intelligence to good account,
+they bound it hand and foot on the rack of an everlasting drill which
+could not have been more soullessly mechanical in the days of Frederick.
+It held them together as an iron hoop holds together a cask, the dry
+staves of which would fall asunder at the first kick."
+
+Lord Roberts has said that if ten points represent the complete soldier,
+eight should stand for his efficiency as a shot. The German maxim has
+rather been that eight should stand for his efficiency as a drilled
+marionette. It has been reckoned that about two hundred books a year
+appear in Germany upon military affairs, against about twenty in
+Britain. And yet, after all this expert debate, the essential point of
+all seems to have been missed--that in the end everything depends upon
+the man behind the gun, upon his hitting his opponent and upon his
+taking cover so as to avoid being hit himself.
+
+After all the efforts of the General Staff, the result when shown upon
+the field of battle has filled our men with a mixture of admiration and
+contempt--contempt for the absurd tactics and admiration for the poor
+devils who struggle on in spite of them. Listen to the voices of the men
+who are the real experts. Says a Lincolnshire Sergeant: "They were in
+solid square blocks, and we couldn't help hitting them." Says Private
+Tait (Second Essex): "Their rifle shooting is rotten. I don't believe
+they could hit a haystack at 100 yards." "They are rotten shots with
+their rifles," says an Oldham private. "They advance in close column,
+and you simply can't help hitting them," writes a Gordon Highlander.
+"You would have thought it was a big crowd streaming out from a cup
+tie," says Private Whitaker of the Guards. "It was like a farmer's
+machine cutting grass," so it seemed to Private Hawkins of the
+Coldstreams. "No damned good as riflemen," says a Connemara boy. "You
+couldn't help hitting them. As to their rifle fire, it was useless."
+"They shoot from the hip, and don't seem to aim at anything in
+particular."
+
+
+*Not Books That Count.*
+
+These are the opinions of the practical men upon the field of battle.
+Surely a poor result from the 200 volumes a year and all the weighty
+labors of the General Staff! "Artillery nearly as good as our own, rifle
+fire beneath contempt." That is the verdict. How will the well-taught
+parade schritt avail them when it comes to a stricken field?
+
+But let it not seem as if this were meant for disparagement. We should
+be sinking to the Kaiser's level if we answer his "contemptible little
+army" by pretending that his own troops are anything but a very
+formidable and big army. They are formidable in numbers, formidable,
+too, in their patriotic devotion, in their native courage, and in the
+possession of such material, such great cannon, aircraft, machine guns,
+and armored cars as none of the Allies can match. They have every
+advantage which a nation would be expected to have when it has known
+that war was a certainty, while others have only treated it as a
+possibility. There is a minuteness and earnestness of preparation which
+are only possible for an assured event. But the fact remains, and it
+will only be brought out more clearly by the Emperor's unchivalrous
+phrase, that in every arm the British have already shown themselves to
+be the better troops. Had he the Froissart spirit within him he would
+rather have said: "You have today a task which is worthy of you. You are
+faced by an army which has a high repute and a great history. There is
+real glory to be won today." Had he said this then, win or lose, he
+would not have needed to be ashamed of his own words--the words of
+ungenerous spirit.
+
+It is a very strange thing how German critics have taken for granted
+that the British Army had deteriorated, while the opinion of all those
+who were in close touch with it was that it was never so good. Even some
+of the French experts made the same mistake, and Gen. Bonnat counseled
+his countrymen not to rely upon it, since "it would take refuge amid its
+islands at the first reverse." One would think that the cause which
+makes for its predominance were obvious. Apart from any question of
+national spirit there is the all-important fact that the men are there
+of their own free will, an advantage which I trust that we shall never
+be compelled to surrender. Again, the men are of longer service in every
+arm, and they have far more opportunities of actual fighting than come
+to any other force. Finally they are divided into regiments with
+centuries of military glories streaming from their banners, which carry
+on a mighty tradition. The very words the Guards, the Rifles, the
+Connaught Rangers, the Buffs, the Scots Greys, the Gordons, sound like
+bugle calls. How could an army be anything but dangerous which had such
+units in its line of battle?"
+
+
+*History Repeating Itself*.
+
+And yet there remains the fact that both enemies and friends are
+surprised at our efficiency. This is no new phenomenon. Again and again
+in the course of history the British armies have had to win once more
+the reputation which had been forgotten. Continentals have always begun
+by refusing to take them seriously. Napoleon, who had never met them in
+battle, imagined that their unbroken success was due to some weakness in
+his Marshals rather than in any excellence of the troops. "At last I
+have them, these English," he exclaimed as he gazed at the thin, red
+line at Waterloo. "At last they have me, these English," may have been
+his thought that evening as he spurred his horse out of the débacle. Foy
+warned him of the truth. "The British infantry is the devil," said he.
+"You think so because you were beaten by them," cried Napoleon. Like von
+Kluck or von Kluck's master, he had something to learn.
+
+Why this continual depreciation? It may be that the world pays so much
+attention to our excellent right arm that it cannot give us credit for
+having a very serviceable left as well. Or it may be that they take
+seriously those jeremiads over our decay which are characteristic of our
+people, and very especially of many of our military thinkers. I have
+never been able to understand why they should be of so pessimistic a
+turn of mind, unless it be a sort of exaltation of that grumbling which
+has always been the privilege of the old soldier. Croker narrates how he
+met Wellington in his later years, and how the Iron Duke told him that
+he was glad he was so old, as he would not live to see the dreadful
+military misfortunes which were about to come to his country. Looking
+back, we can see no reason for such pessimism as this. Above all, the
+old soldier can never make any allowance for the latent powers which lie
+in civilian patriotism and valor. Only a year ago I had a long
+conversation with a well-known British General, in which he asserted
+with great warmth that in case of an Anglo-German war with France
+involved the British public would never allow a trained soldier to leave
+these islands. He is at the front himself and doing such good work that
+he has little time for reminiscence, but when he has he must admit that
+he underrated the nerve of his countrymen.
+
+
+*Assurance Beneath Pessimism.*
+
+And yet under the pessimism of such men as he there is a curious
+contradictory assurance that there are no troops like our own. The late
+Lord Goschen used to tell a story of a letter that he had from a Captain
+in the navy at the time when he was First Lord. This Captain's ship was
+lying alongside a foreign cruiser in some port, and he compared in his
+report the powers of the two vessels. Lord Goschen said that his heart
+sank as he read the long catalogue of points in which the British ship
+was inferior--guns, armor, speed--until he came to the postscript, which
+was: "I think I could take her in twenty minutes."
+
+With all the grumbling of our old soldiers, there is always some
+reservation of the sort at the end of it. Of course, those who are
+familiar with our ways of getting things done would understand that a
+good deal of the croaking is a means of getting our little army
+increased, or at least preventing its being diminished. But whatever the
+cause, the result has been the impression abroad of a "contemptible
+little army." Whatever surprise in the shape of 17-inch howitzers or
+900-foot Zeppelins the Kaiser may have for us, it is a safe prophecy
+that it will be a small matter compared to that which Sir John French
+and his men will be to him.
+
+But above all I look forward to the development of our mounted riflemen.
+This I say in no disparagement of our cavalry, who have done so
+magnificently. But the mounted rifleman is a peculiarly British
+product--British and American--with a fresh edge upon it from South
+Africa. I am most curious to see what a division of these fellows will
+make of the Uhlans. It is good to see that already the old banners are
+in the wind, Lovat's Horse, Scottish Horse, King Edward's Horse, and the
+rest. All that cavalry can do will surely be done by our cavalry. But I
+have always held, and I still very strongly hold, that the mounted
+rifleman has it in him to alter our whole conception of warfare, as the
+mounted archer did in his day; and now in this very war will be his
+first great chance upon a large scale. Ten thousand well-mounted,
+well-trained riflemen, young officers to lead them, all broad Germany,
+with its towns, its railways and its magazines before them--there lies
+one more surprise for the doctrinaires of Berlin.
+
+
+
+
+*The Need of Being Merciless*
+
+*By Maurice Maeterlinck.*
+
+*From The London Daily Mail.*
+
+
+At these moments of tragedy none should be allowed to speak who cannot
+shoulder a rifle, for the written word seems so monstrously useless and
+so overwhelmingly trivial in face of this mighty drama that will for a
+long time and maybe forever free mankind from the scourge of war--the
+one scourge among all that cannot be excused and that cannot be
+explained, since alone among all scourges it issues entirely from the
+hands of man.
+
+But it is while this scourge is upon us--while we have our being in its
+very centre--that we shall do well to weigh the guilt of those who
+committed this inexpiable crime. It is now, when we are in the awful
+horror, undergoing and feeling it, that we have the energy and
+clearsightedness needed to judge it. From the depths of the most fearful
+injustice justice is best perceived. When the hour shall have come for
+settling accounts--it will not be long delayed--we shall have forgotten
+much of what we have suffered and a censurable pity will creep over us
+and cloud our eyes.
+
+
+*Will Seek Sympathy.*
+
+This is the moment, therefore, for us to frame our inexorable
+resolution. After the final victory, when the enemy is crushed--as
+crushed as he will be--efforts will be made to enlist our sympathy. We
+shall be told that the unfortunate German people are merely the victims
+of their monarch and their feudal caste; that no blame attaches to the
+Germany we know that is so sympathetic and cordial--the Germany of
+quaint old houses and open-hearted greetings; the Germany that sits
+under its lime trees beneath the clear light of the moon--but only to
+Prussia, hateful, arrogant Prussia; that homely, peace-loving Bavaria,
+the genial, hospitable dwellers on the banks of the Rhine, the Silesian
+and Saxon--I know not who besides--have merely obeyed and been compelled
+to obey orders they detested, but were unable to resist.
+
+We are in the face of reality now. Let us look at it well and pronounce
+our sentence, for this is the moment when we hold the proofs in our
+hands; when the elements of the crime are hot before us and should
+out--the truth that will soon fade from our memory. Let us tell
+ourselves now therefore that all we shall be told hereafter will be
+false. Let us unflinchingly adhere to what we decide at this moment when
+the glare of the horror is on us.
+
+
+*No Degrees of Guilt.*
+
+It is not true that in this gigantic crime there are innocent and guilty
+or degrees of guilt. They stand on one level, all who have taken part.
+The German from the north has no more especial craving for blood than
+the German from the south has especial tenderness and pity. It is very
+simple. It is the German from one end of the country to the other who
+stands revealed as a beast of prey that the firm will of our planet
+finally repudiates. We have here no wretched slaves dragged along by a
+tyrant King who alone is responsible. Nations have the Government they
+deserve, or rather the Government they have is truly no more than a
+magnified public projection of the private morality and mentality of the
+nation.
+
+If eighty million innocent people merely expose the inherent falseness
+and superficiality of their innocence--and it is a monster they maintain
+at their head who stands for all that is true in their nature, because
+it is he who represents the eternal aspirations of their race, which lie
+far deeper than their apparent transient virtues--let there be no
+suggestion of error, of intelligent people having been tricked and
+misled. No nation can be deceived that does not wish to be deceived. It
+is not intelligence that Germany lacks. In the sphere of intellect such
+things are not possible, nor in the region of the enlightened,
+reflecting will. No nation permits herself to be coerced into the one
+crime man cannot pardon. It is of her own accord she hastens toward it.
+Her chief has no need to persuade. It is she who urges him on.
+
+We have forces here quite different from those on the surface--forces
+that are secret, irresistible, profound. It is these we must judge, must
+crush under heel once for all, for they are the only ones that will not
+be improved, softened or brought into line by experience, progress, or
+even the bitterest lesson. They are unalterable, immovable. Their
+springs lie far beneath hope or influence. They must be destroyed as we
+destroy a nest of wasps, since we know these never can change into a
+nest of bees.
+
+Even though individually and singly Germans are all innocent and merely
+led astray, they are none the less guilty in mass. This is the guilt
+that counts--that alone is actual and real, because it lays bare
+underneath their superficial innocence, the subconscious criminality of
+all. No influence can prevail on the unconscious or subconscious. It
+never evolves. Let there come a thousand years of civilization, a
+thousand years of peace, with all possible refinements, art, and
+education, the German spirit which is its underlying element will remain
+absolutely the same as today and would declare itself when the
+opportunity came under the same aspect with the same infamy.
+
+Through the whole course of history two distinct will-powers have been
+noticed that would seem to be the opposing elemental manifestations of
+the spirit of our globe, one seeking only evil, injustice, tyranny,
+suffering, the other strives for liberty, right, radiance, joy. These
+two powers stand once again face to face. Our opportunity is to
+annihilate the one that comes from below. Let us know how to be pitiless
+that we have no more need for pity. It is the measures of organic
+defense--it is essential that the modern world should stamp out Prussian
+militarism as it would stamp out a poisonous fungus that for half a
+century had poisoned its days. The health of our planet is the question.
+Tomorrow the United States and Europe will have to take measures for the
+convalescence of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+*Letters to Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler*
+
+*By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant.*
+
+
+ _Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia University, has
+ permitted_ THE NEW YORK TIMES _to have the extracts printed
+ herewith from letters sent to him since the beginning of the war by
+ Baron d'Estournelles de Constant, Senator of France, and Member of
+ the International Court at The Hague._
+
+
+*First Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Aug. 15, 1914.--* * * Today I am full of grief to feel myself
+impotent before the murderous conflicts now going on in Belgium and at a
+number of points on our northern and eastern frontiers, while awaiting
+the great battles and hecatombs which will follow; my thought is full of
+these terrible calamities willfully brought about; so many precious
+lives already wiped out or soon to be; so much avoidable mourning which
+one neither can nor wishes now to avoid!
+
+In France there is not a single family which has not given without
+hesitation all its children of military age to fight for the repulse of
+the invader. All the men from Créans, of ages 20 to 48 years, have gone,
+with one exception, and he is now going; and meanwhile no work has
+ceased because of their absence. In all the communes, in all the hamlets
+of the whole of France, the women, the children, and the men over 48
+have assumed all duties, in particular the gathering of the harvests,
+which I see already finished as in normal times. * * *
+
+When one thinks that Servia alone, even though exhausted by two
+atrocious wars, is sufficient to hold in check imperial Austria; when
+one sees Italy remain neutral, and in reality hostile to Austria, and
+Russia open slowly, inexorably, her reservoir of men, resources, and
+infinite energy on the eastern frontier of Germany, one asks truly if
+the Pan-Germanists have not been the veritable plague of God for their
+country; the Fatherland, which men like Goethe, Kant, and Beethoven had
+made so cultured, so glorious, and which asked only to live and to
+prosper, the Pan-Germanists have isolated only to deliver it to the
+execration of the world. It was the same in France formerly, when she
+ceded to chauvinistic influences.
+
+
+*Second Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 3, 1914.
+
+* * * May you never witness such calamities as have fallen upon Europe.
+The visions of horror, which formerly we evoked in order to terrify the
+world and to try to conjure them away, are now surpassed; and we are
+only at the commencement of the war! The trains, thronged with youth and
+enthusiasm, which I saw leave are now returning crowded with the
+wounded. They have filled all the hospitals, the barracks which had been
+left empty, the lyceums, and the schools throughout France. In but a few
+days they have arrived everywhere in the south, the west and the centre
+of the country. At La Flèche alone we have five improvised hospitals
+with 1,200 beds. Créans is a hospital annex, and so it is in all the
+villages and in the dwellings which can provide one or more beds. The
+wounded who occupy these beds are happy, very happy. One of them, who
+has only a broken leg, but who thinks of the thousands of his comrades
+who remain wounded upon the fields of battle, said to me, "I am in
+heaven." * * *
+
+The worst of all, (I have always said it, but it is even worse than I
+had thought,) the worst is that each of the combatants, for the most
+part incapable of cruelty under ordinary conditions, is now devoted to
+the horrible work of hatred and of reprisal; and even more than the
+combatants, their children, their orphans, all those who are to remain
+in mourning. * * *
+
+As far as France is concerned, our first reverses have served to exalt
+the national spirit and to fortify the unanimous resolution to conquer
+or to die. It is important that this be well understood in the United
+States and that it be given due consideration if it is desired to
+intervene without irritating the most noble scruples. * * *
+
+It is the Prussian military system of domination with its contagion
+which has done the harm and which ought to disappear, and that system
+itself is the fruit of Napoleonic imperialism. The struggle is always,
+and more now than ever, between imperialism and liberty, between force
+and right. May you in the United States profit by this lesson, so that
+you may avoid falling into the European error. * * * It is barbarity
+triumphant. But that triumph will be only momentary, and all agree at
+the conclusion of this terrible drama on having a United States of
+Europe with disarmament, or at least with armaments limited to a
+collective police force.
+
+
+*Third Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 8, 1914.
+
+* * * You have comprehended that France is struggling for justice and
+peace. Be sure that she will resist even to the last man, with the
+certainty that she is defending not herself alone but also civilization.
+Never have I suspected to what degree of savagery man can be degraded by
+unrestrained violence. I had believed that the world could never again
+see the time of the Massacre of the Innocents; I deceived myself; we
+have returned to barbarity, and the Prussian Army leaves us no
+alternative between victory and extermination; should she become
+mistress of Paris, which I doubt, and of the half of France, she will
+find the other half which will bury her under its ruins. * * *
+
+The English troops march on our roads, stop at Clermont-Créans! Oh,
+miracle! I see among my compatriots the worst chauvinists, those who
+openly desire for me the fate of Jaurès, those who fought me in 1902
+with cries of "Fashoda" or "Chicago," hasten to meet the English
+soldiers in order to aid and acclaim them, in this country still full of
+the memories and the ruins of the hundred years' war! It is because the
+English troops are also defending the land of liberty, theirs as ours
+and as yours. Every one except the Prussians comprehend this, and this
+it is which exalts their souls! * * *
+
+The whole misfortune, I repeat, is the result of the crime committed
+forty-three years ago, the crime which we accepted to avoid recommencing
+the war. Our resignation has not sufficed; it has not caused the trouble
+to disappear; the German Government has none the less been obliged to
+confirm it each day. The misfortune has been the forcible annexation of
+Alsace-Lorraine. For that the Germans are paying today; for that they
+will pay until they have made atonement for their fault. In this regard
+France is irreproachable; she has resisted the chauvinists; our general
+elections, the conferences of Berne and of Basle, have proved that, far
+from seeking revenge, she wished by mutual concessions to arrive
+worthily at reconciliation in peace.
+
+The Germans are paying today for their fault of 1870-71, because that
+fault has corrupted and poisoned them. I have said it a thousand times.
+In order to keep those two unfortunate provinces under their domination
+it has been necessary for them to use force, to institute a régime of
+force. * * * It has been necessary to prevent revolts by repressive
+measures, as at Saverne, which have disgusted, and even disquieted, the
+whole world; that ignominious brutality become sovereign mistress, by
+the force of circumstances, even against the will of the Kaiser and
+against the protestation of all the élite of Germany, of such men as
+Zorn, Förster, Nippold, and Bebel, has ended by being a menace and a
+danger to Germany itself. All this is connected, and, whatever happens,
+Germany cannot emerge victorious from a war which is itself but the
+logical result of the abuse of her victories. She cannot conquer
+civilization; it is impossible. * * *
+
+Comprehend this well, repeat it, publish it if you wish; France,
+Belgium, and England may suffer check after check; they are prepared for
+this, they expect it, but they will not be discouraged. The German
+armies may exhaust themselves uselessly in killing, burning, and
+destroying. They will destroy themselves in the end. Our national policy
+is to take them in their own trap and to wear them out.
+
+The day of reckoning is coming, when the inexorable advance of the
+Slavic race, always increasing in numbers--it little matters whether it
+is well or badly organized--will come from the rear to attack the
+Germans at the time when they are confident of victory and to drown them
+in the floods of blood which they have caused to flow; terrible
+punishment for a war which we and our friends have done everything to
+prevent. The victims of this punishment will be at least a half million
+of French, Belgians, and Englishmen, together with a whole nation which
+desired peace as we did, but which has allowed herself to be misled by a
+Government mad enough to wish to reconcile the irreconcilable, namely,
+the maintenance of peace and the spirit of conquest. May this punishment
+at least begin an era of new peace! Alas! how may we hope for this when
+we see the human beast awakening in a delirium of fury and getting
+beyond our control to destroy the masterpieces of human genius.
+
+
+*Fourth Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 11, 1914.
+
+The Germans appear to have comprehended that the atrocities which have
+bitterly aggravated the remorseless violation of Belgian neutrality have
+only aroused general indignation, and have at the same time exasperated
+the opposing nations and armies. Contrary to the tales which appear in
+the sensational journals, which are naturally as eager today to embitter
+the war as they were formerly to bring it about, I am assured that the
+German armies in France are repudiating the unworthy excesses of the
+beginning of the campaign and are respecting life and private property.
+This will alleviate the horrors of the war, but France nevertheless will
+place no limit on the sacrifices which she will make. She will wear out
+the German Army and destroy it, day after day, in continuous battles.
+* * *
+
+The Belgians with us at Clermont-Créans, instead of being a burden, as I
+had feared, are making themselves useful. They are very welcome. They
+are gradually recognized and appreciated as estimable people, and are
+employed in the homes and farms and fields. We should like to have more
+of them. How we shall regret them when they leave! * * *
+
+The German Emperor must stand either as a pacifist or as a conqueror. He
+cannot pass as both. All the results which may follow this war could
+well have been obtained in peace by a general effort of good-will. On
+the other hand, the legacy of the war will be endless rancor, hatred,
+reprisal, and savagery. When it shall be understood that, in spite of
+Governments and Parliaments, the war has been, in large part, excited by
+the manoeuvres of an international band of the dealers in military
+supplies and by their all-powerful newspapers, when it shall be
+thoroughly comprehended that these dealers and these newspapers have
+played with rumors of war as with a scarecrow, for the purpose of
+keeping up a general condition of disquiet favorable to their sinister
+operations, then, too late, alas! there will be a revulsion of public
+opinion to sustain finally those men, like our friends, who have urged
+arbitration rather than war, and conciliation rather than arbitration.
+
+* * * More than ever our motto, "Pro patria per orbis concordiam," will
+be that of every good patriot who wishes to develop the internal
+prosperity of his country through friendly foreign relations. * * * More
+than a century ago you Americans condemned and executed British
+imperialism; subsequently Europe condemned and executed Napoleonic
+imperialism; Europe is now going to condemn and execute Germanic
+imperialism; profit by this threefold lesson to make an end of
+imperialism in your country, and by your good example to render to
+Europe an incalculable service.
+
+Such an example will be more efficacious than overhasty or superficial
+intervention, however well intentioned it might be. Above all, beware of
+offering aid to Europe in a spirit of opportunism rather than of high
+principle. Especially, do not try to take advantage of some
+circumstances in order to urge a lame and ephemeral peace. Public
+opinion will be bitterly divided if the war is brought to an end merely
+by lassitude and a desire for comfort. Public opinion will accept only a
+peace inspired with high ideals, without needless humiliation for the
+conquered, and equally without sacrifice of any principles which have
+brought together the anti-German coalition.
+
+The war itself, however atrocious it has been and still may be, will
+have been only a commencement, the beginning of continual wars into
+which the New World will be drawn, if we do not leave the desire of life
+and the means of living to Germany, conquered but still alive. It is
+possible to conquer and to exterminate armies, but it is not possible to
+exterminate a nation of 70,000,000 people. It will then be necessary to
+make a place for Germany which will permit the exercise of her fecund
+activity in the struggle of universal competition. If we yield to the
+temptation to make an end of German competition, we shall neither end
+the competition nor shall we end war.
+
+For years I have repeated this to our English friends who were
+intoxicated with the theories of Chamberlain. I see without surprise but
+with sorrow that serious journals of London and Paris spread before the
+eyes of their readers the absurd idea that this war will kill the German
+foreign commerce, while the English and French production will be
+enriched without a rival, and consequently without effort. Place should
+be made for Germany from Berlin to Vienna in the organization of a
+general European confederation which will give full satisfaction to
+Italy at Trieste, will install the Turkish Government in Asia, will
+bring about an agreement between the Christian Balkan States, and give
+the free disposal of their destinies to Poland, Denmark, Finland,
+Hungary, Rumania, and Alsace-Lorraine.
+
+In this manner the worst problems on which general peace depends would
+be solved, and with these problems that of armaments, which it would no
+longer be dangerous nor humiliating to reduce if the general reduction,
+extending even to Japan and seconded by all the republics of the New
+World, were agreed to by all. Certainly such an agreement would be
+difficult to develop; it would terrify the diplomats, but outside of
+such an agreement I see in perspective nothing but perpetual war,
+internal revolution, and general ruin.
+
+
+*Fifth Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 18, 1914.
+
+
+* * * The pride of an empire may not be crushed without a bitter
+struggle. The German Government has at its disposition the live force of
+a young and growing people. However, the day is coming when that people,
+aware that they have been deceived, will be able to repudiate their
+Government, just as the French people did after Sedan. Meanwhile the
+German armies have stopped their retreat in order to form a new line of
+resistance. But to what good? This line will be overthrown, and in the
+end the German Army will be obliged to retreat in disorder and again to
+cross the land which it has laid waste.
+
+The true difficulties, in my opinion, are going to commence when the
+conquered Germans must submit to the conditions made by the conquerors.
+The victors will be able to agree, I believe, to stop the war and to
+dictate conditions. But will they agree to make these conditions
+moderate? That is the question. At that moment even France will be far
+from unanimous, as she has been unanimous in defending herself. France
+is of one opinion on these principal points:
+
+1. Alsace-Lorraine ought to be liberated at last, free to return to
+France; her rights ought to be respected and recognized. Such liberation
+should extend as far as possible to every country in Europe whose right
+has been violated.
+
+2. We must make an end of ruinous armed peace, invented, so it was said,
+to prevent war, but which has made war inevitable. German militarism
+must be crushed unless it is again to become a menace and give the
+signal for another competition of armaments. This peace will be only a
+truce, a sinister comedy, unless it is crowned by a general convention
+of disarmament, to which Germany must subscribe with all the others and
+before all the others.
+
+3. Arbitration, conciliation, all the means already provided for
+amicable adjustment, and if possible for the prevention of international
+conflicts, should be organized on a more solid and more definite basis
+than in the past, with the sanction, or at least the maximum of
+necessary precautions, of a federated Europe. All which we have done at
+The Hague, far from being lost, will serve as a foundation for the
+building of a pacific federation.
+
+On these three points one may prophesy a unanimity almost complete; but
+the division will begin when it comes to distinguishing between Germany
+and the empire, between the German people who have a right to live and
+the German Empire which opposed the right to live; the division will
+begin when some demand the humiliation of Germany, others the ruin of
+her colonies, and of her very life. France, who has defended peace,
+will, I am sure, also defend justice; but justice will not triumph
+without difficulty. And it is here that the United States will render
+great service, if the United States has preserved, as one can see so
+clearly in the Mexican crisis, her moral authority and
+disinterestedness.
+
+In the cuttings from the American papers which you have sent me I have
+read with great disquietude an article which says that, after all, the
+United States "will be the beneficiary of the European war." This
+article claims that the United States may profit very easily by this war
+to take away from Germany her commerce in the three Americas, &c. It is
+a dangerous form of reasoning, which, however, is not new.
+
+If war has attracted ardent partisans it is because it appeals to the
+temperament of many people, it flatters their self-pride, but also it
+serves their interests. I have never understood it as I do at present. I
+see, for example, the town of Mons enriching itself through the war;
+cafés, restaurants, the hotels, are unable to accommodate all who come
+to them; the farmers are seen disputing about their products. There are
+also the military requisitions by which one can profit in getting rid of
+an old horse, of a wagon, an automobile, &c.; there are the butchers,
+the bakers, the dealers in cutlery, &c., who have never had so many
+purchasers; the furnishers of materials for the hospitals, pharmacists,
+orthopedists, &c.
+
+Add to these an immense number of furnishers of military supplies, not
+only those who sell cannon, arms, and ammunition, but the accessories,
+the uniforms, material for the transports, and for the administrative
+work, &c. They are legion. Add to these all the combatants who have been
+promised positions as officers, Colonels, Generals. * * * Napoleon I.
+gave titles and honors. * * * You will understand that after the war, if
+there is an infinite number of unfortunates who mourn and who are ruined
+by the war, there are others, on the contrary, who have profited very
+well, who have enriched themselves and been raised to a privileged,
+fortunate class, who will find it quite natural to demand war or whose
+children will demand it later; while the mass of unfortunates, without
+strength, without resources, without protection, will need years to
+reconquer in peace the rights which they legally enjoyed before the war,
+and which the war suddenly took from them.
+
+If to this class, more powerful than numerous, of natural partisans of
+the war in Europe you are going to add the American partisans of the
+European war, you will commit a grave fault, for the Americans have more
+than ever everything to gain by peace and all to lose in war, which they
+will not be able to limit if it breaks out again in the world.
+
+The truth is that the Americans evidently gain in the war, but they lose
+more. Europe is something else to them than a market over which to
+dispute, she is a reservoir of experiences, good and bad, but of
+experiences which you cannot do without. To wish for the continuation of
+the war in Europe or even to take sides with it as a sort of half evil
+is for the Americans a crime, a sort of suicide; that would be to
+applaud the destruction of models which civilization seems to have
+collected for your edification and for your development. Later, the
+United States can do without many of these lessons which she learns from
+Europe, but she will always have need of the inspiration of the
+masterpieces of our civilization. It is only a barbarous reasoning which
+allows one to see in the European war profit for the United States; it
+is a loss, a mourning, a shame for the whole world, and particularly for
+the free countries which are the guides of other peoples and which can
+only fulfill their mission in times of peace.
+
+I have often heard the profits of war discussed. The undertakers of
+impressive funeral services can also congratulate themselves over
+catastrophes. A railroad accident which puts an entire country in
+mourning can enrich them. The most murderous battles bring profit in the
+final reckoning to somebody, if it is only to the jackals and the crows;
+but it is the whole of a country, and for the United States it is the
+whole world, which must be considered, and the more the whole world
+prospers the more will the United States find friends, collaborators,
+and clients. The more the world is troubled, on the contrary, the more
+commerce and general activities will suffer from it, without mention of
+the development of instruction and of the progress of human thought,
+which will be paralyzed.
+
+I have been surprised to see a serious American paper bring up these old
+questions for discussion, and I conclude that we are going to feel in
+Europe the result of our errors. It is going to be necessary to find
+money to fill up the financial gulf which we dig each day under our feet
+without realizing it; a gulf twice made, by the billions which it has
+been necessary to spend for the war, by the billions of ordinary income
+which must now go by default. We cannot reasonably expect that Germany
+will be able to pay all the deficits in France, England, Russia,
+Belgium, and Japan; she will have no longer her foreign commerce; her
+misery is going to be frightful; it will be necessary then that each of
+the adversaries which she has so rashly provoked limit his demands; we
+must ourselves limit her ruin unless our own credit shall be ruined
+also.
+
+In a word, there are two victories equally difficult for the Allies to
+win: the first over Germany, the second over themselves. Let us prepare
+ourselves to the uttermost and with all the authority which we can
+husband to facilitate the first here, and from your side as well as from
+ours, the second. To make war there is the first difficulty; but to
+finish well, that is what makes me anxious for the future.
+
+
+*Sixth Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 24, 1914.
+
+In spite of all, unity of purpose is maintained among the Allies as well
+as among Frenchmen. I say in spite of all, because at Berlin this was
+hardly believed possible at the beginning of the war.
+
+* * * All the men have left Créans; my farm is empty, and as I told you,
+the work is accomplished just the same. Means are found to feed the
+wounded English, becoming more and more numerous, the wounded Belgians
+and the prisoners. At the mill the miller's wife has four sons and a
+son-in-law in the army. I went to see her; not a tear, she looked
+straight before her absorbed in her work and said only "It is
+necessary." She continues her work as yesterday, as always, only with
+more energy and seriousness than formerly, with the purpose to
+accomplish double.
+
+Meanwhile in spite of lack of news, we are beginning to learn that many
+sons, husbands, fathers, and brothers whom we saw go away will never
+return. Each day a few of the wounded are buried, and so it is in all
+the communities in the country which are not occupied by the Germans. In
+every town, village, home, and heart the national tribulations have
+their local echo.
+
+If all France were victim of a catastrophe of nature, an earthquake, a
+conflagration, or a flood, the country would be crushed; but, no, the
+contrary is now true, for the present catastrophe has been brought about
+by an evil will and each one comprehends that this will, if left free to
+act, will continue to do evil until it has been crushed. We have neither
+the time nor the wish to complain; we fight. * * *
+
+The people, all those who are now devoted to my policy, to our policy,
+remain more faithful than ever. They keep silent awaiting the end of the
+war and knowing well that in fact it is not so much a question of
+Germany as of German reaction, German imperialism, and German
+militarism. They know also that if the German reaction might have been
+crushed sooner, the war would not have broken out. Thus, far from being
+blind, public opinion is alive to the truth. The grandeur, and to speak
+the whole truth, alas, the beauty of the atrocious war is that it is a
+war of liberation. * * *
+
+It is impossible that the New World should remain a simple spectator
+before the gigantic struggle which is progressing in Europe. I do not
+ask that the New World intervene by armed force, but that it shall not
+conceal its opinion, its aversion for that horror which is called
+reaction and which truly is only death; that it shall not conceal its
+indignation for the abominable calculation of that reaction which is
+incapable of comprehending anything of the life, the work, the science
+and the art of human genius. I ask that the New World shall not remain
+skeptical before the senile attacks of those armies which respect
+nothing, neither women, children, old men, unfortified cities, museums,
+nor cathedrals. * * *
+
+It is impossible that the free United States, born out of the sacred
+struggle against European domination, enlarged, enriched, and ennobled
+by that struggle, and now in the front rank among nations as the fruit
+of that struggle, should hesitate between revolution and reaction,
+between right and conquest, between peace and war.
+
+Americans are too generous to hesitate, too wise, also, for Prussian
+reaction is cracking and is going to crumble; even Americans of German
+origin would be acting against their own fatherland if they, by their
+sympathies, should sustain the régime of caporalism which is now
+destroying it.
+
+
+
+
+*The Vital Energies of France*
+
+*By Henri Bergson.*
+
+*From The Bulletin des Armees, Nov. 5, 1914.*
+
+
+The issue of the war is not doubtful: Germany will succumb. Material
+force and moral force, all that sustains her will end by failing her
+because she lives on provisions garnered once for all, because she
+wastes them and will not know how to renew them.
+
+Everything has been said about her material resources. She has money,
+but her credit is sinking, and it is not apparent where she can borrow.
+She needs nitrates for her explosives, oil for her motors, bread for her
+sixty-five millions of inhabitants. For all this she has made provision,
+but the day will come when her granaries will be empty and her
+reservoirs dry. How will she fill them? War as she practices it consumes
+a frightful number of her men, and here, too, all revitalization is
+impossible; no aid will come from without, since an enterprise launched
+to impose German domination, German "culture," German products, does not
+and never will interest those who are not Germans. Such is the situation
+of Germany confronting a France who keeps her credit intact and her
+ports open, who procures provisions and ammunition according to her
+need, who reinforces her army with all that her Allies bring to her, and
+who can count--since her cause is that of humanity itself--upon the
+increasingly active sympathy of the civilized world.
+
+But it is not merely a question of material force, of visible force.
+What of the moral force that cannot be seen and that is more important
+than the other--which to a certain degree can be supplied--that is
+essential, since without it nothing avails?
+
+The moral energy of nations, like that of individuals, can only be
+sustained by some ideal superior to themselves, stronger than they are,
+to which they can cling with a strong grip when they feel their courage
+vacillate. Where lies the ideal of contemporary Germany? The time has
+past when her philosophers proclaimed the inviolability of justice, the
+eminent dignity of the person, (the individual?), the obligation laid
+upon nations to respect one another. Germany militarized by Prussia has
+thrust far from her those noble ideas which came to her formerly for the
+most part from the France of the eighteenth century and the Revolution.
+She has made for herself a new soul, or rather, she has docilely
+accepted that which Bismarck has given her. To that statesman has been
+attributed the famous phrase: "Might makes right." As a matter of fact
+Bismarck never said it, because he was unable to distinguish between
+might and right; in his eyes right was simply that which is desired by
+the strongest, that which is declared in the law imposed by the victor
+upon the vanquished. His whole moral philosophy is summed up in that.
+The Germany of the present knows no other. She also worships brute
+force. And as she believes herself strongest she is entirely absorbed in
+adoration of herself. Her energy has its origin in this pride. Her moral
+force is only the confidence by which her material force inspires her.
+That is to say, that here also she lives on her reserves, that she has
+no means of revitalization. Long before England was blockading her
+coasts she had blockaded herself, morally, by isolating herself from all
+ideals capable of revivifying her.
+
+Therefore she will see her strength and her courage worn out. But the
+energy of our soldiers is linked to something which cannot be worn out,
+to an ideal of justice and liberty. Time has no hold on us. To a force
+nourished only by its own brutality we oppose one that seeks outside of
+itself, above itself, a principle of life and of renewal. While the
+former is little by little exhausted, the latter is constantly revived.
+The former already is tottering, the latter remains unshaken. Be without
+fear: the one will be destroyed by the other.
+
+
+
+
+*France Through English Eyes*
+
+With Rene Bazin's Appreciation.
+
+
+ _Referring to the article printed below, which appeared in The
+ London Times Literary Supplement of Oct. 1, and which the French
+ Government ordered to be read in all Parisian schools, M. Rene
+ Bazin writes in l'Echo de Paris:_
+
+Is not this language admirable? What full and flowing phrases. They are
+like a ship filled with grain sailing into port with her sails full.
+Preserve them, these fugitive lines written by a neighbor, and read them
+to your children. They will teach them the greatness of France and the
+greatness of England.
+
+The whole world recognizes two qualities in the Englishman: his bravery
+and his common sense. We know that the Englishman is true to his given
+word, and that even in the antipodes he never changes his habits. As I
+write, the postman brings me a letter from the front, dated Oct. 17. The
+cavalryman who sends it tells of our Allies. "We are fighting the
+enemy's cavalry," he writes, "and for two days my brigade was in action
+with the British. They know how to fight and they astonish us by their
+marvelous powers of organization and their coolness."
+
+Yes, we know that of old. We also know that England never closes her
+doors to liberty. We have a confused memory of the hospitality given to
+our priests in the times of the Revolution. Now England provides us with
+fresh proof of her kindness of heart. You have heard the news--the
+professors and students of the Catholic University of Louvain invited to
+Cambridge. The destroyed Belgian university reconstituted in the home of
+the celebrated English university. What a magnificent idea!
+
+I do not know whether the author who has spoken so well of France in the
+great English newspaper has ever visited this country. But he has surely
+meditated on our history and has divined the reason of the very
+existence of France; why she merits love beyond her frontiers, and why
+she should be defended "like a treasure." England is not made up of
+traders, soldiers, sailors, politicians, but also--and that is what the
+French people will learn better every day--of poets, subtle
+philosophers, and of thoughtful and religious spirits.
+
+In truth, the day which Joan of Arc foresaw has arrived. She did not
+hate the English. It was only their intolerable rule of the kingdom
+which was hateful to her. The good maid of Lorraine said that after
+having driven the English out of France she would reconcile them with
+the French and lead them together in a crusade. This has become true.
+Her dream is accomplished. The crusade is not against the Saracens, but
+it is a crusade all the same.
+
+
+
+
+*France*
+
+*From The London Times Literary Supplement*
+
+
+Among all the sorrows of this war there is one joy for us in it: that it
+has made us brothers with the French as no other two nations have ever
+been brothers before. There has come to us, after ages of conflict, a
+kind of millennium of friendship; and in that we feel there is a hope
+for the world that outweighs all our fears, even at the height of the
+worldwide calamity. There were days and days, during the swift German
+advance, when we feared that the French armies were no match for the
+German, that Germany would be conquered on the seas and from her eastern
+frontier, that after the war France would remain a power only through
+the support of her Allies. For that fear we must now ask forgiveness;
+but at least we can plead in excuse that it was unselfish and free from
+all national vanity. If, in spite of ultimate victory, France had lost
+her high place among the nations, we should have felt that the victory
+itself was an irreparable loss for the world. And now we may speak
+frankly of that fear because, however unfounded it was, it reveals the
+nature of the friendship between France and England.
+
+That is also revealed in the praise which the French have given to our
+army. There is no people that can praise as they can: for they enjoy
+praising others as much as some nations enjoy praising themselves, and
+they lose all the reserve of egotism in the pleasure of praising well.
+But in this case they have praised so generously because there was a
+great kindliness behind their praise, because they, like us, feel that
+this war means a new brotherhood stronger than all the hatreds it may
+provoke, a brotherhood not only of war but of the peace that is to come
+after it. That welcome of English soldiers in the villages of France,
+with food and wine and flowers, is only a foretaste of what is to be in
+both countries in a happier time. It is what we have desired in the past
+of silly wrangles and misunderstandings, and now we know that our desire
+is fulfilled.
+
+
+*"That Sweet Enemy."*
+
+For behind all those misunderstandings, and in spite of the difference
+of character between us, there was always an understanding which showed
+itself in the courtesies of Fontenoy and a hundred other battles. When
+Sir Philip Sidney spoke of France as that sweet enemy, he made a phrase
+for the English feeling of centuries past and centuries to be. We
+quarrelled bitterly and long; but it was like a man and woman who know
+that some day their love will be confessed and are angry with each other
+for the quarrels that delay the confession. We called each other
+ridiculous, and knew that we were talking nonsense; indeed, as in all
+quarrels without real hatred, we made charges against each other that
+were the opposite of the truth. We said that the French were frivolous;
+and they said that we were gloomy. Now they see the gayety of our
+soldiers and we see the deep seriousness of all France at this crisis of
+her fate. She, of all the nations at war, is fighting with the least
+help from illusion, with the least sense of glory and romance. To her
+the German invasion is like a pestilence; to defeat it is merely a
+necessity of her existence; and in defeating it she is showing the
+courage of doctors and nurses, that courage which is furthest removed
+from animal instinct and most secure from panic reaction. There is no
+sign in France now of the passionate hopes of the revolutionary wars;
+1870 is between them and her; she has learned, like no other nation in
+Europe, the great lesson of defeat, which is not to mix material dreams
+with spiritual; she has passed beyond illusions, yet her spirit is as
+high as if it were drunk with all the illusions of Germany.
+
+And that is why we admire her as we have never admired a nation before.
+We ourselves are an old and experienced people, who have, we hope,
+outlived gaudy and dangerous dreams; but we have not been tested like
+the French, and we do not know whether we or any other nation could
+endure the test they have endured. It is not merely that they have
+survived and kept their strength. It is that they have a kind of
+strength new to nations, such as we see in beautiful women who have
+endured great sorrows and outlived all the triumphs and passions of
+their youth, who smile where once they laughed; and yet they are more
+beautiful than ever, and seem to live with a purpose that is not only
+their own, but belongs to the whole of life. So now we feel that France
+is fighting not merely for her own honor and her own beautiful country,
+still less for a triumph over an arrogant rival, but for what she means
+to all the world; and that now she means far more than ever in the past.
+
+
+*Furia Francese.*
+
+This quarrel, as even the Germans confess, was not made by her. She saw
+it gathering, and she was as quiet as if she hoped to escape war by
+submission. The chance of revenge was offered as it had never been
+offered in forty years; yet she did not stir to grasp it. Her enemy gave
+every provocation, yet she stayed as still as if she were spiritless;
+and all the while she was the proudest nation on the earth, so proud
+that she did not need to threaten or boast. Then came the first failure,
+and she took it as if she had expected nothing better. She had to make
+war in a manner wholly contrary to her nature and genius, and she made
+it as if patience, not fire, were the main strength of her soul. Yet
+behind the new patience the old fire persisted; and the _Furia Francese_
+is only waiting for its chance. The Germans believe they have determined
+all the conditions of modern war, and, indeed of all modern competition
+between the nations to suit their own national character. It is their
+age, they think, an age in which the qualities of the old peoples,
+England and France, are obsolete. They make war, after their own
+pattern, and we have only to suffer it as long as we can. But France has
+learned what she needs from Germany so that she may fight the German
+idea as well as the German armies; and when the German armies were
+checked before Paris there was an equal check to the German idea. Then
+the world, which was holding its breath, knew that the old nations, the
+old faith and mind and conscience of Europe, were still standing fast
+and that science had not utterly betrayed them all to the new barbarism.
+Twice before, at Tours and in the Catalaunian fields, there had been
+such a fight upon the soil of France, and now for the third time it is
+the heavy fate and the glory of France to be the guardian nation. That
+is not an accident, for France is still the chief treasury of all that
+these conscious barbarians would destroy. They knew that while she
+stands unbroken there is a spirit in her that will make their Kultur
+seem unlovely to all the world. They know that in her, as in Athens long
+ago, thought remains passionate and disinterested and free. Their
+thought is German and exercised for German ends, like their army; but
+hers can forget France in the universe, and for that reason her armies
+and ours will fight for it as if the universe were at stake. Many forms
+has that thought taken, passing through disguises and errors, mocking at
+itself, mocking at the holiest things; and yet there has always been the
+holiness of freedom in it. The French blasphemer has never blasphemed
+against the idea of truth even when he mistook falsehood for it. In the
+Terror he said there was no God, because he believed there was none, but
+he never said that France was God so that he might encourage her to
+conquer the world. Voltaire was an imp of destruction perhaps, but with
+what a divine lightning of laughter would he have struck the Teutonic
+Antichrist, and how the everlasting soul of France would have risen in
+him if he could have seen her most sacred church, the visible sign of
+her faith and her genius, ruined by the German guns. Was there ever a
+stupidity so worthy of his scorn as this attempt to bombard the spirit?
+For, though the temple is ruined, the faith remains; and whatever war
+the Germans may make upon the glory of the past, it is the glory of the
+future that France fights for. Whatever wounds she suffers now she is
+suffering for all mankind; and now, more than ever before in her
+history, are those words become true which one poet who loved her gave
+to her in the Litany of Nations crying to the earth:
+
+ I am she that was thy sign and standard bearer,
+ Thy voice and cry;
+ She that washed thee with her blood and left thee fairer,
+ The same am I.
+ Are not these the hands that raised thee fallen, and fed thee,
+ These hands defiled?
+ Am not I thy tongue that spake, thine eye that led thee,
+ Not I thy child?
+
+
+
+
+*The Soldier of 1914*
+
+*By Rene Doumic.*
+
+
+ _In spite of the great European war, which struck France with the
+ full force of its horrors, the Institute of France, which includes
+ the world-famous French Academy, held its regular session on Oct.
+ 26 last. The feature of this session, widely heralded beforehand,
+ was the address of the celebrated critic, M. Rene Doumic of the
+ Academy, on "The Soldier of 1914." "Every sentence, every word of
+ it, was punctuated with acclamations from the audience," says Le
+ Figaro in its report. Below is a translation of M. Doumic's
+ address:_
+
+The soldier of 1914. We think only of him. We live only for him, just as
+we live only through him. I have not chosen this subject; it has forced
+itself upon me. My only regret is that I come here in academician's
+costume, with its useless sword, to speak to you about those whose
+uniforms are torn by bullets, whose rifles are black with powder.
+
+And I am ashamed, above all, of placing so feeble a voice at the service
+of so great a cause. But what do words matter, when the most brilliant
+of them would pale before acts of which each day makes us the witnesses?
+For these acts we have only words, but let us hope that these, coming
+from the heart, may bring to those who are fighting for their country
+somewhere near the frontier the spirit of our gratitude and the fervor
+of our admiration.
+
+Our history is nothing but the history of French valor, so ingenious in
+adopting new forms and adapting itself each time to the changing
+conditions of warfare. Soldiers of the King or of the republic, old
+"grognards" of Napoleon, who always growled yet followed just the same,
+youngsters who bit their cartridges with childish lips, veterans of
+fights in Africa, cuirassieurs of Reichshofen, gardes-mobiles of the
+Loire, all, at the moment of duty and sacrifice, did everything that
+France expected of her sons.
+
+So, too, for this war, the soldier needed has arisen. After so many
+heroes he has invented a new form of heroism.
+
+I say the soldier, for the soldier is what one must say. Here begins
+what is clearly expressed in one phrase only--the French miracle. This
+national union in which all opinions have become fused is merely a
+reflection of the unity which has been suddenly created in our army.
+
+
+*When War Broke Out.*
+
+When war broke out it found military France ready and armed; mere
+troopers, officers none of whom ever thought that he would one day lead
+his men under fire, and that admirable General Staff which, never
+allowing itself to be deflected from its purpose, did its work silent
+and aloof.
+
+But there was beside this France another France, the France of
+civilians, accustomed by long years of peace to disbelieve in war;
+which, in conjuring up a picture of Europe delivered over to fire and
+blood, could not conceive that any human being in the world would assume
+the responsibility for such an act before history. War surprised the
+employe at his desk, the workman in his workshop, the peasant in his
+field. It snatched them from the intimacy of their hearths, from the
+amenities of family life which in France is sweeter than elsewhere.
+These men were obliged to leave behind beings whom they loved tenderly.
+For the last time they clasped in their arms the beloved partners of
+their lives, so deeply moved yet so proud, and their children, the
+eldest of whom have understood and will never forget. And all of them,
+artist and artisan, priest and teacher, those who dreamed of revenge and
+those who dreamed of the fraternity of nations, those of every mind,
+every profession, every age, as they stepped into their places, were
+endowed with the soul of the soldier of France, every one of them, and
+became thus the same soldier.
+
+The war which lay in wait for these men, many of whom did not seem made
+for war, was a war of which nobody had ever seen the like. We have heard
+tell of wars of giants, of battles of nations, but nobody had ever seen
+a war extending from the Marne to the Vistula, nor battles with a front
+of hundreds of kilometers, lasting weeks without respite day or night,
+fought by millions of men. Never in its worst nightmares had
+hallucinated imagination conjured up the progress made in the art of
+mowing down human lives. The German Army, to which the German Nation has
+never refused anything, either moral support or money, the nerve of war,
+has been able to profit by all this progress, to reduce to a formula the
+violence which drives forward the attack, to prepare the spy system
+which watches over the unarmed foe, to organize even incendiarism, and
+to become thus, forged by forty-four years of hatred, the most
+formidable tool of destruction that has ever sown ruin and death.
+
+
+*German Meets Belgian.*
+
+The Germans arrived, with the irresistible impetus of their masses, with
+the fury of a tempest, with the roar of thunder, enraged at having been
+confronted on their road by that little Belgian Nation which has just
+inscribed its name among the first on the roster of heroism. Already the
+German chiefs imagined themselves lords of Paris, which they threatened
+to reduce to ashes--and which did not tremble.
+
+It was to meet this colossus of war that our little soldier marched
+forth. And he made it fall back.
+
+To this new war he brings his old qualities, the qualities of all time.
+Courage--let us not speak of that. Can one speak of courage? Just read
+the short sentences in the army orders.
+
+Corporal Voituret of the Second Dragoons, mortally wounded on a
+reconnoissance, cries: "Vive la France! I die for her! I die happy!"
+Private Chabannes of the Eighteenth Chasseurs, unhorsed and wounded,
+replies to the Major who asks him why he had not surrendered: "We
+Frenchmen never surrender!" And remember those who, mortally wounded,
+stick to their posts so as to fight to the end with their men, and those
+wounded men who have but one desire--every one of us can vouch for
+this--to return to the firing line! And that one who, hopelessly
+mutilated, said to me: "It is not being crippled that hurts me; it is
+that I shall not be able to see the best part of the thing!" These, and
+the others, the thousands of others, shall we speak of their courage?
+--what would it mean to speak of their courage?
+
+And the dash of them!--the only criticism to which they lay themselves
+open is that they are too fiery, that they do not wait the right moment
+for the charge, in order to drive back the enemy at the point of the
+bayonet. What spirit! What gayety! All the letters from our soldiers are
+overflowing with cheerfulness. Where, for instance, does that nickname
+come from applied by them to the enemy--the "Boches"? It comes from
+where so many more have come; its author is nobody and everybody; it is
+the spontaneous product of that Gallic humor which jokes at danger,
+takes liberities with it.
+
+What pride! What sense of honor! Whereas the German officer, posted
+behind his men, drives them forward like a flock of sheep, revolver in
+his hand and insults on his lips, we, on our side, hear nothing but
+those beautiful, those radiant words: "Forward! For your country!"--the
+call of the French officer to his children, whom he impels forward by
+giving them the example, by plunging under fire first, before all of
+them, at their head.
+
+
+*The Password: "Smile!"*
+
+And--supreme adornment of all--with what grace they deck their
+gallantry! A few seconds before being killed by an exploding shell, Col.
+Doury, ordered to resist to the last gasp, replies: "All right! We will
+resist. And now, boys, here is the password: Smile!" It is like a flower
+thrown on the scientific brutality of modern war, that memory of the
+days when men went to war with lace on their sleeves. There we recognize
+the French soldier such as we have always known him through fifteen
+centuries of the history of France.
+
+But now we look upon him in a form of which we did not suspect the
+existence, the form in which he has just revealed himself to us.
+
+To go forward is all very well; but to fall back in good order, to
+understand that a retreat may be a masterpiece of strategy, to find in
+himself that other kind of courage which consists in not getting
+discouraged, to be able to wait without getting demoralized, to preserve
+unshaken the certainty of the final outcome--in these things lies a
+virtue which we did not know we possessed: the virtue of patience. It
+won us our victory of the Marne. One man is its personification today,
+that great chief, wise and prudent, who spares his men, who makes up his
+mind not to give battle except in his own time on his own ground, that
+chief toward whom at this moment the calm and confident eyes of the
+entire country are turned.
+
+To carry a position by assault is one thing. But to stand impassive in a
+rain of shot, amid exploding shells, amid infernal din and blinding
+smoke; to fire at an invisible enemy, to dispute foot by foot ground
+covered with traps, to retake the same village ten times, to burrow into
+the soil and crouch there, to watch day after day for the moment when
+the beast at bay ventures from his lair--where have we acquired the
+phlegmatic coolness for such things? Has it come from the proximity of
+our English allies? It is in the English reports that we read the
+eulogies of our army for its endurance and tenacity.
+
+We have always known how to pluck the laurels of the brave on fields of
+battle and to water them with our blood. We Frenchmen, all of us, are
+lovers of glory. The stories of war which we read in our childhood
+days--captures of redoubts, fiery charges, furious fights around the
+flag--made us thrill. And, like the Athenians who left the performance
+of a tragedy by Aeschylus thirsting to close their books and march on
+the enemy, we dreamed of combats in which we were to win fame.
+
+But since those days military literature has undergone somewhat of a
+change, and the communiqués which we devour twice a day, hungry for
+news, give us no such tales of prowess.
+
+"On the left wing we have progressed. On the right wing we have repulsed
+violent counter-attacks. On the front the situation remains without
+change." Where are our men? What troops are meant? What Generals?
+Nothing is told of such things. The veil of anonymity shrouds great
+actions, a barrier of impenetrable mystery protects the secret of the
+operations.
+
+
+*Great Things Done Simply.*
+
+Our soldiers have endured every hardship, braved every danger, never
+knowing whether each dawning day was their last, yet the cleverest
+manoeuvring, the most gallant feats, are obliterated, effaced, lost, in
+the calculated colorlessness of an enigmatic report. But that sacrifice
+also have they made. To be at the post assigned to them, to play a great
+or infinitesimal role in the common work, is the only reward they
+desire. Can it be that the disease of individualism is a thing of
+yesterday? The soldier of 1914 has cured us of it. Never have
+disinterestedness and modesty been pushed so far.
+
+Let us say it in a word: Never have great things been done so simply.
+
+But he knows why he is fighting. It is not for the ambition of a
+sovereign or the impatience of his heir, for the arrogance of a caste of
+country squires or the profit of a firm of merchants. No; he fights for
+the land where he was born and where his dead sleep; he fights to free
+his invaded country and give her back her lost provinces, for her past,
+struck to the heart by the shells that bombarded the Cathedral of
+Rheims; he fights so that his children may have the right to think,
+speak, and feel in French, so that there may still be in the world a
+French race, which the world needs. For this war of destruction is aimed
+at the destruction of our race, and our race has been moved to its
+depths. It has risen as one man and assembled together; it has called up
+from its remotest history all its energy, in order to reincarnate them
+in the person of him whose duty is to defend the race today; it has
+inspired in him the valor of the knights of old, the endurance of the
+laborer bending over his furrow, the modesty of the old masters who made
+of our cathedrals masterpieces of anonymity, the honesty of the
+bourgeois, the patience of humble folk, the consciousness of duty which
+mothers teach to their children, all those virtues which, developed from
+one generation to another, become a tradition, the tradition of an
+industrious people, made strong by a long past and made to endure. It is
+these qualities, all of them together, which we admire in the soldier of
+1914, the complete and superb type of the entire race.
+
+
+*A Holy Intoxication.*
+
+When it has such an aim, the noblest of all, war is sublime; all who go
+into it are as if transfigured. It exalts, expands, and purifies souls.
+On approaching the battlefield a holy intoxication, a holy happiness,
+takes possession of those for whom has been reserved the supreme joy of
+braving death for their country. Death is everywhere, but they do not
+believe in it any more. And when, on certain mornings, to the sound of
+cannon that mix their rumblings with mystic voices of bells, in the
+devastated church which cries to the heavens through every breach opened
+in its walls, the Chaplain blesses the regiment that he will accompany
+the next minute to the firing line, every head will be bent at the same
+time and all will feel on their brows the breath of God.
+
+Alas! the beauty of the struggle does not hide from me its sadness. How
+many went away, full of youth and hope, to return no more. How many have
+fallen already without seeing realized what they so ardently desired;
+sowers they, who to make the land fertile have watered it with their
+blood, yet will not see the harvest.
+
+But at least their sacrifice will not have been in vain. They have
+brought reconciliation to their divided country, they have made her
+become conscious of herself again, they have made her learn enthusiasm
+once again. They have not seen victory, but they have merited it. Honor
+to them, struck down first, and glory to those who will avenge them! We
+enfold them both in our devotion to the same sacred cause.
+
+Would that a new era might dawn, thanks to them, that a new world might
+be born in which we might breathe more freely, where injustices
+centuries old might be made good, where France, arising from long
+humiliation, might resume her rank and destiny. Then, in that cured,
+vivified France, what an awakening, what a renewal, what a sap, what a
+magnificent flowering there would be! This will be thy work, soldier of
+1914! To you we shall owe this resurrection of our beloved country. And
+later on, and always, in everything beautiful and good that may be done
+among us, in the creations of our poets and the discoveries of our
+savants, in the thousand forms of national activity, in the strength of
+our young men and the grace of our young women, in all that will be the
+France of tomorrow, there will be, soldier so brave and so simple in
+your greatness, a little of your heroic soul!
+
+
+
+
+*Germany's Civilized Barbarism*
+
+*By Emile Boutroux.*
+
+*From the Revue des Deux Mondes.*
+
+
+I sincerely thank M. Emile Boutroux for the letter he has been good
+enough to write to me; and the readers of the Revue will join me, for it
+is addressed to them also. No one could speak of Germany more
+authoritatively than M. Boutroux; no one, indeed, is better acquainted
+with the Germany of yesterday and that of today, or better equipped to
+draw a comparison between them, which for the Prussianized Germany of
+the present is a verdict and a condemnation. The violence, brutality,
+barbarism which she displays--a frightful spectacle--doubtless spring
+from the deepest instincts of race; but man always feels the need of
+justifying his conduct, and the Germans are too much philosophers not to
+seek justification for theirs in a scientific system in which these
+doctrinaires of a new sort are encouraged to persevere without the least
+scruple or pity. M. Boutroux explains to us the detestable sophism which
+has perverted the entire German soul and made of a nation which our
+grandfathers loved and admired, a monster whose implacable egotism
+weighs heavily on the world. But let M. Boutroux speak.
+
+FRANCIS CHARMES.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PARIS, 28 September, 1914.
+
+To the Director of the Revue des Deux Mondes:
+
+Mr. Director and Dear Colleague: You have done me the honor to ask me,
+as I have lived in Germany and studied in part German philosophy and
+literature, whether I was not prepared to submit some observations
+touching the present war. I confess that at this moment words, and even
+thoughts, seem to me to amount to little. Like every Frenchman,
+
+[Illustration: FREDERIC HARRISON. _See Page_ 192]
+
+[Illustration: YVES GUYOT. _See Page_ 194]
+
+I am given up wholly to the task of the hour; all my interest is in
+our generous and admirable army, and my sole concern is to take part,
+however modestly, in the work of the nation. True, a thousand memories
+and reflections crowd my mind; the notion of pausing to express them in
+writing had not occurred to me, but it would be ungracious in me to
+decline your kind invitation. Please omit from the ideas I throw on
+paper whatever seems to you to be lacking in interest.
+
+
+*Mephistopheles Appears.*
+
+In the presence of such events as are passing before our eyes, how can
+we keep our minds free? We have to say to ourselves: "See what has come
+of that philosophic, artistic, scientific development whose grandeur and
+idealistic character all the world has proclaimed!" "That is what the
+infernal cur had in his belly," said Faust as he saw the dog which was
+playing at his side change into Mephistopheles. What! Having declared
+the morality of Plato and Aristotle inadequate and mediocre, having
+preached duty for duty's sake, having established the unconditioned
+supremacy of moral worth, the royalty of the intellect, to end by
+officially declaring that a signed engagement is but a scrap of paper,
+and that juridic or moral laws do not count if they incommode us and if
+we are the strongest! Having given to the world marvelous music, in
+which the purest and deepest aspirations seem to be heard; having raised
+art and poetry to a sort of religion, in which man communes with the
+Eternal by the worship of the ideal; having exalted the universities as
+the most sublime of human creations, temples of science and of
+intellectual freedom, to come to bombarding Louvain, Malines, and the
+Cathedral of Rheims! Having assumed the role of representative par
+excellence of culture, of civilization in its loftiest form, at the end
+to aim at the subjugation of the world and to strive toward that aim by
+the methodical letting loose of brute force, wickedness, and barbarism!
+To boast of having attained the highest plane of human nature, and to
+reveal themselves as survivors of the Huns and Vandals!
+
+Only yesterday Germany was feared throughout the world because of her
+power, but esteemed for her science and her heritage of idealism. Today,
+on the contrary, there is a common cry of reprobation and horror raised
+against her from one end of the earth to the other. Fear is overcome by
+indignation. On every side it is asserted that the victory of German
+imperialism and militarism would be the triumph of despotism, brutality,
+and barbarism. These ideas are expressed to us by Americans of the North
+and South, by Spaniards, Italians, Greeks, Swiss, and Rumanians. The
+nation which burned the University of Louvain and the Cathedral of
+Rheims has brought dishonor upon itself.
+
+What shall we think of the prodigious contrast which manifests itself
+between the high culture of Germany and the end at which she aims, the
+means which she employs in the present war? Is it enough to explain this
+contrast, to allege that in spite of all their science the Germans are
+but slightly civilized, that in the sixteenth century they were still
+boorish and uncultivated and that their science, an affair of
+specialists and pundits, has never penetrated their soul or influenced
+their character?
+
+This explanation is justified. Consider the German professor in the beer
+garden, in the relations of everyday life, in his amusements. With
+certain notable exceptions he excels only in discovering and collecting
+materials for study and in drawing from them, by mechanical operations,
+solutions that rest wholly upon text and argument and make no appeal
+whatever to ordinary judgment and good sense. What a disproportion often
+between his science and his real education. What vulgarity of tastes and
+sentiments and language. What brutality of methods on the part of this
+man whose authority is indisputable in his specialty. Take this learned
+man from his university chair, place him on that scene of war where
+force can alone reign and where the gross appetites are unchained, it is
+not surprising that his conduct approaches that of savages.
+
+
+*A Culture of Violence.*
+
+That is the current judgment and not without reason. The savant and the
+man, among the Germans, are only too often strangers to each other. The
+German in war is inhuman not merely because of an explosion of his true
+nature, gross and violent, but by order. His brutality is calculated and
+systematized. It justifies the words of La Harpe, "There is such a thing
+as a scientific barbarity." In 1900 the German Emperor haranguing his
+soldiers about to set sail for China, exhorted them to leave nothing
+living in their path and to bear themselves like Huns.
+
+If, then, in this war, in the manner in which they have prepared and
+provoked it and now conduct it, they violate without scruple the laws of
+the civilized world, it is not despite their superior culture, it is in
+consequence of that very culture. They are barbarous because they are
+more civilized. How can such a combination of contradictory elements,
+such a synthesis, be possible?
+
+Fichte in the famous discourses to the German Nation which he delivered
+at the University of Berlin during the Winter of 1807 and 1808, had one
+object: to arouse the German Nation by kindling its self-consciousness,
+that is to say, its pure Germanic essence, _Deutschheit_, in order to
+realize that essence when possible beyond its borders and to make it
+dominate the world. The general idea which must guide Germany in the
+accomplishment of this double task is: Germany is to all the rest of the
+world as good is to evil.
+
+The appeal of Fichte was heard. During the century which followed,
+Germany in the most precise and practical manner, on the one hand built
+up the theory of Germanism or _Deutschtum_, on the other hand prepared
+the domination of Germanism in the world. This notion of Germanism
+furnishes, if I am not mistaken, the principle of the inference which I
+wish to indicate, the explanation of the surprising solidarity which
+Germans have created between culture and barbarism.
+
+It would be interesting to probe this notion and follow its development.
+
+In the first place how can a people come to claim for its ideas, its
+virtue, its achievements, not only the right to exist and to be
+respected by other people, but the privilege of being the sole
+expression of the true and the good while everything which emanates from
+other peoples represents nothing but error and evil?
+
+The philosopher Fichte after having built up his system under the
+influence of Kant and of French ideas, notably under the influence of
+Rousseau--of whom he said "peace to his ashes, for he has done
+things"--could think of nothing better to reinforce the German soul
+after Jena than to persuade it that in itself and itself alone there was
+to be found the sense of the ideal combined with power to realize that
+ideal in the world.
+
+
+*The Power to Realize.*
+
+Starting from a certain notion of the absolute he found after Jena that
+this very notion constituted the foundation of the German genius. Soon
+this mystic method was merged in a more concrete method better adapted
+to the positive spirit of modern generations. The one science where all
+knowledge and ideas which concern human life are concentrated is
+history. To this science our epoch has devoted a veritable worship. Now
+the Germans have drawn from history two lessons of the highest
+importance. One is that history is not only the succession of events,
+which mark the life of humanity, it is the judgment of God upon the
+rivalries of peoples. Everything which is wishes to be, and to endure,
+struggle, and impose itself. History tells us which are the men and the
+things Providence has elected. The sign of that election is success. To
+subsist, grow, conquer, dominate is to prove that one is the confidant
+of the thought of Providence, the dispenser of the power of Providence.
+If one people appears designated by history to dominate the others then
+that people is the vicegerent of God upon earth, is God Himself, visible
+and tangible for His creatures.
+
+The second lesson which German erudition has drawn from the study of
+history is that the actual existence of a people charged with
+representing God is not a myth, that such a people exists and that the
+German people is that people. From the victory of Hermann (Arminius)
+over Varus in the forest of Teutoburg in the year 9 A.D., the will of
+God is evident. The Middle Ages show it, and if in modern times Germany
+has appeared to efface herself it is because she was reposing to collect
+her force and strike more heavily. When she was not obviously the first,
+she was so virtually. It was in 1844 that Hoffmann von Fallersleben
+composed the national song, _Deutschland über alles, über alles in der
+Welt_. Germany over all, Germany over all the world, Germany extending
+from the Meuse to the Niemen, from the Adige to the Belt.
+
+Not only is Germany the elect of Providence but the sole elect, and
+other nations are rejected. The sign of her election is the annihilation
+of the three legions of Quinctilius Varus, and her eternal task is to
+revenge herself for the insolence of the Roman General. "We shall give
+battle to Hermann and we shall avenge ourselves, "_und wollen Rache
+haben_." Thus ran the celebrated national song. _Der Gott, der Eisen
+wachsen liess_.
+
+
+*Germanism and God.*
+
+German civilization has developed in antagonism with the Greco-Roman
+civilization. To adopt the former was on the part of God to reject the
+latter. Therefore German consciousness, realized without hindrance in
+all its force, is but the Divine consciousness. _Deutschtum_ = God and
+God = _Deutschtum_. In practice it is enough that an idea is
+authentically German in order that we may and must conclude that it is
+true, that it is just, and that it ought to prevail.
+
+What are the essential dogmas of this truth, which is German because it
+is true and which is true because it is German? German metaphysicians
+explain that to us more clearly than is usual by thought. The first
+quality of this truth is that it is in opposition to what classic or
+Greco-Latin thought would recognize as true. The latter has sought to
+discover what in man is essentially human, to render man superior to
+other beings, and to substitute more and more the superior elements for
+the inferior elements in human life--reason for blind impulse, justice
+for force, good for wickedness. It has undertaken to create in the world
+a moral force capable of controlling and humanizing material forces. To
+this doctrine, which rests upon man as its centre and which was
+essentially human, German thought opposes itself as the infinite opposes
+the finite, the absolute the relative, the whole the part. The disciples
+of the Greeks had at their disposition no light except that of human
+reason; the German genius possesses a transcendent reason which pierces
+the mysteries of the absolute, of the Divine. What would light be
+without the shadow from which it is detached? How could the ego exist if
+there was not somewhere a non ego to which it is opposed? Evil is not
+less indispensable than good in the transcendent symphony of the whole.
+
+There is something more. It may be a satisfaction for a Greco-Latin,
+impelled by his mediocre logic to say that good is good, evil is evil,
+but these simple formulas are contrary to the truth per se. Good by
+itself is absolutely impotent to realize itself. It is only an idea, an
+abstraction. The power and faculty of creation belong to evil alone. So
+that if good is to be realized it can only be by means of evil, and by
+means of evil left entirely to itself. God could not exist if He were
+not created by the devil, and thus, in a sense, evil is good and good is
+bad. Evil is good because it creates. Good is bad because it is
+impotent. The supreme and true divine law is just this: That evil left
+to itself, evil as evil, gives birth to good, which, by itself, would
+never be able to advance from the ideal to the real. "I am," said
+Mephistopheles, "part of that force which always wishes evil and always
+creates the good." Such is the divine order. He who undertakes to do
+good by good will only do evil. It is only in unchaining the power of
+evil that one has a chance to realize any good.
+
+From these metaphysical principles questions raised by the idea of
+civilization receive most remarkable solutions.
+
+
+*The Essence of Civilization.*
+
+What is civilization in the German and true sense of the word?
+
+Nations in general, especially the Latin nations, put the essence of
+civilization in the moral element of human life, in the softening of
+human manners. To those who understand human culture in this way the
+Germans will apply the words of Ibsen's Brand, "You wish to do great
+things but you lack energy. You expect success from mildness and
+goodness." According to the German thought, mildness and goodness are
+only weakness and impotence. Force alone is strong and force _par
+excellence_ is science, which puts at our disposal the powers of nature
+and indefinitely multiplies our strength. Science, then, should be the
+principal object of our efforts. From science and from the culture of
+scientific intelligence there will necessarily result, by the effect of
+Divine grace, the progress of the will and of the conscience which is
+called moral progress. It is in this sense that Bismarck said,
+"Imagination and sentiment are to science and intelligence what the
+tares are to the wheat. The tares threaten to stifle the wheat; that is
+why they are cut down and burned." True civilization is a virile
+education, aiming at force and implying force. A civilization which
+under pretext of humanity and of courtesy enervates and softens man is
+fit only for women and for slaves.
+
+Is that to say that the notion of right which men invoke against force
+has in reality no meaning, and that a highly civilized people would
+disregard it? We must clearly understand the relation which exists
+between the notion of right and the notion of force. Force is not the
+right. All existing forces do not have an equal right to exist; mediocre
+forces in reality have but a feeble share in the Divine force; but in
+proportion as a force becomes greater it is more noble. A universally
+victorious and all-powerful force would be identical with Divine force
+and should, therefore, be obeyed and honored in the same degree. Justice
+and force, moreover, belong to two different worlds--the natural and the
+spiritual. The former is the phenomenon and symbol of the latter. We
+live in a world of symbols; and so preponderant force is for us the
+visible and practical equivalent of right.
+
+It is, then, puerile to admit the existence of a natural right inherent
+in individuals or in nations, and manifested in their aspirations, their
+powers, their sympathies, their wills. The right of peoples should be
+determined by a purely objective method.
+
+Now in this sense people should be divided into _Naturvölker_,
+_Halbkulturvölker_, and _Kulturvölker_--people in the state of nature,
+half-cultivated people, and cultivated people. This is not all. There
+are people who are simply cultivated--_Naturvölker_--and people who are
+wholly cultivated--_Vollkulturvölker_. Now the degree of right depends
+on the degree of culture. As compared with the _Kulturvölker_ the
+_Naturvölker_ have no rights. They have only duties--submission,
+docility, obedience. And if there exists a people which deserves more
+than all others the title of _Vollkulturvölker_--completely cultured
+people--to this people the earth belongs and the supremacy thereof. Its
+mission is to bend all other peoples beneath the yoke of its omnipotence
+co-ordinated with its supreme culture.
+
+
+*The Master Nation.*
+
+Such is the idea of the master nation. This nation must not be simply an
+abstract type, it must necessarily be able to realize itself in our
+world. In effect the spirit is the supreme form of being; it necessarily
+wishes to be; and as it is infinite, it can be realized only by means of
+an infinite force. A nation capable of imposing its will upon everybody
+is the necessary instrument of the Divine will which can grant the
+prayer: "Our Father, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it
+is done in heaven."
+
+As a master nation is necessary in the world there must be subordinate
+nations. There can be no efficient "yes" without a decided "no." The
+ego, says Fichte, is effort. Therefore it presupposes something that
+resists it, namely, that which we call matter. The master nation
+commands. Therefore nations must exist who are made to obey it. It is
+needful even that these nations, which are to the master nation what the
+non ego is to the ego, should resist the action of this superior nation.
+For this resistance is necessary to enable the latter to develop and
+employ its force and to become fully itself; that is, to become the
+whole, enriching itself by the spoils of its enemies.
+
+The ideal nation is thus defined by a transcendental deduction, and this
+same deduction leads us to affirm that the master nation must be not
+merely an idea but a reality. Now, it is plain that this realization of
+the ideal nation is going on under our eyes in the German Nation, which
+represents the highest created race and which surpasses all other
+nations in science and in power. It is to her, and to her alone, that
+the task of accomplishing the will of God upon earth is consigned.
+
+
+*Means of Success.*
+
+To succeed in it, what means must she employ?
+
+In the first place she must acquire complete consciousness of her
+superiority and of her own genius. Nothing German is found in the same
+degree of excellence in other nations. German women, German fidelity,
+German wine, the German song, hold the first rank in the world. To
+combat Satan, that is to say, enemies of Germany, the Germans have at
+their service the ancient god, the German god, _der alte, der deutsche
+Gott_, who identifies His cause with theirs. And as everything which is
+German is by that very fact unique and inimitable, so it is
+correspondingly true that everything which the world has of excellence
+belongs to Germany in fact and in right. Rembrandt, Shakespeare, Ibsen,
+are Germans. A German brain alone could understand them and has a right
+to admire them. It is doubtful if even Joan of Arc, that sublime
+heroine, is French. German savants have maintained her German
+nationality. If the people of Alsace and Lorraine are faithful to France
+that only proves that they ought to be German subjects, because fidelity
+is a German virtue.
+
+As Germany possesses, in principle, all the virtues, all the
+perfections, she suffices to herself and can learn nothing from other
+people. By still stronger reason she owes them no duty of respect or
+good-will. What is called humanity has no meaning for the German. The
+_mot_ of William II., "Humanity for me stops at the Vosges," is not
+merely an instance of national egoism. The German Emperor feels that
+what is for the present beyond his empire can only acquire value when it
+shall be annexed to it.
+
+How, then, ought Germany to behave to other nations?
+
+There are people who wish to be loved, who believe that among nations as
+between individuals, courtesy may have a place and that it would be an
+advance for humanity to admit that justice and equity may rule
+international relations. But Germany, as regards other nations, makes no
+account of justice. She has nothing but scorn for that feminine
+sentiment which particularly characterizes the Latin races. The
+sentiment of justice and humanity is weakness and Germany is and ought
+to be force. _Wo Preussens Macht in Frage kommt, kenne ich kein Gesetz,_
+said Bismarck--"When the power of Prussia is in question I know no law."
+
+
+*Enemies Most Welcome.*
+
+The German does not ask to be loved. He prefers to be hated provided he
+is feared. _Oderint, dum metuant_. He does not mind being surrounded by
+enemies. He knows with satisfaction that in the very heart of the empire
+certain annexed provinces constantly protest against the violence which
+has been done to them. The ego cannot work without opposition. The
+German needs enemies to keep himself in that state of tension and of
+struggle which is the condition of vigor. He willingly applies to
+himself what the Lord God said of man in general in the prologue of
+Goethe's "Faust":
+
+ Man's activity has only too great a propensity to relax. Left by
+ himself man seeks repose. That is why I give him a devil for a
+ companion. He will excite him and keep him from getting sleepy.
+
+Germany has a certain satisfaction in recognizing in the neighbors whom
+she menaces, in the subjects whom she oppresses, these providential
+devils whose mischief will stimulate her activity and her virtue.
+
+Not that Germany rejects, as regards other nations, every régime except
+that of hostility. Her aim is domination, the only rôle which suits the
+people of God. Now, to attain that, two means are offered to her. The
+first plainly is intimidation which must never flag. The feeble quickly
+become insolent if their feebleness is not recalled to them. Other
+nations must feel themselves constantly threatened with the worst
+catastrophes if they resist Germany. But it being well understood that
+Germany is the strongest, that she will never give up what she
+possesses, however unjustly, then bargains advantageous not only for
+herself but occasionally for the other party, may be the more direct and
+less onerous means than violence to attain her end. So Germany will be,
+by turns, or both at once, threatening and amiable. Amiability itself
+can be effective when it rests on hatred, contempt, and omnipotence.
+
+Now power counts before all. Germany must possess armaments superior to
+those of all other nations. The reason is plain. The German Empire is a
+rock of peace, _der Hort des Friedens_. The force which it accumulates
+is directed toward imposing upon mankind the German peace, the divine
+peace. Since Germany represents peace, whoever opposes Germany intends
+war. Now it is legitimate that Germany should arm to the teeth because
+she is the incarnation of peace, but the adversaries of Germany, who, in
+opposing Germany oppose peace, cannot have the same right. It is the
+duty of Germany to carry her armaments to the maximum; other peoples
+have the right to arm only as Germany may permit.
+
+Germany does not seek war. On the contrary, she tries by inspiring
+terror to render it impossible. But if some nation should profit or be
+capable of profiting by her love of peace to pretend to rights which
+offend her she will consent to punish that nation. She will be pained by
+the violence she has to do to that nation and the severity which she has
+to use toward the guilty. But soldier of God as she is, she cannot fail
+to her mission. Any nation which refuses to do the will of Germany
+proves by that very fact its cultural inferiority and becomes guilty. It
+must be chastised.
+
+The method according to which Germany will make war is determined by
+these premises. War is a return to the state of nature. Germany yields
+to this temporary retrogression because she has to do with people of an
+inferior culture who must be taught a lesson, and must be spoken to in a
+language which they understand. Now a characteristic of a state of
+nature is that force reigns undisputed. In this very trait resides the
+sublime beauty of that state, its grandeur and its fecundity. Don't talk
+of that romantic chivalry which pretends in time of war to temper the
+violence of savage instincts by the intervention of feminine
+sensibility. War is war. _Krieg ist Krieg_. It isn't child's play, it
+isn't sport where it is necessary to blend barbarity and humanity so as
+to conciliate and humanize them. It is barbarity itself let loose as
+widely and fully as possible. This is not perversity. Man as man suffers
+in becoming barbarous, but the man who replaces God suppresses the
+feebleness of the creature. He submits himself to the mysterious and
+sublime law in virtue of which evil is by so much more beneficent as it
+is achieved with resolution and completeness. _Pecca fortiter._
+
+
+*The Nature of War.*
+
+The first article of the code of war is then the suppression of all
+sensibility, pity, humanity. The nature of war is to kill and destroy.
+The more it destroys and kills the sooner it comes to its ideal form.
+Moreover, it is at bottom more humane the more inhuman it is, because
+the very terrors which its excesses inspire shorten it and make it less
+murderous.
+
+In the second place, war necessarily ignores moral laws. Respect for
+laws, treaties, conventions, loyalty, good faith, sentiment and honor,
+scruples, nobility of soul generosity--these are mere fetters. The
+God-people do not recognize them. It will then, without hesitation,
+violate the rights of neutrals if it is to its interest. It will use
+falsehood, perfidy, treachery. It will justify itself by futile pretexts
+in committing the most atrocious acts--bombardment of undefended cities,
+massacre of old men, women and children; barbarous torture, pillage and
+assassination; bestiality to women; organized incendiarism; methodical
+destruction of monuments which, by their history and their antiquity and
+by the admiration of the world, would seem to be inviolable. "I am told:
+I must avenge myself." This reason suffices. We are told that some
+inhabitant of one city or another has been wanting in respect toward one
+of our men. Therefore we must burn the city and show the inhabitants
+what we have. Definitively, our duty is to let loose the elementary
+energies of nature as far as possible to attain the maximum force and
+the maximum of result.
+
+The effect should, moreover, be psychological as well as material.
+Actions which seem horrible to man and which spread terror are
+commendable means, because they break the spirit even if they have no
+value from a military point of view. Moreover, what offends common
+morality is conformed to transcendent morality. The mission of the
+Germans at war is to punish. They work Divine vengeance. They compel
+their enemies to expiate the crime of resisting them. After they have
+taken a city, if the enemy has the insolence to take it back, it is just
+that they shall sack that city if possible, killing its inhabitants and
+burning its finest monuments.
+
+*Barbarity Multiplied by Science.*
+
+Given this problem, how to let loose most widely the powers of evil, it
+is clear that a people of superior culture is better equipped than any
+other to resolve that problem. In fact, science, where it excels, can
+work destruction and evil with the very forces which nature employs only
+to create light, heat, life, and beauty. The God-people therefore unites
+the maximum of science to the maximum of barbarity. The formula of its
+action may be thus written: "Barbarity multiplied by science."
+
+This is the last word of the famous doctrine of Germanism. Now the
+identity of the ultimate consequences of the doctrine and the features
+which the present war presents is evident. The problem which we
+undertook is, therefore, solved. If, contrary to all likelihood,
+barbarity co-exists with culture in the Germans; if in the present war
+it appears to be absolutely bound up in that culture, the reason is that
+German culture differs profoundly from what humanity understands by
+culture and civilization. Human civilization tries to humanize war.
+German culture tends indefinitely to increase its primitive brutality by
+science.
+
+In everything the Germans must be unique--in their women, their God,
+their wine, their loyalty. The war which the Germans wage against us
+strikes the world with horror and terror, because it is in the full
+force of the term "the German way, _die deutsche Art_, the German war."
+
+As the world recognizes this astonishing proposition it asks with
+anxiety, what may be its future relations to Germany? Knowingly and
+systematically, Germany opposes to all Hellenic, Christian, humane
+civilizations the devastating theory of the Huns. True, after the war
+she will claim that she has done nothing but conform, often with pain,
+to the conditions of ideal and divine war, and she will appear willing
+to pardon to her enemies the cruelties she has had to inflict upon them.
+Decidedly, the world will refuse to admire this horrible magnanimity
+which on the first impulse of resistance becomes savagery. Today the
+veil is torn away. German culture is shown to be a scientific barbarity.
+The world, which means in the future to rid itself of all despotism,
+will not compromise with the despotism of barbarity.
+
+But what a disappointment and what a grief! Formerly, Germany was held
+to be a great nation. Its praises were sounded in many a land of solid
+and high culture. The German tradition once held other doctrines than
+those we have now seen devolop under the hands of Prussia. Germanism, as
+the Prussians formulate it, consists essentially in contempt for all
+other nations and in the pretension of domination. But Leibnitz--as
+highly esteemed in the Latin world as in the German--professed a
+philosophy which valued unity only under the form of harmony between
+free and autonomous forces. Leibnitz exalted the multiple, the diverse,
+the spontaneous. Between rival powers he sought to establish relations
+which would reconcile them without changing or diminishing the value or
+independence of any of them. Witness his effort at the reunion of the
+Catholic and Protestant Churches. After Leibnitz came Kant. He certainly
+was very much of a German. He owned, nevertheless, that he had learned
+from Rousseau to honor the common man who, not being a savant, possesses
+moral value far above the savant, who has no merit but science. And,
+starting from the principle that every person, so far as he is capable
+of moral value, is entitled to respect, he urged men to create not a
+universal and despotic monarchy but a republic of nations in which each
+should possess a free and independent personality.
+
+This willingness to put liberty before unity, and respect and honor the
+dignity of other nations while at the same time serving its own, was not
+extinguished in Germany with Leibnitz and Kant. Permit me, my dear
+Director, on this subject to indulge in some personal reminiscences.
+
+
+*Treitschke Versus Bluntschli.*
+
+In January, 1869, I was sent to Heidelberg by the Minister of Public
+Instruction, Victor Duruy, to study the organization of German
+universities. Germany was for me the land of metaphysics, music, and
+poetry. I was greatly astonished to find that outside of the lecture
+courses the only thing discussed was the war which Prussia was about to
+make on France. Invited to a soirée, I heard it whispered behind me,
+_Vielleicht ist er ein französischer Spion_--"Perhaps he is a French
+spy." Such were the words as I caught them. At the beer garden a student
+seated himself near me. He said to me, "We are going to war with you. We
+shall take Alsace and Lorraine." That night I could see from my window,
+looking out on the Neckar, the students clad in their club costumes
+floating down the river on an illuminated raft singing the famous song
+in honor of Blücher, who "taught the Welches the way of the Germans."
+And at the university itself the lectures of Treitschke, attended by
+excited crowds, were heated harangues against the French, inciting to
+hatred and to war. Seeing that nothing was thought of but the
+preparation for war, I came back at the Easter vacation of 1869
+convinced that hostilities would ensue. I returned to Heidelberg some
+time later and became acquainted with other persons, other centres of
+ideas. I understood then that opinion in Germany was divided between two
+opposite doctrines. The general aspiration was for the unity of Germany,
+but there was no agreement as to the way of conceiving and realizing
+this unity. The thesis of Treitschke was, _Freiheit durch Einheit_,
+"liberty through unity," that is to say, unity first, unity before all;
+liberty later, when circumstances should permit. And to realize at once
+this unity, which really was the only thing that mattered, the
+enrollment of all Germany under the command of Prussia for a war against
+France.
+
+Now the formula of Treitschke was opposed by that of Bluntschli,
+_Einheit durch Freiheit_--"Unity through liberty." This doctrine, which
+counted at that time some eminent advocates, aimed first to safeguard
+the independence and unity of the German States and then to establish
+between them on that basis a federated union. And as it contemplated in
+the heart of Germany a union without hegemony, so it conceived of German
+unity as something to be realized without harm to other nations, and
+especially without harm to France. It was to be a free Germany in a free
+world.
+
+Germany at that epoch was at the parting of the ways. Should she follow
+a tendency still living in many and noble minds or should she abandon it
+entirely, to march head down in the ways in which Prussia had entangled
+her? That was the question. The party of war, the party of unity as a
+means of attacking and despoiling France, the Prussian party, gained the
+day. And its success rendered its preponderance definitive. Since then
+those who have undertaken to remain faithful to an ideal of liberty and
+humanity have been annihilated.
+
+Is it still possible that Germany may some day regain the parting of the
+ways where she was before 1870 and this time take the other road, the
+road of the Leibnitzes, the Kants, the Bluntschlis, which leads first to
+the liberty of individuals and of peoples and afterward--- and only
+afterward--a form of harmony where the rights of all are equally
+respected? A word of the Scotch professor, William Knight, comes back to
+my memory at this moment: "The best things have to die and be reborn."
+The Germany which the world respected and admired, the Germany of
+Leibnitz, appears indeed dead. Can it be reborn?
+
+Accept, I beg, my dear Director, the assurance of my cordial devotion.
+
+EMILE BOUTROUX.
+
+
+
+
+*The German Religion of Duty*
+
+*By Gabriele Reuter.*[B]
+
+
+On various occasions in the past I have been reproached by my friends
+for not showing the proper spirit of patriotism.
+
+I have merely smiled at their criticism, for it was my opinion that true
+patriotism does not consist of flowery speeches and assertions, but in
+the effort dutifully to accomplish that for which one is best qualified.
+
+It seemed to me that I was truly showing my love for the Fatherland by
+writing my books to the best of my ability.
+
+But the source of this reproach was very evident to me. The cause could
+be traced to a quality which I share with many of my compatriots. It
+must, in truth, be called a particularly characteristic trait. This is a
+very earnest desire for and love of justice, which is not satisfied
+simply to "recognize," but endeavors thoroughly to understand the
+material and spiritual points of view of the other nations in order to
+show them the proper appreciation.
+
+It is natural to develop affection for that which one earnestly desires
+to understand.
+
+Many Germans have had the experience that they have rather overzealously
+commenced by weighing the good of a foreign people in the balance with
+the good of their own, and with well-nigh fanatic honesty they have
+ended by acknowledging their own shortcomings compared to the merits and
+advantages of the foreign nation. There have been instances when some
+foreigner has drawn our attention to this or that particular weakness
+and immediately innumerable of my countrymen assented, saying,
+"Certainly it is true, the criticism is just, matters are probably even
+worse than they have been represented."
+
+Many of us, and I acknowledge I am one of the many, have developed a
+form of ascetic mania for self-abasement, a desire for truth which knows
+no limits in the dissection of its own condition and the disclosure of
+social and personal shortcomings and disadvantages. This tendency may be
+easily discerned in much of the German literature of the past twenty
+years; also, in my books.
+
+The individual is really always the symbol of the whole, and the
+thoughts and feelings of one person are but the expression of strong
+forces in national life and culture. It was not want of patriotism, but
+an unbounded love for the universality of European culture which drove
+us, drove many thousand people with German souls, to reach out over the
+boundaries of our own Fatherland for intellectual conquests, for
+permeation and coalescence with all the world's riches, goodness, and
+beauty.
+
+We loved the others; and believing ourselves among friends we were
+candid and disclosed our weaknesses.
+
+
+*Germans Trusted Too Well.*
+
+We permitted criticism and criticised ourselves, because we were
+convinced that those others had our welfare at heart, and also because
+we were convinced that only by unsparing self-knowledge can the heights
+be scaled which lead to superior and more refined development. It is
+therefore probable that we ourselves have delivered the weapons into our
+enemies' hands.
+
+Confiding and harmless as children, we were blind to the enigmatical
+hatred which has to an appalling extent developed all around us. This
+hate which has been nourished systematically and with satanic cleverness
+probably originated in a slight feeling of jealousy, and the tendency of
+my countrymen to criticise each other led our enemies to believe that
+they might look for internal discord in the Fatherland and that our
+humiliation could therefore be more easily accomplished.
+
+If we had recognized the danger in time, we might have prevented this
+hatred, to which they at the beginning were hardly prone, from taking
+root in the souls of nations. But only very few among us were aware of
+it and they received little credence from the others. There were times
+when each one of us sensed the antipathy which we encountered beyond the
+boundary lines of our own country. But we never realized how deeply it
+had taken root and how widely it had spread. We loved our enemies! We
+loved this French nation for its high development of etiquette,
+language, and taste; a culture which seemed well adapted to serve as a
+complement to our own. How much misery France might have been spared had
+she but understood this unfortunate love of the German people for the
+"Hereditary Enemy!"
+
+We loved the deep, mystically religious soul of the Russians in their
+anguished struggles for freedom! How many Germans have looked upon
+Tolstoy as a new savior!
+
+Above all, though, the German admired the Englishman, in the rôle of the
+"royal merchant," the far-seeing colonizer, the master of the seas.
+Without envy Germany gave England credit for all these qualities. And
+when during the Boer war voices were raised to warn against the English
+character, even then to most of us our Anglo-Saxon cousin remained the
+"Gentleman beyond reproach."
+
+Then there is the great German love for Holland, Switzerland, and the
+Scandinavian countries; here we may find the Germanic race less
+adulterated than in our own country. Scandinavian poets have become our
+poets and we are as proud of the works of the Swedish artist as we are
+of those of our people.
+
+We gaze with delight upon the proud, blonde grace of the Norse maid; the
+more gentle and pliant manners of the Swedes and Danes arouse our
+admiration; and we dearly love their beautiful fjords and forests of
+beech and birch.
+
+
+*Love Changed to Suspicion.*
+
+Many of us wonder today how much of all this love we, in the days to
+come, will be able to rescue from the debris. "Has the world gone mad
+that it has ceased to believe in our sincerity?" This at present is the
+cry of many, many thousand German men and women. Do we deserve to have
+our love requited with hate? And to find in the countries which declare
+themselves neutral, distrust, reserve, and, in fact, doubt of our honest
+intentions? Sad, dull despair has taken possession of the hearts of our
+best men and women. It is not because they tremble for the fate of the
+loved ones who have been compelled to go to the front and not because
+there is any fear as to the outcome of this war. Not one among us doubts
+the ultimate triumph of Germany. We also know that we must pay a
+terrible toll for this victory with the blood of our sons, fathers and
+husbands.
+
+Equally as much as they mourn the loss of our young manhood many of our
+best citizens deplore the hatred which has spread over the face of the
+globe, hate which has torn asunder what was believed to have been a
+firmly woven net of a common European culture. That which we with ardent
+souls have labored to create is being devastated by ruthless force.
+
+The following story of the non-commissioned German officer is typical or
+symbolical of many. He, while the bullets of the inhabitants of Louvain
+fell around him, rescued the priceless old paintings from the burning
+Church of St. Peter, simply because he was an art-historian and knew and
+loved each of the masterpieces. And well we all understand the feelings
+which mastered him during those moments of horror.
+
+He would probably think and say, "I have but done my duty."
+
+And now we have arrived at the point which gives rise to the greatest
+amount of antipathy. Our opponents declare we are endowed with great
+ability--they say they must acknowledge that. But how can a race of
+stiff, dry, duty-performing beings awaken love? The German must lose all
+claim to individual freedom and independence of thought in consequence
+of the training which he receives. When he is a child he commences it in
+a military subordination in the school, he continues it in the barracks,
+and later, when he enters a vocational life, under the stern leadership
+of his superiors. He becomes, our critics continue, simply a
+disagreeable pedantic tool of the all-powerful "drill." This atmosphere
+of "drill," or in other words this stern hard military spirit, envelops
+him, accompanies him as guardian from the cradle to the grave, and makes
+of him an unbearable companion for all the more refined, gentle, and
+amiable nations. Yes, our opponents often declare that they are waging
+war not only against Germany, but against this pedantic, military,
+tyrannical sense of duty, which they call the "Prussian spirit." It
+shall once and for all, they assert, be eradicated from the world.
+
+
+*A Religious Feeling of Duty.*
+
+Far be it from me to deny that my country people, male and female, do
+indeed possess an unusually strong sense of duty. This is combined with
+a desire for justice which is so often looked upon by outsiders as a
+lack of patriotic pride, and with an honesty which easily makes the
+German appear so clumsy and awkward. These three characteristics belong
+indissolubly together and one is not to be thought of without the other.
+The spirit from which the German sense of duty arises is what the
+foreigner so often misunderstands in us. He generally confuses sense of
+duty with blind obedience. But this sense of duty does not originate
+from a need for submission or from a mental dependence. No, it rests on
+a deep philosophical reason and arises from the mental recognition of
+ethical and national necessity. That is why it can exist side by side
+with the most extreme individualism, which also belongs to the
+peculiarities of the character of our people. The Germans have always
+been a nation of thinkers. Not only the scholar, also the simple worker,
+the laborer, the modest mother take a deep pleasure in forming their
+philosophy of life and the world. Side by side with the loud triumph of
+our industry goes this quieter existence, which has been rather pushed
+into the background in the last decades, but has not, therefore, ceased
+to exist. And the further the belief in miracles stepped into the
+background, the more the belief in duty acquired a warm religious tinge.
+The loud complaints about the vanishing of the sense of duty among the
+young, which has so often been voiced by public opinion, only prove how
+strongly this ethical force was governing people's minds. Every seeming
+diminution of it was felt to be a disastrous endangerment of the
+knowledge of the people. We have perhaps acted childishly and foolishly
+toward other nations by too great confidence. But in the consciousness
+of the entire German Nation the ominous feeling was living and working
+with mighty power, that only if every one of us devotes his entire
+strength to the post assigned to him, and works until the exhaustion of
+his last mental and physical power, only then can we as a national whole
+retain our high level and, surrounded by dangers on all sides, create
+sufficient room for ourselves to breathe and live.
+
+
+*The Military and the Socialists.*
+
+Two mighty organizations exist among us which were opposed to each other
+until recently--the military and the Social Democratic. The world sees
+with amazement the perfection which has been reached by the military
+organization of our army. Its achievements have only become possible
+through the above-mentioned philosophical conception of the sense of
+duty which raises it far above any systematic obedience and lets it
+appear in the light of religious ideal. Duty becomes in these serious
+and energetic minds a voluntary adaptation to a carefully organized
+whole with the knowledge that to serve this whole at the same time
+produces the highest achievement of the individual personality. The
+Social Democratic organization, opposed though it is to the military
+organization, is also composed of Germans and is, therefore, directed by
+the same basic principles as the military organization, although for
+entirely different purposes. For this one reason it was almost a matter
+of course that the Social Democrats offered their services for the war
+at the moment when they recognized that it had become of imperious
+necessity to set aside personal wishes and ideals and to put in the
+foreground only the duty of the defense of their country. The idea of
+our opponents, that they would find a support in the Socialists of our
+country, rested on a complete misunderstanding of the German character.
+
+A foreign woman wrote to me in the days of the mobilization: "I do not
+understand the German enthusiasm for war--how it is possible that one
+can become enthusiastic about murder!" The woman only saw the exterior
+and superficial phase of things.
+
+In its endeavor to unite itself with the world the German soul had
+suddenly come upon the wildest hatred * * * numerous high ideals of
+culture fell to ruin within a few hours. Deeply wounded, it was hurled
+back into its most personal possessions. Here it found itself face to
+face with tasks which far surpassed anything demanded heretofore of it
+as fulfillment of duty. And now there came to pass a wonder which will
+be unforgettable for every one who lived through this period. Everything
+dry, petty, pedantic, connected with German ways, which had often made
+many of us impatient with ourselves, was suddenly swept away by the
+storm of these days.
+
+A gigantic wave of fiery hot feeling passed through our country flaming
+up like a beautiful sacrificial pyre. It was no longer a duty to offer
+one's self and one's life--it was supreme bliss. That might easily sound
+like a hollow phrase. But there is a proof, which is more genuine than
+words, than songs, and cheers. That is the expression in the faces of
+the people, their uncontrolled spontaneous movements. I saw the eyes
+light up of an old woman who had sent four sons into battle and
+exclaimed: "It is glorious to be allowed to give the Fatherland so
+much!" I saw the controlled calm in the features of sorrowing mothers
+who knew that their only sons had fallen. But the expression in the
+faces of many wounded who were already returning home gripped me the
+most. They had lived through the horror of the battle, their feet had
+waded through blood, their young bodies were horribly maimed. I saw this
+strangely serene, quietly friendly expression in the young faces. They
+were men who had sacrificed their ego. They were great patient
+conquerors of selfishness. And with what tenderness, what goodness are
+they surrounded, to lighten their lot, to give them joy. How the general
+sentiment is often expressed in the gesture of a single person--you did
+that for us--how can we sufficiently requite you?
+
+A stream of love is flowing through our Fatherland and is uniting all
+hearts. The unobtrusive mother "duty" gave birth to the genial child
+"feeling." She bestowed on it her strong vitality so that it can defy a
+world of hatred--and conquer it.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[B] Gabriele Reuter is one of the foremost German woman authors.
+
+
+
+
+*A Letter to Gerhart Hauptmann*
+
+*By Romain Rolland.*
+
+
+I am not, Gerhart Hauptmann, of those Frenchmen who call Germany
+barbarian. I recognize the intellectual and moral grandeur of your
+mighty race. I realize all that I owe to the thinkers of old Germany;
+and even at this extreme hour I recall to mind the example and the words
+of our Goethe--for he belongs to all humanity--repudiating national
+hatred and preserving his soul serene in those heights "where one feels
+the joys and sorrows of all peoples as one's own." It has been the labor
+of my life to bring together the minds of our two nations; and the
+atrocities of impious war shall never lead me to soil my heart with
+hatred.
+
+Whatever reason I may have, therefore, to suffer through the deeds of
+your Germany and to judge as criminal the German policy and the German
+methods, I do not hold responsible the people who submit thereto and are
+reduced to mere blind instruments. This does not mean that I regard war
+as a fatality. A Frenchman knows no such word as fatality. Fatality is
+the excuse of souls that lack a will.
+
+No. This war is the fruit of the feebleness of peoples and of their
+stupidity. One can only pity them; one cannot blame them. I do not
+reproach you for our sorrows. Your mourning will not be less than ours.
+If France is ruined, so also will be Germany. I did not even raise my
+voice when I saw your armies violate the neutrality of noble Belgium.
+This forfeit of honor, which compels the contempt of every
+right-thinking mind, is too well within the political tradition of
+Prussian Kings to have surprised me.
+
+But the fury with which you treated that generous land whose one crime
+was to defend, unto despair, its independence and the idea of
+justice--that was too much! The world revolts in wrath at this. Reserve
+for us your violence--for us French, who are your enemies. But to
+trample upon your victims, upon the little Belgian people, unfortunate
+and innocent--that is ignominy!
+
+And not content with assaulting the Belgium that lives, you wage war on
+the dead, on the glory of past centuries. You bombard Malines, you put
+Rubens to flame, Louvain comes from your hands a heap of ashes--Louvain
+with its treasures of art and knowledge, the holy city! Who indeed are
+you and what name do you conjure us to call you, Hauptmann, you who
+reject the title of barbarian?
+
+Are you the children of Goethe or of Attila? Do you wage war against
+armies or against the human spirit? Kill men if you must, but respect
+man's work. For this is the heritage of the human race. And you, like
+us, are its trustees. In making pillage of it as you have done you prove
+yourselves unworthy of this great inheritance, unworthy of holding rank
+in the small European army which is the garde d'honneur of civilization.
+
+It is not to the sense of the rest of the world that I appeal against
+you. It is to yourself, Hauptmann. In the name of our Europe, of which
+up to the present you have been one of the noblest champions--in the
+name of that civilization for which the greatest of men have
+struggled--in the name of the honor even of your German race, Gerhart
+Hauptmann, I adjure you, I command you, you and the intellectual élite
+of Germany, where I have so many friends, to protest with utmost
+vehemence against this crime which leaps back upon yourselves.
+
+If you fail in this, one of two things will be proved--that you
+acquiesce, (and then the opinion of the world will crush you,) or that
+you are powerless to raise your voice against the Huns that now command
+you. And in that case, with what right will you still pretend, as you
+have written, that your cause is that of liberty and human progress?
+
+You will be giving to the world a proof that, incapable of defending the
+liberty of the world, you are helpless even to uphold your own; that the
+élite of Germany lies subservient to the blackest despotism--to a
+tyranny which mutilates masterpieces and assassinates the human spirit.
+
+I await your response, Hauptmann--a response which shall be an act. The
+opinion of Europe awaits it, as do I. Bear this in mind; in a moment
+like this, even silence is an act.
+
+
+
+
+*A Reply to Rolland*
+
+*By Gerhart Hauptmann.*
+
+
+You address me, Herr Rolland, in public words which breathe the pain
+over this war, (forced by England, Russia and France,) pain over the
+endangering of European culture and the destruction of hallowed
+memorials of ancient art. I share in this general sorrow, but that to
+which I cannot consent is to give an answer whose spirit you have
+already prescribed and concerning which you wrongly assert that it is
+awaited by all Europe. I know that you are of German blood. Your
+beautiful novel, "Jean-Christophe," will remain immortal among us
+Germans together with "Wilhelm Meister," and "der grüne Heinrich."
+
+But France became your adopted fatherland; therefore your heart must now
+be torn and your judgment confused. You have labored zealously for the
+reconciliation of both peoples. In spite of all this when the present
+bloody conflict destroys your fair concept of peace, as it has done for
+so many others, you see our nation and our people through French eyes,
+and every attempt to make you see clearly and as a German is absolutely
+sure to be in vain.
+
+Naturally everything which you say of our Government, of our army and
+our people, is distorted, everything is false, so false that in this
+respect your open letter to me appears as an empty black surface.
+
+War is war. You may lament war, but you should not wonder at the things
+that are inseparable from the elementary fact itself. Assuredly it is
+deplorable that in the conflict an irreplaceable Rubens is destroyed,
+but--with all honor to Rubens!--I am among those in whom the shattered
+breast of his fellow-man compels far deeper pain.
+
+And, Herr Rolland, it is not exactly fitting that you should adopt a
+tone implying that the people of your land, the French, are coming out
+to meet us with palm branches, when in reality they are plentifully
+equipped with cannon, with cartridges, yes, even with dumdum bullets. It
+is apparent that you have grown pretty fearful of our brave troops! That
+is to the glory of a power which is invincible through the justice of
+its cause. The German soldier has nothing whatsoever in common with the
+loathsome and puerile were-wolf tales which your lying French press so
+zealously publishes abroad, that press which the French and the Belgian
+people have to thank for their misfortune.
+
+Let the idle Englishmen call us Huns; you may, for all I care,
+characterize the warriors of our splendid Landwehr as sons of Attila; it
+is enough for us if this Landwehr can shatter into a thousand pieces the
+ring of our merciless enemies. Far better that you should call us sons
+of Attila, cross yourselves in fear and remain outside our borders, than
+that you should indict tender inscriptions upon the tomb of our German
+name, calling us the beloved descendants of Goethe. The epithet Huns is
+coined by people who, themselves Huns, are experiencing disappointment
+in their criminal attacks on the life of a sound and valorous race,
+because it knows the trick of parrying a fearful blow with still more
+fearful force. In their impotence, they take refuge in curses.
+
+I say nothing against the Belgian people. The peaceful passage of German
+troops, a question of life for Germany, was refused by Belgium because
+the Government had made itself a tool of England and France. This same
+Government then organized an unparalleled guerrilla warfare in order to
+support a lost cause, and by that act--Herr Rolland, you are a
+musician!--struck the horrible keynote of conflict. If you are at all in
+a position to break your way through the giant's wall of anti-German
+lies, read the message to America, by our Imperial Chancellor, of Sept.
+7; read further the telegram which on Sept. 8 the Kaiser himself
+addressed to President Wilson. You will then discover things which it is
+necessary to know in order to understand the calamity of Louvain.
+
+
+
+
+*Another Reply to Rolland*
+
+*By Karl Wolfskehl.*
+
+
+To you, Rolland, belonging as a chosen one to the more important
+Frenchmen who can rise above their race, the German nature has often
+been revealed. To you, now, we shall make answer, offer frank testimony
+concerning the spirit of the time, concerning that fate, that very fate
+in which you, the Frenchman, do not believe. You do not believe in it;
+what to us is fate, mysterious necessity, to you is fatalité, an
+unavoidable Alp which threatens the individual in his individual
+freedom. This fatalité, we, too, do not believe in it, but we do believe
+in the forces which bring forth the eternal in human will, that these
+both are one, will and forces, one with necessity, with actuality, with
+creative, moral power, of which all great ideas are the children, the
+idea of freedom, the idea of the beautiful, the idea of tragic fidelity,
+and that these, reaching far above being and passing away, are
+nevertheless real, life entire, fact entire. All that which is as dear
+to you as to us, great works and great feelings, resignation and
+self-restraint, all that is necessity, is fate, that became will--all
+that a unity out of choice and compulsion. All that is for us eternal,
+not according to the measure of time, but according to the beginning and
+the power of its working forces, in so far as it is necessary.
+
+Thus has it become fate, destiny, not fatalité, rather like that fate
+which in Beethoven's own words in the first movement of his "Eroica" "is
+the knocking at the gate."
+
+Such a fate is this war. No one wanted it in our Germany, for it was
+forced upon us with terrible arbitrariness, contrary to all right. Do
+you not know of the net that has been spun around us and drawn tight for
+the last half of a generation, to choke us? Do you not know how often
+this most peaceful of peoples has drawn back, how often the strange
+powers in the East and in the West have with contemptuous snarls said,
+"Wilhelm will not make war"? That you ought to know, Rolland, for it is
+known to the whole world.
+
+
+*The War "Came from God."*
+
+But I will betray something to you that you cannot know, because you are
+a stranger; and this will probably show you where we see fate. I will
+betray to you the fact that there is still another Germany behind the
+exterior in which great politics and great finance meet with the
+literary champions of Europe. That Germany tells you in this heavy hour
+of Europe:
+
+This undesired war that has been forced upon us is nevertheless a
+necessity; it had to come to pass for the sake of Germany and the world
+of European humanity, for the sake of the world. We did not want it, but
+it came from God. Our poet knew of it. He saw this war and its necessity
+and its virtues, and heralded it, long before an ugly suspicion of it
+flew through the year--before the leaves began to turn. The "Stern des
+Bundes" ["Star of the Federation"] is this book of prophecy, this book
+of necessity and of triumph.
+
+The present need and the present triumph are quite human and quite
+inexorable. They have a part in all that has taken place, and they are
+unprecedented and new. None of us--do you hear, Rolland?--none of us
+Germans today would hesitate to help destroy every monument of our holy
+German past, if necessity made it a matter of the last ditch, for that
+from which alone all monuments of all times draw their right of
+existence and their worth unless they are empty husks, skeletons, and
+framework; even so, we alone may ask what shall come to pass, not what
+shall cease. Which ruins are ravings, and which are the pains of
+childbirth, we do not presume to decide; but you, too, who are so pained
+by ruins, even as we are pained by them, you, too, do not know it.
+
+Today it is a question of the life or death of the European soul. Do you
+not believe that this soul is more endangered at the hands of the hordes
+of stub-nosed Slavs than of the phalanx of those whom you, Rolland, call
+Huns? Your sense must give you the right to answer. Recall the terrible
+story of Russian incendiarism for the last hundred years, which has torn
+to pieces in ever-increasing lust for murder bodies and souls; recall
+the eternally perjured and law-defying regiment of grave diggers; and
+then blush that you have characterized as a heavy crime a manfully
+confessed act of self-defense on the part of the Germans, the temporary
+occupation of Belgium! Blush that you have forgotten the Russian Moloch
+now loosed upon us, drunk with the blood and tears of alien peoples as
+well as of its own children! That you have forgotten all that, in order
+to lament over buildings which we have been forced in
+self-defense--again in self-defense--to sacrifice! And blush for those
+of your people who have become accomplices of that Moloch! Those who are
+sinning against the Holy Ghost of Europe, in order to attempt belated
+vengeance against Germany! Do you know what the ancients, the very
+Greeks and Romans from whom you have drawn your blood and temperament,
+called that sin? Blood-guiltiness is the name of that horror. And do you
+know how it is atoned for? I shrink to ask further, yea, even to think
+further; for horror falls upon me, and I see the unspeakable.
+
+Today, battling against you allies of the swarms of Muscovites, we
+Europeans are battling also for that France which you are
+threatening--you, not we!
+
+
+*German Intellectuals "All Afire."*
+
+Yes, Romain Rolland, try, Frenchman that you are, to look into the
+mysteries of the time. Ask yourself, marvel, how it comes to pass that
+we, the intellectuals among the Germans, take part without exception in
+this dreadful war; take part with body and soul. None of us ambitious,
+none of us a politician, not one of us who, till this war, busied
+himself about anything except his idea, the Palladium of his life! And
+now we are all afire, with all our hearts, with our whole people, all
+full of determination and prepared for the last. All our youth in the
+field, every man among us thrilled with faith in our God and this battle
+of our God, every man among us conscious of the sacred necessity that
+has driven us, every man among us consecrated for timely death! Are
+these incendiaries? Are these slaves, whom a despot points the way to
+the rolling dead? Every one knows it is our all that is at stake; it is
+a matter of the divine in humanity, a matter of our preservation and
+that of Europe.
+
+And so we stand amid death and ruins under the star--one federation, one
+single union. This I have had to tell you, whether you will listen to
+it, whether Europe has ears to hear it, or not. From now on, may our
+deeds be our words!
+
+
+
+
+*Are We Barbarians?*
+
+*By Gerhart Hauptmann.*
+
+
+The idea of cosmopolitanism has never taken deeper root anywhere than in
+Germany. Let any person reflect about our literary translations and then
+name a nation that has tried so honestly as we to do justice to the
+spirit and the feelings of other races, to understand their inmost soul
+in all good-will.
+
+I must out with it: We had and have no hatred against France: we have
+idolized the fine arts, the sculpture and painting and the literature of
+that country. The worldwide appreciation of Rodin had its origin in
+Germany--we esteem Anatole France, Maupassant, Flaubert, Balzac, as if
+they were German authors. We have a deep affection for the people of
+South France. We find passionate admirers of Mistral in small German
+towns, in alleys, in attics. It was deeply to be regretted that Germany
+and France could not be friends politically. They ought to have been,
+because they were joint trustees of the intellectual treasures of the
+Continent, because they are two of the great cultivated nations of
+Europe. But fate has willed it otherwise.
+
+In the year 1870 the German races fought for the union of the Germans
+and the German Empire. Owing to the success of this struggle Germany has
+enjoyed an era of peace for more than forty years. A time of budding,
+growing, becoming strong, flowering, and bearing fruit, without parallel
+in history. Out of a population, growing more and more numerous, an
+ever-increasing number of individuals have been formed. Individual
+energy and a general tendency to expand led to the great achievements of
+our industry, our commerce, and our trade. I do not think that any
+American, Englishman, Frenchman, or Italian when in a German family, in
+German towns, in German hotels, on German ships, in German concerts, in
+German theatres, at Baireuth, in German libraries, or in German museums,
+ever felt as if he were among "barbarians." We visited other countries
+and kept an open door for every stranger.
+
+
+*English Relations.*
+
+It is with pain and with bitterness that I speak the word England. I am
+one of those barbarians on whom the English University of Oxford
+conferred the degree of Doctor Honoris Causa. I have friends in England
+who stand with one foot on the intellectual soil of Germany. Haldane,
+formerly English Minister of War, and with him countless other
+Englishmen, made regular pilgrimages to the little barbarous town of
+Weimar, where the barbarians Goethe, Schiller, Herder, Wieland, and
+others, have created another world for humanity. We have a poet, whose
+plays, more than those of any other German poet, have become national
+property; his name is Shakespeare. This Shakespeare is, at the same
+time, the prince of English poets. The mother of our Emperor is an
+English woman, the wife of the King of England a German, and yet this
+nation, so closely related by blood and choice, has declared war against
+us. Why? Heaven only knows. This much, however, is certain, that the now
+beginning European concert, saturated with blood, as it is, has an
+English statesman for its impresario and its conductor. It is doubtful,
+however, whether the finale of this terrible music will find the same
+conductor at the stand. "My cousin, you did not mean well either with
+yourselves or with us when your tools threw the fire-brand into our
+dwellings!"
+
+If heaven wills that we should issue regenerated from this terrible
+trial, we shall have the sacred duty of showing ourselves worthy of our
+regeneration. By the complete victory of German arms the independence of
+Europe would be secured. It would be necessary to make it clear to the
+different nations of Europe that this war must be the last between
+themselves. They must see at last that their sanguinary duels only bring
+a shameful advantage to the one who, without taking part in them, is
+their originator. Then they must devote themselves mutually to the work
+of civilization and peace, which will then make misunderstandings
+impossible.
+
+In this direction much had already been done before the war began. The
+dfferent nations had already met in peaceful emulation and were to meet
+again at Berlin for the Olympian games. It is only necessary to recall
+the aeronautic races, the boat races, the horse races, and the
+beneficial international influence of the arts and sciences, and the
+great super-national Nobel Prizes. The barbarian Germany has, as is well
+known, led the way among the other nations with her great institutions
+for social reform. A victory would oblige us to go forward on this path
+and to make the blessings of such institutions general. Our victory
+would, furthermore, secure the future existence of the Teutonic race for
+the welfare of the world. During the last decade, for example, how
+fruitful has the Scandinavian literature been for the German, and vice
+versa, the German for the Scandinavian. How many Swedes, Norwegians, and
+Danes have lately, without feeling conscious of a drop of foreign blood,
+shaken hands with German brothers in Stockholm, Christiania, Copenhagen,
+Munich, Vienna, and Berlin. How much homely good-fellowship has grown up
+around the noble names of Ibsen, Björnsen, and Strindberg.
+
+
+*Faust and Rifles.*
+
+I hear that abroad an enormous number of lying tales are being
+fabricated to the detriment of our honor, our culture, and our strength.
+Well, those who create these idle tales should reflect that the
+momentous hour is not favorable for fiction. On three frontiers our own
+blood bears witness. I myself have sent out two of my sons. All our
+intrepid German soldiers know why they are going to war. There are no
+analphabets to be found among them; all the more, however, of those who,
+besides their rifle, have their Goethe's "Faust," their "Zarathustra," a
+work of Schopenhauer's, the Bible, or their Homer in their knapsacks.
+And even those who have no book in the knapsack know that they are
+fighting for a hearth at which every guest is welcome.
+
+On the frontier stands our blood testimony; the Socialist side by side
+with the bourgeois, the peasant beside the man of learning, the Prince
+beside the workman; and they all fight for German freedom, for German
+domestic life, for German art, German science, German progress; they
+fight with the full, clear consciousness of a noble and rich national
+possession, for internal and external goods, all of which serve for the
+general progress and development of mankind.
+
+
+
+
+*To Americans From a German Friend*
+
+*By Ludwig Fulda.*
+
+ _Like most of the champions of Germany in the literary field,
+ Ludwig Fulda is a Doctor of Philosophy. He is also author of many
+ famous poetical and prose works of fiction._
+
+
+Many things have been revealed to us by this war that even the
+keenest-minded among us would have declared immediately before its
+outbreak to be impossibilities. Nothing, however, has been a greater and
+more painful surprise to Germans than the position taken by a great part
+of the American press. There is nothing that we would have suspected
+less than that within the one neutral nation with which we felt
+ourselves most closely connected, both by common interests and by common
+ideals, voices would be raised that in the hour of our greatest danger
+would deny us their sympathy, yes, even their comprehension of our
+course.
+
+To me, personally--I cannot avoid saying it--this was a very bitter
+disappointment. A year has hardly passed since I was over there the
+second time as a guest and returned strengthened in my admiration for
+that great, upward striving community. In my book, "Amerikanische
+Eindrucke," ("American Impressions,") a new edition of which has just
+appeared in a considerably supplemented form, comprising the fruits of
+that trip, I have made every effort to place before my countrymen in the
+brightest light the advantages and superiorities of Americans, and
+especially to convince them that the so-called land of the dollar was
+not only economically but also mentally and spiritually striding upward
+irresistibly; that also in the longing and effort to obtain education
+and knowledge and in the valuation of all the higher things in life, it
+was not surpassed by any other country in the world. In the entire book
+there is not a page that is not filled with the confidence that for
+these very reasons America and Germany were called upon to march hand in
+hand at the head of cultured humanity. Is this belief now to be
+contradicted? Shall I as a German no longer be permitted to call myself
+a friend of America because over there they think the worst of us for
+the reason that we, attacked in dastardly wise by a world of foes, are
+struggling with unanimous determination for our existence?
+
+
+*Guillotining German Honor.*
+
+Of course I know very well that public opinion over there has largely
+been misled by our opponents and is continuously being misled. Did not
+the English at the very beginning of the war cut our cable, in order to
+be able to guillotine our honor without the least interference? For this
+reason I cannot blame the masses if they took for truth the absurd
+fables dished out to them, when no contradicting voice could reach them.
+Less than that, however, can I understand how educated beings, even men
+who, thanks to their gifts and their standing, play the part of
+responsible leaders, not only accepted believingly these prevarications
+and distortions, but, with them as a basis, immediately rendered a
+verdict against us. For he who publicly judges must be expected to have
+heard first both parties; and whoever is not in a position to do this
+must in decency be expected to postpone his verdict. Yes, even more than
+that, one should think that the sense of justice of every non-partisan
+must be violated if the one party is absolutely muzzled by the other,
+and even for this one reason the cause of the latter must be considered
+as not being free from reason for doubt. Furthermore, one should assume
+that he who once has been unmasked as a liar therewith should have lost
+the blind confidence of the impartial in his future assertions. In spite
+of this, although the first ridiculous news of German defeats and
+internal dissent could not withstand the far-sounding echo of facts,
+there still seems to be no twisting of the truth, no defamation, which
+over there is considered as too thin and too ridiculous by the press and
+as too shameless by the public.
+
+Should the Germans, who, since the time when they fought for and
+attained their national unity, have exclusively devoted themselves to
+works of peace and culture, suddenly have been transformed into an
+adventurous, booty-hungry horde which from mere lust challenged a
+tremendously superior force to do battle? Should they suddenly have
+sacrificed to their so-called militarism all their other efforts in
+commerce, industry, art, and science, in order to risk their very
+existence for the love of this Moloch? Do you believe that, Americans?
+
+
+*Question of Militarism.*
+
+Our militarism! What does this expression, quoted until it is sickening,
+mean in the mouth of enemies who in respect of the energy and extent of
+their armaments were not behind us? Is there no such thing as militarism
+in France and in Russia? Is the English giant fleet an instrument of
+peace? Was the Triple Entente founded in order to bring about the
+millennium on earth? Would the Entente, if we had been foolish enough to
+disarm, have guaranteed our possessions as a reward for being good? Do
+you believe that, Americans?
+
+It certainly may be difficult for the citizens of the Union--happy
+beings they are for it--to put themselves in the place of a nation that
+knows it is surrounded on its open borders by jealous, hateful, and
+greedy neighbors; of a country that for centuries has been the
+battlefield of all European wars, the place of strife of all the
+European peoples. They, the members of a nation which for itself
+occupies a space nearly as large as Europe, almost half of a continent,
+protected on both sides by the ocean and on the other borders not
+seriously threatened for as long a time to come as may be anticipated,
+have no people's army because they do not need any; and yet they
+would--their history proves it--give their blood and that of their sons
+for the cause of their nation just as gladly as we, if the necessity for
+doing so came to them. Will they, therefore, reproach us for loving our
+country not less than they do theirs, only for the reason that we have a
+thousand times more difficulty in protecting it?
+
+Our general military service, which today is being defamed by the word
+"militarism," is born of the iron commandment of self-preservation.
+Without it the German Empire and the German Nation long ago would have
+been struck out of the list of the living. Only lack of knowledge or
+intentional misconception of our character could accuse us of having an
+aggressive motive back of it. On earth there is no more peaceful nation
+than Germany, providing she be left in peace and her room to breathe be
+not lessened. Germany never has had the least thought of assuming for
+herself the European hegemony, much less the rulership of the world. She
+has never greedily eyed colonial possessions of other great powers. On
+the contrary, in the acquisition of her colonies she was satisfied with
+whatever the others had left for her. And least of all did she carry up
+her sleeve a desire of extending the frontiers of the empire. The famous
+word of Bismarck, that Germany was "saturated" with acquired territory,
+is still accepted as fully in force to such an extent that even in case
+of her victory the question as to which parts of the enemies' territory
+we should claim for our own would cause us a great deal of perplexity.
+The German Empire could only lose as the national State she is in
+strength and unity by acquiring new and strange elements.
+
+Otherwise would the empire, from the day of its founding until now, for
+nearly half a century, actually have avoided every war, often enough
+under the most difficult circumstances? Would it have quietly suffered
+the open or hidden challenges, the machinations of its enemies
+constantly appearing more plainly? Yes, would it have tried again and
+again to improve its relations with these very same enemies by the
+greatest advances? As opposed to the ill-concealed hostility of the
+French, would it not have been shaken in its steadfast policy of
+conciliation by the fact that this policy with them only made the
+impression of weakness and fear? Would it have permitted France to
+reconstruct her power which was destroyed in 1870 to a greater extent
+than before, and, in addition, allowed her to conquer a new and gigantic
+colonial empire? Would it have permitted prostrate Russia to recuperate
+undisturbed from the almost annihilating blows of the revolution and the
+Japanese war? Would it, in the countless threatening conflicts of the
+last decades, have on every occasion thrown the entire weight of its
+sword into the scales for the preservation of peace?
+
+
+*The Kaiser's Responsibility.*
+
+Then, too, many Americans emphasize the fact that they are making not
+the German people but the Emperor alone responsible for this war. It is
+hardly conceivable how serious-minded people can lend themselves to the
+spreading of a fable so childish. When William II., 29 years old,
+mounted the throne, the entire world said of him that his aim was the
+acquirement of the laurels of war. In spite of this for twenty-six years
+he has shown that this accusation was absurd and has proved himself to
+be the most honest and most dependable protector of European peace. In
+fact, the very circle of enemies which now dares to call him a military
+despot thirsting for glory, has year in and year out ridiculed him as a
+ruler, whose provocation to the very limit was an amusement absolutely
+fraught with no danger. He who has never been misled by the fiery
+enthusiasm of youth nor by the full strength of ripe manhood to adorn
+his brow with the bloody halo of glory, should he suddenly, when his
+hair is turned gray, have turned into a Caesar, an Attila? Do you
+believe that, Americans?
+
+It is a fact in times of peace there have been certain differences of
+opinion between the Emperor and his people. Although at all times the
+honesty of his intentions was elevated above every doubt, the one or
+other impulsive moves he took to obtain their realization exposed him to
+criticism at home. Today one may safely admit that--today, when of these
+trifling disputes not even a breath, not even a shadow, remains. Never
+before has his whole people, his whole nation, in every grade of
+education, in all classes, in all parties, stood behind him so
+absolutely without reserve as now, when in the last, the very last hour,
+and driven by direst need, he finally drew the sword to ward off an
+attack from three sides, long ago prepared.
+
+Our nation and our Emperor have not wanted this war and are not to be
+blamed for it. Even the "White Book" of the German Government, by the
+very uncontrovertible language of its documents, must convince every
+impartial being of this fact. And day by day the overwhelming evidence
+of the plot systematically hatched and systematically carried out under
+the guidance of England, which put before us the alternative of cutting
+our way through or being annihilated, is increasing.
+
+
+*No Treason to Austria Considered.*
+
+It may be that the catastrophe, so far as we are concerned, might have
+been staved off once more if we would have disregarded the obligation of
+our alliance and would have left Austria in the lurch--the Austria which
+did not want anything else than to put a stop to the nasty work of a
+band of assassins organized by a neighboring State. But it requires an
+extreme degree of political blindness for the assumption that by such
+cowardly treason we should have been able to purchase a change of mind
+or a lasting peace from our enemies. On the contrary, they would soon
+enough have used a suitable opportunity to fall upon Germany, which then
+would have been completely isolated, and the struggle for our national
+existence would have had to be fought under conditions very much more
+favorable to our enemies.
+
+According to a newspaper report, the esteemed President Eliot of Harvard
+has written that the fear of the Muscovites could not explain our
+action, and that an alliance with the Western powers would have offered
+better protection against a Russian attack. Yes; if such a thing had
+been possible! As a matter of fact, however, the Western powers did not
+ally themselves with us against Russia, but with Russia against us; and
+not the fear of the Muscovites, but their mobilization, encouraged and
+aided by the very same Western powers, drove us to war. I wonder what
+President Eliot himself would have done under these circumstances had he
+been the guardian responsible for Germany's fate?
+
+*Belgium's Alleged Neutrality.*
+
+But then the violation of Belgian neutrality! How with the aid of this
+bugaboo the entire neutral world has been stirred up against us, after
+England made it the hypocritical excuse for her declaration of war! We
+knew very well that England and France were determined to violate this
+neutrality; but, then, we ought to have been very good; we ought to have
+waited until they did so. Waited until their armies would break into our
+country across our unprotected Belgian frontier! In other words, we
+ought to have committed national suicide. Whoever, even up until now,
+has doubted the German assertion that Belgium was under one roof with
+England and France, and had herself thrown away her neutrality, must
+have his eyes opened by the latest official developments. The documents
+of the Belgian General Staff which have fallen into our hands contain an
+agreement according to which the march through Belgium of British troops
+in the case of a Franco-German war was provided for in every detail.
+Whosoever in the face of these documents repeats the assertion that we
+have committed a violation of innocent Belgium gives aid to a historical
+forgery.
+
+We have violated the alleged neutrality of Belgium in self-defense. On
+the other hand, the Japanese, egged on and supported by England, have
+violated the real neutrality of China from pure lust for robbery. For
+the three great powers allied against Germany and Austria have not been
+satisfied with their own nominal superiority of 220 millions against 110
+millions! In addition to this they have urged on into war against us a
+Mongolian people, the most dangerous enemy of the white race and its
+culture. They have supplemented their armies by a motley collection of
+all the African negro tribes. They lead into battle against us Indian
+troops, and the Christian Germanic King of England prays to God for the
+victory of the heathen Hindus over his coreligionists and blood
+relatives. Americans, does your racial feeling, at other times so
+sensitive, remain silent in view of this unexampled shame? Do you accord
+to the English and the French, who are attacking us in co-operation with
+the Russians, the Servians, and the Montenegrins, who are dirtying
+themselves with a brotherhood in arms with the yellow skins, the brown
+skins, and the blacks, the right to declare themselves the
+representatives of civilization and us to be barbarians?
+
+In order to drive home such evident absurdities, they were, of course,
+obliged to carry on the poisoning of the spring of information to the
+utmost, they had to suppress the news of the vile deeds of guerrillas
+and "snipers" in Belgium and of the Russian ghouls in East Prussia, that
+were crying to heaven, and to send out into the world instead fables of
+German brutality. Our national army, permeated with ethical seriousness
+and iron discipline, the scientist standing beside the farmer, the
+workman beside the artist, should be guilty of unnecessary severity,
+uncontrollable brutality, brutality against people unable to defend
+themselves? Do you believe that, Americans?
+
+
+*The Charge of Vandalism.*
+
+The climax of absurdity, however, is reached when the Germans, who in
+their love and appreciation of art are not surpassed by any people in
+the world, are accused of having raged as vandals against works of art.
+Even now these accusations, which the French Government itself had the
+pitiful courage to support, have proved totally groundless. The City
+Hall at Louvain stands uninjured; while the populace fired at them, our
+soldiers had, risking their own lives, saved it from the flames. An
+imperial art commission followed at the heels of our victorious troops
+in Belgium, in order to take charge of the guarding and administration
+of the treasures of art. The cathedral at Rheims has received but slight
+damage, and would not have been damaged at all had its tower not been
+misused by the French as an observation station. I should like to see
+the commander of an army who, for the sake of the safety of a historical
+monument, would forget the safety of the troops intrusted into his care!
+
+Enough of it! What I have stated is sufficient to show what low weapons
+our enemies are using behind the battlefield to sully Germany's shield
+of honor. It is enough for those who care to listen at all. But, also,
+wherever the weak voice of one rebounds from ears stubbornly closed, the
+more powerful voice of truth eventually will force a more just verdict.
+
+Justice--that is all that we expect from America. We respect its
+neutrality; we do not ask from it an ideal partisanship for our benefit.
+If it does not have for us the sympathy which we have already extended
+to it and, after a century and a half of unclouded intercourse between
+the two nations, have anticipated there, then we cannot imbue it with
+that spirit by reasoning. Furthermore, in the existence of nations
+sympathy is not the deciding factor, and every nation should be rebuked
+which out of regard for sympathy would in decisive matters act against
+its own interests. But just for that very reason one more question must
+be raised. In the present conflict, which momentarily almost splits the
+entire world into two camps, where do the interests of America lie?
+
+That they are not lying on the side of Russia probably is self-evident.
+No free American can find desirable a further extension of the Russian
+world empire and of Russian despotism at the expense of Germany. But how
+about a country from which once America had to wrest its own liberty in
+bloody battle? How about England? Where, if England should succeed in
+downing Germany, would her eyes next be pointed? Has she not herself
+admitted that she is making war on us principally because she sees in us
+an uncomfortable competitor in trade? And which competitor would be the
+next one after us that would become awkward to the trust on the Thames?
+Yes, have they not already hauled off for the smash against America,
+when Japan is given opportunity to increase her power--the same Japan
+with whom America sooner or later will be bound to have an accounting
+and whose victory over us would make that accounting a great deal more
+difficult for the United States?
+
+Germany's fate certainly does not depend upon the friendly or unfriendly
+feeling of America. It will be decided solely upon the European
+battlefields. But because we are looking out from the night to a future
+dawn, because in the midst of our national need the cause of humanity is
+close to our heart, for these reasons it is not immaterial to us how the
+greatest neutral nation of culture thinks of us. Americans, the cable
+between us has been cut. It is our wish and our hope that the stronger
+band that unites American ideals with German ideals shall not also be
+cut.
+
+
+
+
+*To the Civilized World*
+
+*By Professors of Germany.*
+
+
+As representatives of German science and art, we hereby protest to the
+civilized world against the lies and calumnies with which our enemies
+are endeavoring to stain the honor of Germany in her hard struggle for
+existence--in a struggle which has been forced upon her.
+
+The iron mouth of events has proved the untruth of the fictitious German
+defeats, consequently misrepresentation and calumny are all the more
+eagerly at work. As heralds of truth we raise our voices against these.
+
+_It is not true_ that Germany is guilty of having caused this war.
+Neither the people, the Government, nor the Kaiser wanted war. Germany
+did her utmost to prevent it; for this assertion the world has
+documental proof. Often enough during the twenty-six years of his reign
+has Wilhelm II. shown himself to be the upholder of peace, and often
+enough has this fact been acknowledged by our opponents. Nay, even the
+Kaiser they now dare to call an Attila has been ridiculed by them for
+years, because of his steadfast endeavors to maintain universal peace.
+Not till a numerical superiority which had been lying in wait on the
+frontiers assailed us did the whole nation rise to a man.
+
+_It is not true_ that we trespassed in neutral Belgium. It has been
+proved that France and England had resolved on such a trespass, and it
+has likewise been proved that Belgium had agreed to their doing so. It
+would have been suicide on our part not to have been beforehand.
+
+_It is not true_ that the life and property of a single Belgian citizen
+was injured by our soldiers without the bitterest self-defense having
+made it necessary; for again and again, notwithstanding repeated
+threats, the citizens lay in ambush, shooting at the troops out of the
+houses, mutilating the wounded, and murdering in cold blood the medical
+men while they were doing their Samaritan work. There can be no baser
+abuse than the suppression of these crimes with the view of letting the
+Germans appear to be criminals, only for having justly punished these
+assassins for their wicked deeds.
+
+_It is not true_ that our troops treated Louvain brutally. Furious
+inhabitants having treacherously fallen upon them in their quarters, our
+troops with aching hearts were obliged to fire a part of the town as a
+punishment. The greatest part of Louvain has been preserved. The famous
+Town Hall stands quite intact; for at great self-sacrifice our soldiers
+saved it from destruction by the flames. Every German would of course
+greatly regret if in the course of this terrible war any works of art
+should already have been destroyed or be destroyed at some future time,
+but inasmuch as in our great love for art we cannot be surpassed by any
+other nation, in the same degree we must decidedly refuse to buy a
+German defeat at the cost of saving a work of art.
+
+_It is not true_ that our warfare pays no respect to international laws.
+It knows no indisciplined cruelty. But in the east the earth is
+saturated with the blood of women and children unmercifully butchered by
+the wild Russian troops, and in the west dumdum bullets mutilate the
+breasts of our soldiers. Those who have allied themselves with Russians
+and Servians, and present such a shameful scene to the world as that of
+inciting Mongolians and negroes against the white race, have no right
+whatever to call themselves upholders of civilization.
+
+_It is not true_ that the combat against our so-called militarism is not
+a combat against our civilization, as our enemies hypocritically pretend
+it is. Were it not for German militarism German civilization would long
+since have been extirpated. For its protection it arose in a land which
+for centuries had been plagued by bands of robbers as no other land had
+been. The German Army and the German people are one and today this
+consciousness fraternizes 70,000,000 of Germans, all ranks, positions,
+and parties being one.
+
+We cannot wrest the poisonous weapon--the lie--out of the hands of our
+enemies. All we can do is to proclaim to all the world that our enemies
+are giving false witness against us. You, who know us, who with us have
+protected the most holy possessions of man, we call to you:
+
+Have faith in us! Believe that we shall carry on this war to the end as
+a civilized nation, to whom the legacy of a Goethe, a Beethoven, and a
+Kant is just as sacred as its own hearths and homes.
+
+For this we pledge you our names and our honor:
+
+ADOLF VON BAEYER, Professor of Chemistry, Munich.
+
+Prof. PETER BEHRENS, Berlin.
+
+EMIL VON BEHRING, Professor of Medicine, Marburg.
+
+WILHELM VON BODE, General Director of the Royal Museums, Berlin.
+
+ALOIS BRANDL, Professor, President of the Shakespeare Society, Berlin.
+
+LUJU BRENTANO, Professor of National Economy, Munich.
+
+Prof. JUSTUS BRINKMANN, Museum Director, Hamburg.
+
+JOHANNES CONRAD, Professor of National Economy, Halle.
+
+FRANZ VON DEFREGGER, Munich.
+
+RICHARD DEHMEL, Hamburg.
+
+ADOLF DEITZMANN, Professor of Theology, Berlin.
+
+Prof. WILHELM DOERPFELD, Berlin.
+
+FRIEDRICH VON DUHN, Professor of Archaeology, Heidelberg.
+
+Prof. PAUL EHRLICH, Frankfort on the Main.
+
+ALBERT EHRHARD, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Strassburg.
+
+KARL ENGLER, Professor of Chemistry, Karlsruhe.
+
+GERHARD ESSER, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Bonn.
+
+RUDOLF EUCKEN, Professor of Philosophy, Jena.
+
+HERBERT EULENBERG, Kaiserswerth.
+
+HEINRICH FINKE, Professor of History, Freiburg.
+
+EMIL FISCHER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM FOERSTER, Professor of Astronomy, Berlin.
+
+LUDWIG FULDA, Berlin.
+
+EDUARD VON GEBHARDT, Dusseldorf.
+
+J.J. DE GROOT, Professor of Ethnography, Berlin.
+
+FRITZ HABER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.
+
+ERNST HAECKEL, Professor of Zoology, Jena.
+
+MAX HALBE, Munich.
+
+Prof. ADOLF VON HARNACK, General Director of the Royal Library, Berlin.
+
+GERHART HAUPTMANN, Agnetendorf.
+
+KARL, HAUPTMANN, Schreiberhau.
+
+GUSTAV HELLMANN, Professor of Meteorology, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM HERRMANN, Professor of Protestant Theology, Marburg.
+
+ANDREAS HEUSLER, Professor of Northern Philology, Berlin.
+
+ADOLF VON HILDEBRAND, Munich.
+
+LUDWIG HOFFMANN, City Architect. Berlin.
+
+ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK, Berlin.
+
+LEOPOLD GRAF KALCKREUTH, President of the German Confederation of
+Artists, Eddelsen.
+
+ARTHUR KAMPF, Berlin.
+
+FRITZ AUG. VON KAULBACH, Munich.
+
+THEODOR KIPP, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.
+
+FELIX KLEIN, Professor of Mathematics, Goettingen.
+
+MAX KLINGER, Leipsic.
+
+ALOIS KNOEPFLER, Professor of History of Art, Munich.
+
+ANTON KOCH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Münster.
+
+PAUL LABAND, Professor of Jurisprudence, Strassburg.
+
+KARL LEMPRECHT, Professor of History, Leipsic.
+
+PHILIPP LENARD, Professor of Physics, Heidelberg.
+
+MAX LENZ, Professor of History, Hamburg.
+
+MAX LIEBERMANN, Berlin.
+
+FRANZ VON LISZT, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.
+
+LUDWIG MANZEL, President of the Academy of Arts, Berlin.
+
+JOSEF MAUSBACH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Münster.
+
+GEORG VON MAYR, Professor of Political Sciences, Munich.
+
+SEBASTIAN MERKLE, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Wurzburg.
+
+EDUARD MEYER, Professor of History, Berlin.
+
+HEINRICH MORF, Professor of Roman Philology, Berlin.
+
+FRIEDRICH NAUMANN, Berlin.
+
+ALBERT NEISSER, Professor of Medicine, Breslau.
+
+WALTER NERNST, Professor of Physics, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM OSTWALD, Professor of Chemistry, Leipsic.
+
+BRUNO PAUL, Director of School for Applied Arts, Berlin.
+
+MAX PLANCK, Professor of Physics, Berlin.
+
+ALBERT PLEHN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.
+
+GEORG REICKE, Berlin.
+
+Prof. MAX REINHARDT, Director of the German Theatre, Berlin.
+
+ALOIS RIEHL, Professor of Philosophy, Berlin.
+
+KARL ROBERT, Professor of Archaeology, Halle.
+
+WILHELM ROENTGEN, Professor of Physics, Munich.
+
+MAX RUBNER, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.
+
+FRITZ SCHAPER, Berlin.
+
+ADOLF VON SCHLATTER, Professor of Protestant Theology, Tubingen.
+
+AUGUST SCHMIDLIN, Professor of Sacred History, Münster.
+
+GUSTAV VON SCHMOLLER, Professor of National Economy, Berlin.
+
+FRANZ VON STUCK, Munich.
+
+REINHOLD SEEBERG, Professor of Protestant Theology, Berlin.
+
+MARTIN SPAHN, Professor of History, Strassburg.
+
+HERMANN SUDERMANN, Berlin.
+
+HANS THOMA, Karlsruhe.
+
+WILHELM TRUEBNER, Karlsruhe.
+
+KARL VOLLMOELLER, Stuttgart.
+
+RICHARD VOTZ, Berchtesgaden.
+
+KARL VOTZLER, Professor of Roman Philology, Munich.
+
+SIEGFRIED WAGNER, Baireuth.
+
+WILHELM WALDEYER, Professor of Anatomy, Berlin.
+
+AUGUST VON WASSERMANN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.
+
+FELIX VON WEINGARTNER.
+
+THEODOR WIEGAND, Museum Director, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM WIEN, Professor of Physics, Wurzburg.
+
+ULRICH VON WILAMOWITZ-MOELLEN-DORFF, Professor of Philology, Berlin.
+
+RICHARD WILLSTAETTER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM WINDELBAND, Professor of Philosophy, Heidelberg.
+
+WILHELM WUNDT, Professor of Philosophy, Leipsic,
+
+
+
+
+*Appeal of the German Universities*
+
+
+The campaign of systematic lies and slander which has been carried on
+against the German people and empire for years has since the outbreak of
+the war surpassed everything with which one might have credited even the
+most unscrupulous press. To repudiate any charges raised against our
+Kaiser and his Government rests with the authorities in question. They
+have done so, and their defense is substantiated by striking proofs. He
+who wants to know the truth can learn it, and we trust that truth will
+prevail. But if we are to look on, when our enemies, guided by envy and
+malice, are shameless enough to charge our army and with it our whole
+nation with barbarous atrocities and senseless vandalism, and when their
+statements appear to be believed, to a certain extent, among neutrals
+and in places which, at other times, were well disposed toward us; if we
+are quietly to look on when all this happens, we, the appointed trustees
+of culture and education in our Fatherland, feel in duty bound to break
+the reserve which our calling and position impose on us with a strong
+expression of protest. Hence we now appeal to the learned bodies with
+whom we hitherto worked in common in the interests of the highest ideals
+of the human race and with whom, even at this time, when hatred and
+passion rule the world and confuse the minds of men, we hope to remain
+of the same mind, in the same service of truth. We appeal to them in the
+confident belief that our voice will find hearing, and that the
+expression of our honest indignation will meet with credence. Moreover,
+we appeal to the love of truth and to the sense of justice of the many
+thousands all over the world who, being welcome guests in our
+educational institutions, have taken part in the inheritance of German
+culture, and who thus have had an opportunity of watching and
+appreciating the German people in peaceful labor, their industry and
+uprightness, their sense of order and discipline, their reverence for
+intellectual work of every kind, and their profound love for sciences
+and arts. All of you who know that our army is no mercenary host but
+embraces the entire nation from first to last, that it is led by the
+country's best sons, and that, at this very hour, thousands from our
+midst, teachers as well as students, are shedding their life's blood as
+officers and soldiers on the battlefields of Russia and France; you who
+have seen and heard for yourselves in what spirit and with what success
+our youths are treated and taught, and that nothing is stamped upon
+their minds more deeply than reverence and admiration for artistic,
+scientific and technical creations of the human mind, no matter what
+country and nation brought them forth; we call upon you who know all
+this as witnesses, whether it can be true what our enemies report that
+the German Army is a horde of barbarians and a band of incendiaries who
+take pleasure in leveling defenseless cities to the ground and in
+destroying venerable monuments of history and art. If you wish to pay
+honor to the cause of truth you will be as firmly convinced as we are
+that German troops, wherever they had to do destructive work, could only
+have done so in the bitterness of defensive warfare. But we appeal to
+all those whom the slanderous reports of our enemies reach and who are
+not yet altogether blinded by passion, in the name of truth and justice,
+to shut their ears to such insults to the German people, and not allow
+themselves to be prejudiced by those who prove ever anew that they hope
+to be victorious by the instrumentality of lies. Now, if in this fearful
+war, in which our nation is compelled to fight not only for its power,
+but for its very existence and its entire civilization, the work of
+destruction should be greater than in former wars, and if many a
+precious achievement of culture falls to ruin, the responsibility for
+all this entirely rests with those who were not content with letting
+loose this ruthless war, nay, who did not even shrink from pressing
+murderous weapons upon a peaceful population for them to fall
+surreptitiously upon our troops who trusted in the observance of the
+military usages of all civilized peoples. They alone are the guilty
+authors of everything which happens here. Upon their heads the verdict
+of history will fall for the lasting injury which culture suffers.
+
+September, 1914.
+
+
+UNIVERSITIES.
+
+Tuebingen, Berlin, Bonn, Breslau, Erlangen, Frankfurt, Freiburg,
+Giessen, Goettingen, Greifswald, Halle, Heidelberg, Jena, Kiel,
+Königsberg, Leipzig, Marburg, Muenchen, Münster, Rostock, Strassburg,
+Wuerzburg.
+
+
+
+
+*Reply to the German Professors*
+
+*By British Scholars.*
+
+
+We see with regret the names of many German professors and men of
+science, whom we regard with respect and, in some cases, with personal
+friendship, appended to a denunciation of Great Britain so utterly
+baseless that we can hardly believe that it expresses their spontaneous
+or considered opinion. We do not question for a moment their personal
+sincerity when they express their horror of war and their zeal for "the
+achievements of culture." Yet we are bound to point out that a very
+different view of war, and of national aggrandizement based on the
+threat of war, has been advocated by such influential writers as
+Nietzsche, von Treitschke, von Bülow, and von Bernhardi, and has
+received widespread support from the press and from public opinion in
+Germany. This has not occurred, and in our judgment would scarcely be
+possible, in any other civilized country. We must also remark that it is
+German armies alone which have, at the present time, deliberately
+destroyed or bombarded such monuments of human culture as the Library at
+Louvain and the Cathedrals at Rheims and Malines.
+
+
+*The Diplomatic Papers.*
+
+No doubt it is hard for human beings to weigh justly their country's
+quarrels; perhaps particularly hard for Germans, who have been reared in
+an atmosphere of devotion to their Kaiser and his army; who are feeling
+acutely at the present hour, and who live under a Government which, we
+believe, does not allow them to know the truth. Yet it is the duty of
+learned men to make sure of their facts. The German "White Book"
+contains only some scanty and carefully explained selections from the
+diplomatic correspondence which preceded this war. And we venture to
+hope that our German colleagues will sooner or later do their best to
+get access to the full correspondence, and will form therefrom an
+independent judgment.
+
+They will then see that, from the issue of the Austrian note to Servia
+onward, Great Britain, whom they accuse of causing this war, strove
+incessantly for peace, Her successive proposals were supported by
+France, Russia, and Italy, but, unfortunately, not by the one power
+which could by a single word at Vienna have made peace certain. Germany,
+in her own official defense--incomplete as that document is--does not
+pretend that she strove for peace; she only strove for "the localization
+of the conflict." She claimed that Austria should be left free to
+"chastise" Servia in whatever way she chose. At most she proposed that
+Austria should not annex a portion of Servian territory--a futile
+provision, since the execution of Austria's demand would have made the
+whole of Servia subject to her will.
+
+Great Britain, like the rest of Europe, recognized that, whatever just
+grounds of complaint Austria may have had, the unprecedented terms of
+her note to Servia constituted a challenge to Russia and a provocation
+to war. The Austrian Emperor in his proclamation admitted that war was
+likely to ensue. The German "White Book" states in so many words: "We
+were perfectly aware that a possible warlike attitude of Austria-Hungary
+against Servia might bring Russia upon the field and therefore involve
+us in war. * * * We could not, however, * * * advise our ally to take a
+yielding attitude not compatible with his dignity." The German
+Government admits having known the tenor of the Austrian note
+beforehand, when it was concealed from all the other powers; admits
+backing it up after it was issued; admits that it knew the note was
+likely to precipitate war; and admits that, whatever professions it made
+to the other powers, in private it did not advise Austria to abate one
+jot of her demands. This, to our minds, is tantamount to admitting that
+Germany has, together with her unfortunate ally, deliberately provoked
+the present war.
+
+One point we freely admit. Germany would very likely have preferred not
+to fight Great Britain at this moment. She would have preferred to
+weaken and humiliate Russia; to make Servia a dependent of Austria; to
+render France innocuous and Belgium subservient; and then, having
+established an overwhelming advantage, to settle accounts with Great
+Britain. Her grievance against us is that we did not allow her to do
+this.
+
+
+*Britain's Love of Peace.*
+
+So deeply rooted is Great Britain's love of peace, so influential among
+us are those who have labored through many difficult years to promote
+good feeling between this country and Germany, that, in spite of our
+ties of friendship with France, in spite of the manifest danger
+threatening ourselves, there was still, up to the last moment, a strong
+desire to preserve British neutrality, if it could be preserved without
+dishonor. But Germany herself made this impossible.
+
+Great Britain, together with France, Russia, Prussia, and Austria, had
+solemnly guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium. In the preservation of
+this neutrality our deepest sentiments and our most vital interests are
+alike involved. Its violation would not only shatter the independence of
+Belgium itself: it would undermine the whole basis which renders
+possible the neutrality of any State and the very existence of such
+States as are much weaker than their neighbors. We acted in 1914 just as
+we acted in 1870. We sought from both France and Germany assurances that
+they would respect Belgian neutrality. In 1870 both powers assured us of
+their good intentions, and both kept their promises. In 1914 France gave
+immediately, on July 31, the required assurance; Germany refused to
+answer. When, after this sinister silence, Germany proceeded to break
+under our eyes the treaty which we and she had both signed, evidently
+expecting Great Britain to be her timid accomplice, then even to the
+most peace-loving Englishman hesitation became impossible. Belgium had
+appealed to Great Britain to keep her word, and she kept it.
+
+The German professors appear to think that Germany has in this matter
+some considerable body of sympathizers in the universities of Great
+Britain. They are gravely mistaken. Never within our lifetime has this
+country been so united on any great political issue. We ourselves have a
+real and deep admiration for German scholarship and science. We have
+many ties with Germany, ties of comradeship, of respect, and of
+affection. We grieve profoundly that, under the baleful influence of a
+military system and its lawless dreams of conquest, she whom we once
+honored now stands revealed as the common enemy of Europe and of all
+peoples which respect the law of nations. We must carry on the war on
+which we have entered. For us, as for Belgium, it is a war of defense,
+waged for liberty and peace.
+
+
+Sir CLIFFORD ALLBUTT, Regius Professor of Physics, Cambridge.
+
+T.W. ALLEN, Reader in Greek, Oxford.
+
+E. ARMSTRONG, Pro-Provost of Queen's College, Oxford.
+
+E.V. ARNOLD, Professor of Latin, University College of North Wales.
+
+Sir C.B. BALL, Regius Professor of Surgery, Dublin.
+
+Sir THOMAS BARLOW, President of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
+
+BERNARD BOSANQUET, formerly Professor of Moral Philosophy, St. Andrews.
+
+A.C. BRADLEY, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.
+
+W.H. BRAGG, Cavendish Professor of Physics, Leeds.
+
+Sir THOMAS BROCK, Membre d'honneur de la Société des Artistes Francais.
+
+A.J. BROWN, Professor of Biology and Chemistry of Fermentation,
+University of Birmingham.
+
+JOHN BURNET, Professor of Greek, St. Andrews.
+
+J.B. BURY, Regius Professor of Modern History, Cambridge.
+
+Sir W.W. CHEYNE, Professor of Clinical Surgery, King's College, London,
+President of the Royal College of Surgeons.
+
+J. NORMAN COLLIE, Professor of Organic Chemistry and Director of the
+Chemical Laboratories, University College, London.
+
+F.C. CONYBEARE, Honorary Fellow of University College, Oxford.
+
+Sir HENRY CRAIK, M.P. for Glasgow and Aberdeen Universities.
+
+Sir JAMES CRICHTON-BROWNE, Vice President and Treasurer, Royal
+Institution.
+
+Sir WILLIAM CROOKES, President of the Royal Society.
+
+Sir FOSTER CUNLIFFE, Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
+
+Sir FRANCIS DARWIN, late Reader in Botany, Cambridge.
+
+A.V. DICEY, Fellow of All Souls College and formerly Vinerian Professor
+of English Law, Oxford.
+
+Sir S. DILL, Hon. Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
+
+Sir JAMES DONALDSON, Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of
+St. Andrews.
+
+F.W. DYSON, Astronomer Royal.
+
+Sir EDWARD ELGAR.
+
+Sir ARTHUR EVANS, Extraordinary Professor of Prehistoric Archæology,
+Oxford.
+
+L.R. FARNELL, Rector of Exeter College, Oxford.
+
+C.H. FIRTH, Regius Professor of Modern History, Oxford.
+
+H.A.L. FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University.
+
+J.A. FLEMING, Professor of Electrical Engineering in the University of
+London.
+
+H.S. FOXWELL, Professor of Political Economy in the University of
+London.
+
+Sir EDWARD FRY, Ambassador Extraordinary and First British
+Plenipotentiary to The Hague Peace Conference in 1907.
+
+Sir ARCHIBALD GEIKIE, Past President of the Royal Society.
+
+W.M. GELDART, Fellow of All Souls and Vinerian Professor of English Law,
+Oxford.
+
+Sir RICKMAN GODLEE, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Surgery, University
+College, London.
+
+B.P. GRENFELL, late Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.
+
+E.H. GRIFFITHS, Principal of the University College of South Wales and
+Monmouthshire.
+
+W.H. HADOW, Principal of Armstrong College, Newcastle.
+
+J.S. HALDANE, late Reader in Physiology, Oxford.
+
+MARCUS HARTOG, Professor of Zoology in University College, Cork.
+
+F.J. HAVERFIELD, Camden Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.
+
+W.A. HERDMAN, Professor of Zoology at Liverpool, General Secretary of
+the British Association.
+
+Sir W.P. HERRINGHAM, Vice Chancellor of the University of London.
+
+E.W. HOBSON, Sadleirian Professor of Pure Mathematics, Cambridge.
+
+D.G. HOGARTH, Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
+
+Sir ALFRED HOPKINSON, late Vice Chancellor of Manchester University.
+
+A.S. HUNT, Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.
+
+HENRY JACKSON, Regius Professor of Greek, Cambridge.
+
+Sir THOMAS G. JACKSON, R.A.
+
+F.B. JEVONS, Professor of Philosophy, Durham.
+
+H.H. JOACHIM, Fellow of Merton College, Oxford.
+
+J. JOLLY, Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Dublin.
+
+COURTNEY KENNY, Downing Professor of the Laws of England, Cambridge.
+
+Sir F.G. KENYON, Director and Principal Librarian, British Museum.
+
+HORACE LAMB, Professor of Mathematics, Manchester University.
+
+J.N. LANGLEY, Professor of Physiology, Cambridge.
+
+WALTER LEAF, Fellow of London University, President of the Hellenic
+Society.
+
+Sir SIDNEY LEE, Editor of the Dictionary of National Biography,
+Professor of the English Language and Literature in the University of
+London.
+
+Sir OLIVER LODGE, Principal of Birmingham University.
+
+Sir DONALD MACALISTER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Glasgow.
+
+R.W. MACAN, Master of University College, Oxford.
+
+Sir WILLIAM MACEWEN, Professor of Surgery, Glasgow.
+
+J.W. MACKAIL, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.
+
+Sir PATRICK MANSON.
+
+R.R. MARETT, Reader in Social Anthropology, Oxford.
+
+D.S. MARGOLIOUTH, Laudian Professor of Arabic, Oxford.
+
+Sir H.A. MIERS, Principal of the University of London.
+
+FREDERICK W. MOTT, Fullerian Professor of Physiology, Royal Institution.
+
+LORD MOULTON OF BANK, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary.
+
+J.E.H. MURPHY, Professor of Irish, Dublin.
+
+GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek, Oxford.
+
+J.L. MYRES, Wykeham Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.
+
+G.H.F. NUTTALL, Quick Professor of Biology, Cambridge.
+
+Sir W. OSLER, Regius Professor of Medicine, Oxford.
+
+Sir ISAMBARD OWEN, Vice Chancellor of the University of Bristol.
+
+Sir WALTER PARRATT, Professor of Music, Oxford.
+
+Sir HUBERT PARRY, Director of Royal College of Music.
+
+W.H. PERKIN, Waynflete Professor of Chemistry, Oxford.
+
+W.M. FLINDERS PETRIE EDWARDS, Professor of Egyptology, University
+College, London.
+
+A.F. POLLARD, Professor of English History, London.
+
+Sir F. POLLOCK, formerly Corpus Professor of Jurisprudence, Oxford.
+
+EDWARD B. POULTON, Hope Professor of Zoology, Oxford.
+
+Sir E.J. POYNTER, President of the Royal Academy of Arts.
+
+Sir A. QUILLER-COUCH, King Edward VII. Professor of English Literature,
+Cambridge.
+
+Sir WALTER RALEIGH, Professor of English Literature, Oxford.
+
+Sir W. RAMSAY, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, London.
+
+Lord RAYLEIGH, Past President Royal Society, Nobel Laureate, Chancellor
+of Cambridge University.
+
+Lord REAY, First President British Academy.
+
+JAMES REID, Professor of Ancient History, Cambridge.
+
+WILLIAM RIDGEWAY, Disney Professor of Archaeology, Cambridge.
+
+T.F. ROBERTS, Principal of the University College of Wales, Aberystwith.
+
+J. HOLLAND ROSE, Reader in Modern History, Cambridge.
+
+Sir RONALD ROSS, formerly Professor of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool,
+Nobel Laureate.
+
+M.E. SADLER, Vice Chancellor of Leeds.
+
+W. SANDAY, Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity, Oxford.
+
+Sir J.E. SANDYS, Public Orator, Cambridge.
+
+Sir ERNEST SATOW, Second British Delegate to The Hague Peace Conference
+in 1907.
+
+A.H. SAYCE, Professor of Assyriology, Oxford.
+
+ARTHUR SCHUSTER, late Professor of Physics, Manchester.
+
+D.H. SCOTT, Foreign Secretary, Royal Society.
+
+C.S. SHERRINGTON, Waynflete Professor of Physiology, Oxford.
+
+GEORGE ADAM SMITH, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Aberdeen.
+
+G.C. MOORE SMITH, Professor of English Language and Literature,
+Sheffield.
+
+E.A. SONNENSCHEIN, Professor of Latin and Greek, Birmingham.
+
+W.R. SORLEY, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Cambridge.
+
+Sir C.V. STANFORD, Profesor of Music, Cambridge.
+
+V.H. STANTON, Ely Professor of Divinity, Cambridge.
+
+J. ARTHUR THOMSON, Regius Professor of Natural History, Aberdeen.
+
+Sir J.J. THOMSON, Professor of Experimental Physics, Cambridge.
+
+T.F. TOUT, Professor of Mediæval and Modern History, Manchester.
+
+Sir W. TURNER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Edinburgh.
+
+Sir C. WALDSTEIN, late Reader in Classical Archæology and Slade
+Professor of Fine Art, Cambridge.
+
+Sir J. WOLFE-BARRY.
+
+Sir ALMROTH WRIGHT, formerly Professor of Pathology, Netley.
+
+C.T. HAGBERG WRIGHT, Librarian, London Library.
+
+JOSEPH WRIGHT, Professor of Comparative Philology, Oxford.
+
+*Concerning the German Professors*
+
+*By Frederic Harrison.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of the London Morning Post_:
+
+Sir: I was not invited to join the reply of our distinguished scholars
+and professors, perhaps because it is so many years since I was the
+colleague of James Bryce as Professor of Jurisprudence to the Inns of
+Court. And, indeed, I do not care to bandy recriminations with these
+German defenders of the attack on civilization by the whole imperial,
+military, and bureaucratic order. It seems to me waste of time and loss
+of self-respect to notice these pedants.
+
+The whole German press and the entire academic class seem to be banded
+together as an official bureau in order to spread mendacious insults and
+spiteful slanders. Not a word comes from them to excuse or deny the
+defiance of public law and the mockery of public faith by the German
+Emperor, his Ministers, and his armies. These professors seem to exult
+in serving the new Attila--rather let us say the new Caligula, for
+Attila at least was an open soldier and did not skulk under the Red
+Cross behind barbed wire fences.
+
+We have long known that all German academic and scholastic officials are
+the creatures of the Government, as obedient to orders as any Drill
+Sergeant. They seem to have sold their consciences for place. Not a word
+comes from them even of regret for the massacre of civilians on false
+charges, for the wanton murder of children, for the wholesale rape of
+women, the showering of bombs upon sleeping towns in sheer cruelty of
+destruction. The intellectual energies of Kultur seem concentrated on
+distorting the meaning of our dispatches and the speeches of our
+statesmen, and in manufacturing for their people and neutrals venomous
+falsehoods. German Geist today is a huge machine to cram lies upon their
+own people, and to insinuate lies to the world around. Their system of
+war is based upon lying at home and abroad, on treachery and terrorism.
+They think that murdering a few civilians would terrify France into
+surrender, and will drive England to betray the Allies. Their poor
+conscripts are told that we kill and torture prisoners; their monuments
+at home are bedizened with mock laurels; and neutrals are poisoned with
+wild inventions.
+
+For years past their public men, have
+
+[Illustration: ADOLF VON HARNACK.
+
+_See Page_ 198]
+
+[Illustration: THEODORE NIEMEYER.
+
+_See Page_ 206]
+
+been tricking our politicians, journalists, and professors to accept
+them as peaceful leaders of a higher civilization--- while all the while
+their soldiers, diplomats, and spies (the three are really but one
+class) were secretly courting our own royalties and society, studying
+our naval and military defenses, filling our homes with tens of
+thousands of reservists having secret orders to spy, to destroy our
+arsenals and roads, and even planting out bogus industries and laying
+concrete bases for cannon, to bombard the open towns of friendly
+nations. We have been living unsuspectingly with a nation of assassins
+plotting to destroy us. Did these professors of Kultur not know of this
+elaborate conspiracy of Kaisertum, which unites the stealthy treachery
+of a Mohawk or a thug to the miracles of modern science? For years past
+the ideal of Kultur has been to lay down secret mines to destroy their
+peaceful neighbors. Did these professors of the Fatheland not know this?
+Then they are unable to grasp the most obvious facts--the life work of
+their own masters under their own eyes. And, if they did know it, and
+must at least know it now, and yet approve and glory in it, they must be
+beneath contempt. Why argue with such hypocrites?
+
+Not a few of us have known and watched this conspiracy for years. I have
+preached this ever since the advent of Bismarckism and the new Europe
+that was formed forty years ago. Not a few of us have foretold not only
+the tremendous attack on the British Empire designed by German sea power
+but the precise steps of the war upon France, through Belgium, and to be
+executed by an overwhelming force of sudden shock in the midst of peace.
+For my part, nothing in this war since July 30 has at all surprised me,
+unless it be the foul cruelty with which Belgian civilians have been
+treated. Indeed, in January, 1913, I wrote a warning which reads now
+like a summary of events that have since happened. I was denounced as a
+senile alarmist by some who are now the loudest in calling to arms.
+Alas! too late is their repentance.
+
+May I ask why our eminent academicians and scholars who still profess
+"friendship and admiration" for their German confrères never even
+suspected the huge conspiracy of which civilization has been the victim?
+Why did they accept the stars and crosses of Caligula-Attila? Why
+hob-nob with the docile creatures of his chancery, and spread at home
+and abroad the worship of Geist and Kultur? Are they fit to instruct us
+about politics, public law, and international relations, when they were
+so egregiously mistaken, so blind, so befooled, with regard to the most
+portentous catastrophe in the memory of living men? I am glad that they
+see their blindness now--but why this sentimental friendliness for those
+who hoodwinked them?
+
+Surely this should open their eyes to the mountains of pretentious
+clouds on which the claims of Kultur rest. I am myself a student of
+German learning, and quite aware of the enormous industry, subtlety, and
+ingenuity of German scholarship. We owe deep gratitude to the older race
+of the Savignys, Rankes, Mommsens. Since 1851 I have been five times in
+Germany on different occasions down to 1900. I read and speak the
+language, and twice I lived in Germany for months together, even in the
+house of a distinguished man of science. I study their theology, their
+sociology, economics, history, and their classics. I am quite aware of
+the supremacy of German scholars in ancient literature, in many branches
+of science, in the record of the past in art, manners, and civilization.
+But to have edited a Greek play or to have discovered a new explosive, a
+new comet, another microbe, does not qualify a savant to dogmatize on
+international morals and the hegemony of the world. Sixty years ago in
+Leipzig the editor of a famous journal undertook to prove to me that
+Shakespeare was a German. Our poet, he said, was the grandest output of
+the Teutonic mind; nine-tenths of the Teutonic mind was German-argal,
+Shakespeare was a German, Q.E.D.
+
+With the vast accumulation of solid knowledge of provable facts there is
+too often in the German mind a sudden bounding up into a cloudland of
+crude and unproved guesswork. In the logic of Kultur there seems to be a
+huge gap in the reasoning of the middle terms. A savant unearths a
+manuscript in Syria, which he deciphers with marvelous industry,
+learning, and ingenuity. Straightway he cries, "Eureka, behold the
+original Gospel--the true Gospel!" and he proceeds to turn Christianity
+upside down. He may have experimented on cultures of microbes for a
+generation; and then he calls on earth and heaven to acknowledge the
+mystery of the self-creation of the universe. We hear much of Treitschke
+today--no doubt a man of genius with a gift for research--but what
+ferocious pyrotechnics were poured forth by this apostle of mendacious
+swagger. And as to Nietzsche, he was anticipated by Shakespeare in
+Timon--a diseased cynic--
+
+ henceforth hated be
+ Of Timon, man and all humanity.
+
+They seem to think that to have put the critics right about a few lines
+in Sophocles, or to have discovered a new chemical dye, dispenses the
+German Superman from being bound to humanity, truthfulness, and honor.
+Charge them with the mutilation of little girls and the violation of
+nuns in Belgium, and they reply: Yes! but think of Kant and Hegel! It is
+treason to philosophy, they say, that a man who has translated
+Schopenhauer should condemn Germans for burning Malines and making
+captive women a screen for troops in battle. Kultur, it seems, has its
+own "higher law," which its professors expound to the decadent nations
+of Europe.
+
+Let us hold no parley with these arrogant sophists. Let all intellectual
+commerce be suspended until these official professors have unlearned the
+infernal code of "military necessity" and "world policy" which, to the
+indignation of the civilized world, they are ordered by the Vicegerent
+of God at Potsdam to teach to the great Teutonic Super-race. Yours, &c.,
+
+FREDERIC HARRISON.
+
+Bath, Oct. 29.
+
+
+
+
+*The Reply From France*
+
+
+*By M. Yves Guyot and Prof. Bellet.*
+
+ _The following is the text of an open lettert addressed by M. Yves
+ Guyot, Editor-in-Chief of the Journal des Economistes, and M.
+ Bellet, Professor at the Schools of Political Science and
+ Commercial Studies, to Prof. Brentano of the University of Munich,
+ the communication being a reply to the recent German Appeal to
+ Civilized Nations on the subject of the war_:
+
+
+PARIS, Oct. 15, 1914.
+
+_To Prof. Brentano of the University of Munich_:
+
+Very Learned Professor and Colleague: On reading the Appeal to Civilized
+Nations, (among which France is evidently not included,) which has just
+been sent forth by ninety-three persons declaring themselves to be
+representatives of German science and art, we were not surprised to find
+Prof. Schmoller's signature. He had already shown his hatred for France
+by refusing to assist at the gatherings organized, a little more than
+two years ago, to celebrate the seventieth anniversary of the Paris
+Society of Political Economy, (gatherings at which we were happy to
+enjoy your presence and that of your colleague, Mr. Lotz.) In his
+Rector's speech at the Berlin University, in 1897, he declared that
+German science had no other object than to celebrate the imperial
+messages of 1880 and 1890; and he pointed out that every disciple of
+Adam Smith who was not willing to make it a servant of that policy
+"should resign his seat." But we felt painful surprise when, at the foot
+of the said factum, we found your name side by side with his.
+
+You and the other representatives of German science and art accuse
+France, Great Britain, Belgium, and Russia of falsehood. Would you have
+submitted, on the part of one of your pupils, to so grave an imputation,
+so lightly bandied? Admitting you to be in absolute ignorance of the
+documents published since the war declaration, you have certainly been
+acquainted with the ultimatum pronounced by Austria to Servia. It must
+have struck you with surprise; for it stands as a unique diplomatic
+document in all history. Did you not ask yourselves whether the demands
+of Austria did not go beyond all bounds, seeing that they insisted on
+the abdication of an independent State? You learned that, in spite of
+Servia's humble reply, because it contained a reservation, immediately,
+without discussion, the Ambassador of Austria-Hungary left Belgrade, and
+that the following day Austria declared war. You do not ignore the steps
+taken by Great Britain and France, the demand for delay made by Russia,
+and the reply of the German Chancellor "that none should intervene
+between Austria and Servia." He elegantly qualified the attitude thus
+adopted as "localizing the conflict."
+
+Is there a single member among those who signed the document of
+Intellectuals who has been able to believe--have you been able to
+believe, Mr. Brentano, with your quick and perspicacious mind?--that
+this reply from Berlin did not imply war as a fatal consequence; for any
+nation accepting it was certain to be treated in future, by Germany, as
+the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy treated Servia? How, then, knowing the
+initial pretext of the war, are you able to realize that there was no
+other relation between this cause and the effect produced than the will
+of those who made use of it to provoke either a dishonoring humiliation
+for the countries accepting such a situation, or a general
+conflagration? How, then, do you, and the signatories of your appeal,
+dare to state: "It is not true that Germany provoked the war"? You dare
+to speak of proofs taken from authentic documents. Those published by
+Great Britain, Russia, and Belgium are known. All agree; and they give
+clear proof that the Austro-Hungarian ultimatum was pronounced with full
+complicity of the Berlin Chancellery. They prove, moreover, that the
+German Ambassador at Petrograd, fearing a withdrawal on the part of
+Hungary, precipitated events while your Emperor kept himself out of the
+way. Meanwhile, your General Staff had, in underhanded manner, mobilized
+a portion of its troops, by individual call, while in France we waited,
+unable to imagine that the German Government had resolved to engage in
+European war without motives. In the pocketbooks of your reservists have
+been found forms calling them to the army long before the end of July.
+Our friend and colleague, Courcelle-Seneuil, has seen the military book
+of a German living in Switzerland, at Bex, containing this call.
+
+
+*Bismarckian Loyalty.*
+
+Correspondence of official nature has been stopped at the Cape, which
+should have reached in full time officers of the German Navy, warning
+them to prepare for mid-July. Such advance taken by your troops has
+rendered the task the more difficult for ours. We were very simple, for
+we believed in the affirmations of your statesmen. You state that these
+are loyal war methods; so be it. That belongs to the diplomatic rules of
+loyalty bequeathed by Bismarck to his successors. But to attempt to
+carry on this falsehood, you have no longer the excuse of its utility.
+It is clear to all, except, it seems, the representatives of science and
+art in Germany, who are sufficiently devoid of perspicacity to ignore
+it.
+
+They affirm, moreover, that Germany has not violated the neutrality of
+Belgium; she merely contented herself with "taking the first step."
+Beyond the authentic proofs which have been published, we would draw
+your attention to an undeniable fact. Trusting in the treaty which
+guaranteed Belgium neutrality--and at the foot of which figured
+Germany's signature--in the promise made a short while ago to the King
+of the Belgians by your Emperor, we unfortunately left our northern
+frontier unguarded. You must be aware, professor, that the English did
+not move until Belgian soil had been effectively violated. It is true
+that we knew the plan of campaign set forth by Gen. Bernhardi, but we
+naïvely believed that, whatever might be the opinion of a General, the
+Chancellor of the Empire would consider a treaty bearing the imperial
+signature as something more than a mere "bit of paper." Germany has also
+been untrue to her signature by violating the treaty of neutrality of
+Luxembourg. You forgot to state that there also you only "took the first
+step." Your appeal echoes the German papers, which declare that it was
+the Belgians, and particularly the women, who "began against your
+troops." An American paper replied by stating that if it was the Belgian
+women who attacked German soldiers on Belgian soil, what were the
+soldiers doing there? The truth is that your troops, obeying their
+officers, as is proved by papers which have been seized and which you
+would find quoted in the report presented by the Belgian Commission to
+President Wilson, have executed orders which seem inspired by the
+ferocious inscriptions of Assyrian Kings, no doubt exhumed on the Bagdad
+railway line; and you think it quite natural that massacre and arson
+should have been perpetrated at Louvain because the civil population
+fired on your soldiers; but an inquiry made together with the
+representatives of the United States (whom you deign to consider
+sufficiently to ask them to represent your defenses) proved that the
+civil population was unarmed. If you today approve of the burning of the
+Louvain Library, have you until now approved of the destruction of the
+library at Alexandria? It is true there was no Deutsch Kultur there. The
+result of German culture as regards military matters is to place your
+soldiers on a stratum of civilization anterior to that of the Vandals,
+who, when taking Hippone, spared the library.
+
+In Paris, if one of us passing, on Friday, Oct. 9, in the Rue
+d'Edimbourg, to an office of the Societe d'Economie Politique, situated
+at No. 14, had passed near to that address, he might have been murdered
+by a bomb thrown from one of your Taubes on the civil population of a
+town whose bombarding had not been notified. Another Taube caused,
+through the throwing of a bomb, a fire at the Cathedral of Notre Dame.
+You cannot, to excuse such an assault, invoke the pretext put forward to
+excuse the destruction of the Cathedral of Rheims. No observer could
+have caught sight of a German soldier from the top of the towers.
+
+
+*Barbarian Soldiery.*
+
+Your co-signatories and you express indignation because the civilized
+world describes your soldiers as barbarians. Do you therefore consider
+such deeds as those specified to be a high expression of civilization?
+And here is the dilemma: either you are in ignorance of these deeds,
+then you are indeed very careless, or you approve of them, in which case
+you must make the defense of them enter into your works on right and
+ethics. In doing so you would only be following the theories of your
+military authors who have insisted on the necessity of striking terror
+into the hearts of the civil population, in order that it may weigh on
+its Government and its army so strongly that they may be forced to ask
+for peace. But those of your colleagues who profess psychology must, if
+they have approved such a theory, confess today that they made a great
+mistake; for such deeds, far from forcing the people to cowardly action,
+awaken indignation in all hearts and fire the courage of our soldiers.
+Nevertheless, your military authors have not stated that theft was a
+means of assuring victory. And yet the Crown Prince, your Emperor of
+tomorrow, gathered together at the castle of the Count of Baye articles
+in precious metals, belonging to a collection, which he had carefully
+packed up and sent off. Some of your officers' trunks have been found
+stuffed with goods which would constitute the stock of a second-hand
+clothes seller. Do you and your co-signatories include in German science
+and art the science and art of housebreaking? Are the law professors and
+the economists willing to defend such a manner of acquiring property?
+And, if so, what becomes of your penal code?
+
+You and your co-signatories affirm that the present struggle is directed
+against "German culture." If such culture teaches that the rights of men
+include contempt of treaties, contempt of private property, contempt of
+the lives of non-combatants, you cannot be surprised that the other
+nations show no desire to preserve it for your benefit and their
+detriment.
+
+It is not by arms but by arguments and facts that economists like us,
+faithful to the teachings of the physiocrats and of Adam Smith, have
+sought to protect ourselves against it. On the eve of the war, at the
+inauguration of Turgot's Monument, we set forth his ideas of liberty and
+humanity in opposition to the German realpolitik. We hope that the
+present events will cure those among our professors whom it had
+contaminated, and that they will cease to constitute themselves
+accomplices of that, form of Pan-Germanism which they introduced to
+public opinion and to our legislation. The acts of your diplomatists and
+of your Generals, and the approbation given them by you and other
+representatives of German science, are a terrible demonstration, but
+conclusive, of the dangers and vanity of German culture. You are its
+true destroyers.
+
+
+*Militarism and Civilization.*
+
+"Without our miltarism," say you, "our civilization would have been
+annihilated long ago." And you invoke the inheritance of Goethe,
+Beethoven, Kant. But Goethe, born in the free city of Frankfort, lived
+at the Court of Charles Augustus, which was a liberal and artistic
+centre ever threatened by Prussia. But Beethoven was of Flemish origin,
+and lived in Holland until the age of twenty-four, spending the rest of
+his life in Vienna, and he has nothing in common with Prussian
+militarism, so redoubtable for Austria. But Kant, if he was born and
+lived at Könisberg, the true capital of the Prussian Kingdom, welcomed
+the French Revolution, and when he died in 1804 it was not Prussian
+militarism which had recommended his writings to the world.
+
+But the solidarity which you establish between German militarism and
+German culture, of which you and your colleagues claim to be the
+representatives, is a proof of the confusion of German conceptions.
+
+To present Goethe, Beethoven, and Kant to the world you surround them
+with bayonets. In the same manner every tradesman and every merchant
+throughout Germany has got into the habit of saying: "I have four
+million bayonets behind me!" Your Emperor said to some tradesmen who
+complained of bad business: "I must travel!" And he went to
+Constantinople; he went to Tangier, after the speech at Bremen. In every
+one of his words, in each of his gestures, he affirmed the subordination
+of economic civilization to military civilization. He considered that it
+was his duty to open up markets and assert the value of German products
+with cannon and sword. Hence his formidable armaments, his perpetual
+threats which held all nations in a constant state of anxiety.
+
+There is the deep and true cause of the war. And it is due entirely to
+your Emperor and his environment. We readily understand that the greater
+number of "representatives of German science and art" who signed the
+appeal are incapable of fathoming this fact; but this is not your case,
+you who denounced the abuses and consequences of German protectionism,
+and we remember that at the Antwerp Congress you agreed with us in
+recognizing its aggressive nature.
+
+In conclusion, we beg to express the deep consideration which we feel
+for your science, hitherto so unerring.
+
+
+
+
+*To Americans In Germany*
+
+*By Prof. Adolf von Harnack.*
+
+
+Citizens of the United States, ladies and gentlemen: It is my pleasure
+and my privilege to address to you today a few words.
+
+Let me begin with a personal recollection. Ten years ago I was in the
+United States and I came away with some unforgettable memories. What
+impression was the strongest? Not the thundering fall of Niagara, not
+the wonderful entrance into New York Harbor with its skyscrapers, not
+the tremendous World's Fair of St. Louis in all its proud grandeur, not
+the splendid universities of Harvard and Columbia or the Congressional
+Library in Washington--these are all works of technique or of nature and
+cannot arouse our deepest admiration and make the deepest impression.
+What was the deepest impression? It was two-fold: first, the great work
+of the American Nation, and next, American hospitality.
+
+The great work of the American Nation, that is, the nation itself! From
+the smallest beginning the American Nation has in 200 years developed
+itself to a world power of more than 100,000,000 souls, and has not only
+settled but civilized the whole section of the world from the Atlantic
+to the Pacific, from the great lakes to the West Indies. And not only
+civilized: everything which has drifted to it has been welded together
+by this nation with an indescribable power, welded together to the unity
+of a great, noble nation of educated men--such a thing as has never
+before happened in all history. After two or at the most, three
+generations, all are welded together in the American body and the
+American spirit, and this without petty rules, without political
+pressure. In the definite frame of this people every individual
+character fits in without coercion, becomes American and yet retains its
+own quality. The world has never witnessed such a spectacle but it is
+witnessing it continually now. On the one side it hears and sees the
+fact that every alien after a short time announces, "America is now my
+Fatherland!" and on the other hand the old country still continues
+undisturbed the bond between them. Yes, here is at once a national
+strength and freedom which another could not copy from you very easily.
+
+
+*The Spirit of America.*
+
+But, further: Among those who have wandered to your shores are millions
+of Germans--several millions! For more than two years--where shall I
+begin to relate--since the days of Steuben and of Carl Schurz--but how
+can I name names?--they have been all received as brothers, bringing
+their best; and their best was not lost. More I cannot say.
+
+Furthermore, what sort was the spirit which received them? Upon each
+one, without and within, that spirit has imprinted its seal. Concerning
+this spirit I shall speak later, but for the present I will only say, it
+is the spirit of common courage and common freedom! And from this unity
+I saw had developed a tremendous contribution as the work of this
+nation, a contribution to agriculture, to technology, and, as we of the
+German universities have known for several decades, an extraordinary
+contribution to science. And this contribution has been derived from a
+combination such as we in Europe cannot effect, of the good old
+traditional wisdom which has been brought down out of the history of
+Europe and a youthful courage, I might almost say, a childlike spirit.
+These two combined, this circumspection and at the same time this
+courage of youth, which I met everywhere and which has stamped itself
+upon all American work, is what I have admired.
+
+And the second was the American hospitality!
+
+Like a warm breeze, this hospitality surrounded me and my friends.
+Wherever we went we breathed the air of this friendship, indeed, it
+almost took away our powers of will, so thoroughly did it anticipate
+every plan and every need. Like parcels of friendship, we were sent from
+place to place, always the feeling that we had all known each other
+forever. That was an experience for which all of us--for who of us
+Germans who have come over here has not experienced it?--will be
+perpetually thankful. That will never be forgotten.
+
+
+*Friendship for Germany.*
+
+But beautiful and noble as that was, your nation has furnished ours with
+something still more unforgettable. In those horrible days of 1870, when
+a great number of Germans were shut up in unfortunate Paris, the
+American Ambassador assumed the care of them, and what America did at
+that time she is again doing for all of our country--men who, surprised
+in the enemy's country by the war, have been detained there. They are
+intrusted to the special care of the American Ambassador, and we know
+with as much certainty as though it were an actual fact already that
+that care will be the best and the most loyal. That, my friends, is true
+service of friendship, which is not mere convention but such as it is in
+the Catechism: "Give us our daily bread and good friends." They belong
+together.
+
+But to answer the question why you are our good friends we must reflect
+a little for the answer which we might have given a few days ago--"You
+are our good friends as our blood relations"--alas! that answer no
+longer holds. That is over! God grant that in later days we may again be
+able to say it, but by a circumstance which has torn our very
+heartstrings it has been proved that blood is not thicker than water.
+But where then is the deep-lying reason for this friendship? Does it
+rest in the fact that we have so many Germans over there; that they have
+been received so cordially; that they have done so much for the building
+up of America, soul and body, or that we find friends in so many
+Americans on this side of the water? This is an important consideration,
+but it is not the ultimate cause we are seeking.
+
+My friends, when it is a powerful relationship, imbedded in rock as it
+were, which is under consideration, then the matter is more than
+superficial, and that which is at the bottom of this deeper fact,
+history is at this very moment showing us as she writes in characters of
+bronze before our eyes; because we have a common spirit which springs
+from the very depths of our hearts, for that reason are we friends!
+
+And what is that spirit? It is the spirit of the deep religious and
+moral culture which has possessed us through a succession of centuries
+and out of which this powerful American offshoot has sprung. To this
+culture belong three things, or, rather, it rests upon three pillars.
+The first pillar is the recognition of the eternal value of every human
+soul, consequently the recognition of personality and individuality.
+These are respected, nourished, striven for. Second is the recognition
+of the duty at any time to risk this human soul, which is to each one of
+us so dear, for that great ideal--"God, freedom, and the Fatherland."
+The dearer that human soul, that life, is prized by us, Germans and
+Americans, the more surely do we give it up willingly and joyously when
+a high cause demands it. And the third pillar is respect for law and
+therewith the capability for powerful organization in all lines and in
+all manner of communities.
+
+
+*A Different Culture.*
+
+But now before my eyes I see rising up against the culture which rests
+upon these three pillars--personality, duty to sacrifice all for ideals,
+law and organization--another culture, a culture of the horde whose
+Government is patriarchal, a civilization of the mob which is brought
+together and held together by despots, the Byzantine--I must extend it
+further--Mongolian-Muscovite culture.
+
+My friends, this was once a true culture, but it is no longer. This
+culture was not able to bear the light of the eighteenth century, still
+less that of the nineteenth, and now, in this twentieth century, it
+breaks out and threatens us--this unorganized mob, this mob of Asia;
+like the sands of the desert it would sweep down over our harvest
+fields. That we already know; we are already experiencing it. That, too,
+the Americans know, for every one who has stood upon the ground of our
+civilization and who with a keen glance regards the present situation
+knows that the word must be: "Peoples of Europe, save your most hallowed
+possessions!"
+
+
+*"I Cover My Head!"*
+
+This, our culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in large part,
+yes, almost wholly, intrusted to three peoples: to us, to the Americans,
+and--to the English. I will say no more! I cover my head! Two still
+remain, and must stand all the more firmly together where this culture
+is menaced. It is a question of our spiritual existence, and Americans
+will realize that it is also their existence. We have a common culture,
+and a common duty to protect it!
+
+To you, American citizens, we give the holy pledge that we shall offer
+our last drop of blood in the cause of this culture. May I in addition
+say to you, since I have made this pledge, that we shall as a matter of
+course protect those of you here in our land and care for you and do
+everything for you? If we have made the greater pledge, surely we can
+manage these trifles.
+
+But you, my dear fellow-countrymen, we are all thinking with one mind on
+what is now going on about us. It is a very grave but a splendid time.
+Whatever in the last analysis we shall go through, at present there is
+no longer any one of us who any longer regards life in the rôle of a
+blasé or critical spectator, but each one of us stands in the very midst
+of life, and, indeed, in the very midst of a higher life. God has of a
+sudden brought us out of the wretchedness of the day to a high place to
+which we have never before spiritually attained. But always where life
+emerges, a higher life or merely life itself, wherever there is a thirst
+for life, there is it set close around by death, as at every birth when
+something new comes to the light of day, and so if the most precious
+thing is to be gained, then death will stand close by life. But this we
+also know, that when death and life intertwine in this fashion, the fear
+of death vanishes away; in the intertwining, life only appears and full
+of life man goes through death and into death. It brings to my mind an
+old song, the powerful song of victory of our fathers:
+
+ It was a famous battle,
+ Fought 'twixt Life and Death;
+ Life came out the victor,
+ Triumphant over Death;
+ Already it was written
+ How one Death killed the other,
+ So making mock of Death!
+
+Death which is willingly met kills the great death and secures the
+higher life. Death makes us free. Thus spake Luther.
+
+Let me say a few words in closing. Before all of us there stands in time
+of crisis an image under which are the plain words: "He was faithful
+unto death, yea, even to death on the cross." Now the time for great
+faithfulness has come for us, for this obedience for which our neighbors
+in former times have ridiculed us, saying: "See, these are the faithful
+Germans, the men who do all on command and are so obedient!" Now they
+shall see that this great obedience was not mere discipline, but a
+matter of will. It was and still is discipline, but it is also will.
+They shall see that this great obedience is not pettiness and death, but
+power and life.
+
+From the east--I say it once more--the desert sands are sweeping down
+upon us; on the west we are opposed by old enemies and treacherous
+friends. When will the German be able to pray again, confessing:
+
+ God is the Orient,
+ God is the Occident;
+ Northernmost and Southern lands
+ Rest in peace beneath His hands.
+
+We shall hope that God may give us strength to make this true, not only
+for us but for all Europe.
+
+Until then, since we see the very springs of our higher life and our
+existence threatened, we shout: "Father, protect our springs of life and
+save us from the Huns."
+
+
+
+
+*A Reply to Prof. Harnack*
+
+*By Some British Theologians.*
+
+
+Prof. Harnack.
+
+Honored Sir: We, the undersigned, a group of theologians who owe more
+than we can express to you personally and to the great host of German
+teachers and leaders of thought, have noticed with pain a report of a
+speech recently delivered by you, in which you are said to have
+described the conduct of Great Britain in the present war as that of a
+traitor to civilization.
+
+We are quite sure that you could never have been betrayed into such a
+statement if you had been acquainted with the real motives which actuate
+the British Nation in the present crisis.
+
+Permit us, in the interests of a better understanding now and
+subsequently, to state to you the grounds on which we, whose obligations
+to Germany, personal and professional, are simply incalculable, have
+felt it our duty to support the British Government in its declaration of
+war against the land and people we love so well.
+
+We are not actuated by any preference for France over Germany--still
+less by any preference for Russia over Germany. The preference lies
+entirely the other way. Next to the peoples that speak the English
+tongue, there is no people in the world that stands so high in our
+affection and admiration as the people of Germany. Several of us have
+studied in German universities. Many of us have enjoyed warm personal
+friendship with your fellow-countrymen. All of us owe an immeasurable
+debt to German theology, philosophy, and literature. Our sympathies are
+in matters of the spirit so largely German that nothing but the very
+strongest reasons could ever lead us to contemplate the possibility of
+hostile relations between Great Britain and Germany.
+
+Nor have we the remotest sympathy with any desire to isolate Germany, or
+to restrict her legitimate expansion, commercial and colonial. We have
+borne resolute witness against the endeavor made by foes of Germany to
+foment anti-German suspicion and ill-will in the minds of our
+fellow-countrymen.
+
+
+*The Sanctity of Treaties.*
+
+But we recognize that all hopes of settled peace between the nations,
+and indeed of any civilized relations between the nations, rest on the
+maintenance inviolate of the sanctity of treaty obligations. We can
+never hope to put law for war if solemn international compacts can be
+torn up at the will of any power involved. These obligations are felt by
+us to be the more stringently binding in the case of guaranteed
+neutrality. For the steady extension of neutralization appears to us to
+be one of the surest ways of the progressive elimination of war from the
+face of the earth. All these considerations take on a more imperative
+cogency when the treaty rights of a small people are threatened by a
+great world power. We therefore believe that when Germany refused to
+respect the neutrality of Belgium, which she herself had guaranteed,
+Great Britain had no option, either in international law or in Christian
+ethics, but to defend the people of Belgium. The Imperial Chancellor of
+Germany has himself admitted, on Aug. 4, that the protest of the
+Luxembourg and Belgian Governments was "just," and that Germany was
+doing "wrong" and acting "contrary to the dictates of international
+law." His only excuse was "necessity"--which recalls our Milton's
+phrase, "necessity, the tyrant's plea." It has cost us all the deepest
+pain to find the Germany which we love so intensely committing this act
+of lawless aggression on a weak people, and a Christian nation becoming
+a mere army with army ethics. We loathe war of any kind. A war with
+Germany cuts us to the very quick. But we sincerely believe that Great
+Britain in this conflict is fighting for conscience, justice, Europe,
+humanity, and lasting peace.
+
+
+*Dictated Terms.*
+
+This conviction is deepened by the antecedents of the present unhappy
+war. In allowing her ally Austria to dictate terms to Servia which were
+quite incompatible with the independence of that little State, Germany
+gave proof of her disregard for the rights of smaller States. A similar
+disregard for the sovereign rights of greater States was shown in the
+demand that Russia should demobilize her forces. It was quite open to
+Germany to have answered Russia's mobilization with a
+counter-mobilization without resorting to war. Many other nations have
+mobilized to defend their frontiers without declaring war. Alike
+indirectly in regard to Servia and directly in regard to Russia, Germany
+was indisputably the aggressor. And this policy of lawless aggression
+became more nakedly manifest in the invasion of Belgium. Great Britain
+is not bound by any treaty rights to defend either Servia or Russia. But
+she is bound by the most sacred obligations to defend Belgium,
+obligations which France undertook to observe. We have been grieved to
+the heart to see in the successive acts of German policy a disregard of
+the liberties of States, small or great, which is the very negation of
+civilization. It is not our country that has incurred the odium of being
+a traitor to civilization or to the conscience of humanity.
+
+Doubtless you read the facts of the situation quite differently. You may
+think us entirely mistaken. But we desire to assure you, as
+fellow-Christians and fellow-theologians, that our motives are not open
+to the charge which has been made.
+
+We have been moved to approach you on this matter by our deep reverence
+for you and our high appreciation of the great services you have
+rendered to Christendom in general. We trust that you will receive what
+we have said in the spirit in which it was sent.
+
+We have the honor to be,
+
+Yours very sincerely,
+
+
+P.J. FORSYTH, M.A., D.D., Aberdeen University. Principal of Hackney
+College (Divinity School: University of London).
+
+HERBERT T. ANDREWS, B.A. Oxon. Professor of New Testament, Exegesis,
+Introduction and Criticism. New College, London (Divinity School:
+University of London).
+
+J. HERBERT DARLOW, M.A. Cambridge. Literary Superintendent of the
+British and Foreign Bible Society.
+
+JAMES R. GILLIES, M.A. Edinburgh, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church
+of England. Pastor of Hampstead Presbyterian Church, London.
+
+R. MACLEOD, Pastor of Frognal Presbyterian Church, London.
+
+W.M. MACPHAIL, M.A. Glasgow. General Secretary of the Presbyterian
+Church of England.
+
+RICHARD ROBERTS, Pastor of Crouch Hill Presbyterian Church, London.
+
+H.H. SCULLARD, M.A. Cambridge, M.A., D.D. London. Professor of
+Ecclesiastical History, Christian Ethics, and the History of Religions
+in New College (Divinity School: University of London).
+
+ALEX RAMSAY, M.A., B.D. Pastor of the Highgate Presbyterian Church,
+London.
+
+W.B. SELBIE, M.A., D.D. Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford. Chairman
+of the Congregational Union of England and Wales.
+
+J. HERBERT STEAD, M.A. Glasgow. Warden of the Robert Browning
+Settlement, London.
+
+
+
+
+*Prof. Harnack in Rebuttal*
+
+
+BERLIN, Sept. 10, 1914.
+
+Gentlemen: The words, "The conduct of Great Britain is that of a traitor
+to civilization," were not used by me, but you have expressed my general
+judgment of this conduct correctly. The sentence in question in my
+speech reads: "This, our culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in
+large part, yes, almost wholly, intrusted to three peoples: To us, to
+the Americans, and--to the English, I will say no more. I cover my
+head." To my deep sorrow I must, even after your communication, maintain
+this judgment.
+
+You claim that England has drawn and must draw the sword purely for the
+protection of the small nations of Servia and Belgium and for the sake
+of an international treaty. In this claim I see at the very least a
+fearful self-delusion.
+
+It is an actual fact that what Servia desired was that her Government
+should in no wise be mixed up with the shameful crime of Serajevo, and
+it is also an established fact that for years Servia, with the support
+of Russia, has attempted by the most despicable means to incite to
+rebellion the Austrian South Slavs. When Austria finally issued to her a
+decided ultimatum without making any actual attack on her territory, it
+was the duty of every civilized land--England as well--to keep hands
+off, for Austria's royal house, Austria's honor, and Austria's existence
+were attacked. Austria's yielding to Servia would mean the sovereignty
+of Russia in the eastern half of the Balkans, for Servia is nothing more
+than a Russian satrapy, and the Balkan federation brought about by
+Russia had for its ultimate purpose opposition to Austria. This is as
+well known in England as in Germany. If, gentlemen, in spite of this,
+you can presume to judge that in this circumstance it was purely a case
+of protecting the right of a small nation against a large one, I shall
+find great difficulty in believing in your good faith.
+
+
+*Against Pan-Slavism.*
+
+It was not a question of little Servia but of Austria's battle for life
+and the struggle of Western culture against Pan-Slavism. Servia is,
+after all, only an outpost of Russia and as opposed to this nation,
+Servia's "sovereignty" is less than a mere shadow; in fact it can hardly
+be protected by England, for in reality it does not exist. For in
+addition Servia, through the most dastardly murder known to history,
+struck her name from the list of the nations with which one does
+business as equals. What would England have done had the Prince of Wales
+been assassinated by the emissary of a little nation which had
+continually been inciting the Irish to revolt? Would it have issued a
+milder ultimatum than Austria's? But of all this you say not a word in
+your communication, but instead persist on seeing in the situation into
+which Servia and Russia have brought Austria, only the necessity of an
+oppressed little country to whose help haste must be made! Thus to judge
+would be more than blindness, indeed, it would be a crime that cries
+unto heaven, were it not known that the life problems of other great
+powers do not exist for Great Britain, because she is only concerned
+about her own life problems and those of little nations whose support
+can be useful to her.
+
+At bottom Servia is of as little consequence to you as to us. Austria,
+too, is of no consequence to you; and you realize that Austria had the
+right to punish Servia. But because Germany, who stands behind Austria,
+is to be struck; therefore Servia is the guiltless little State which
+must be spared! What is the result? Great Britain sides with Russia
+against Germany. What does that mean? That means that Great Britain has
+torn down the dike which has protected West Europe and its culture from
+the desert sands of the Asiatic barbarism of Russia and of Pan-Slavism.
+Now we Germans are forced to stop up the breach with our bodies. We
+shall do it amid streams of blood, and we shall hold out there. We must
+hold out, for we are protecting the labor of thousands of years for all
+of Europe, and for Great Britain! But that day when Great Britain tore
+down the dam will never be forgotten in the history of the world, and
+history's judgment shall read: On that day when Russian-Asiatic power
+rushed down upon the culture of Europe Great Britain declared that she
+must side with Russia because "the sovereignty of the murderer-nation
+Servia had been violated!"
+
+
+*As to Neutrality.*
+
+But no, the maintenance of Servians sovereignty is not according to your
+communication the first, but only the second reason for Great Britain's
+declaration of war against us. The first reason is our violation of
+Belgian neutrality; "Germany broke a treaty which she herself had
+guaranteed." Shall I remind you how Great Britain has disported herself
+in the matter of treaties and pleasant promises? How about Egypt for
+example? But I do not need to go into these flagrant and repeated
+violations of treaty rights, for a still more serious violation of the
+rights of a people stands today on your books against you; it has been
+proved that your army is making use of dumdum bullets and thereby
+turning a decent war into the most bloody butchery. In this Great
+Britain has severed herself from every right to complain about the
+violation of the rights of a people.
+
+But aside from that--in your communication you have again emphasized the
+main point. We did not declare war against Belgium, but we declared that
+since Russia and France compelled us to wage a war with two fronts
+(190,000,000 against 68,000,000) we had then to suffer defeat if we
+could not march through Belgium; that we should do that but that we
+should carefully keep from harming Belgium in any way and would
+indemnify all damage incurred--our hand upon it! Would Great Britain,
+had she been in our position, have hesitated a moment to do likewise?
+And would Great Britain have drawn the sword for us if France had
+violated the neutrality of Belgium by marching through it? You know well
+enough that both these questions must be answered in the negative.
+
+Our Imperial Chancellor has with his characteristic conscientiousness
+declared that we have on our side committed a certain wrong. I cannot
+agree with him in this judgment, and I cannot even recognize the
+commission of a formal wrong, for we were in a situation where
+formalities no longer obtain, and where moral duties only prevail. When
+David, in the extremity of his need, took the show-bread from the Table
+of the Lord, he was in every sense of the word justified, for the letter
+of the law ceased at that moment to exist. It is as well known to you as
+to me that there is a law of necessity which breaks iron asunder, to say
+nothing of treaties.
+
+Appreciate our position! Prove to me that Germany has flippantly
+constructed a law of necessity; prove it to me in this hour, when your
+country has gone over to our enemies, and we have half the world to
+fight. You cannot do that; you could not do it on the 4th of August, and
+consequently you have assumed the most miserable of pretexts, because
+you wished to destroy us. From your letter, gentlemen, I must believe
+that you are far from holding this view; but do you believe, and would
+you really try to make me believe, that your statesmen would have
+declared war against us only because we were determined to march through
+Belgium? You could not consider them so foolish and so flippant.
+
+
+*An Earlier Treachery.*
+
+But I am not yet at an end. It is not we who have first violated the
+neutrality of Belgium. Belgium, as we feared and as we now, informed by
+the actual facts, see still more clearly, was for a long time in
+alliance with France and--with you. France's airmen were flying over
+Belgium before we marched in; negotiations with France had already taken
+place, and in Maubeuge there was found an arsenal full of English
+munitions which had been stationed there before the declaration of war.
+This arsenal--you know where Maubeuge is situated!--points to agreements
+which Great Britain had made with France, and to which Belgium was also
+party. These agreements are before the whole world today, for the chain
+of evidence is complete and the treacherous plot of Great Britain is
+revealed. She has encouraged and pledged the Belgians against us, and
+therefore it is she who must answer for all the misery which has been
+visited upon that poor country. Had it been our responsibility, not a
+single hair of a Belgian's head should have been harmed. If, then, the
+Belgian wrongs like those of Servia are only the flimsiest pretexts for
+Great Britain's declaration of war against us, there remains,
+unfortunately, no other reason for this declaration of war save the
+intention of your statesmen either to destroy us or so to weaken us that
+Great Britain will rule supreme on the seas and in all distant parts of
+the world. This intention you personally deny and thus far I must take
+your word for it. But do you deny it also for your Government? That you
+cannot do, for the facts have been brought to light; when Great Britain
+determined to join the coalition of Russia with France, which is ruled
+by Russia, when it put aside all the differences that stood between her
+and Russia, when it set upon us not only the hordes of Russia but the
+scrupulous Japanese, "the yellow peril," and called upon all Europe,
+when it also sunk in the ocean its duties to European culture--for all
+of that there is but one explanation: England believes that the hour for
+our destruction has struck. Why does she wish to destroy us? Because she
+will not endure our power, our zeal, our perfection of growth! There is
+no other explanation!
+
+
+*Lifting Humanity.*
+
+We and Great Britain in alliance with America were able in peaceful
+co-operation to lift humanity to a higher plane, and to lead the world
+in peace, allowing to each his rights. We Germans, now know no, and have
+never known any, higher ideal than this. In order to realize this ideal
+the German Kaiser and the German people have made many sacrifices in the
+past 43 years. In proportion to the development of our strength, we
+should be able to lay claim to more territory than we now possess in the
+world. But we have never attempted to force this claim. We held that the
+strength of our nation should be in its zeal and in the peaceful fruits
+of that zeal. Great Britain has begrudged us that; she has been jealous
+of our powers, jealous of our fleet, jealous of our industries and our
+commerce, and jealousy is the root of all evil. Jealousy it is which has
+driven Great Britain into the most fearful war which history knows and
+the end of which is unforseen.
+
+What course is open to you, gentlemen, once you are enlightened as to
+the policy of your country? In the name of our Christian culture, which
+your Government has frivolously placed in jeopardy, I can offer you but
+one counsel: To burden your consciences no longer with Servia and
+Belgium, which you must protect, but to face about and stop your
+Government in its headlong course; it may not be too late. As far as we
+Germans are concerned, our way is clearly indicated, though not so our
+fate. Should we fall, which God and our strong arm prevent, then there
+sinks with us to its grave all the higher culture of our part of the
+world, whose defenders we were called to be; for neither with Russia nor
+against Russia will Great Britain be able longer to maintain that
+culture in Europe. Should we conquer--and victory is for us something
+more than mere hope--then shall we feel ourselves responsible, as
+formerly, for this culture, for the learning and the peace of Europe,
+and shall put from us any idea of setting up a hegemony in Europe. We
+shall stand by the one who, together in fraternal union with us, will
+create and maintain such a peaceful Europe.
+
+For the continuation of your cordial attitude toward me I am personally
+grateful. I would not unnecessarily sever the bond which holds me to the
+upright Christians and the learning of your country, but at the present
+moment this bond has no value for me.
+
+PROF. VON HARNACK.
+
+
+P.S.--It is in your power now to wage a battle which would be of honor
+to you. As a fourth great power arrayed against Germany, the lying
+international press has raised itself up, flooded the world with lies
+about our splendid and upright army, and slandered everything that is
+German. We have been almost entirely cut off from any possibility of
+protecting ourselves against this "beast of the pit." Do not believe the
+lies, and spread abroad the truth about us. We are today no different
+than Carlyle pictured us to you. HARNACK.
+
+
+
+
+*The Causes of the War*
+
+*By Theodore Niemeyer*
+
+ _Theodore Niemeyer, Kaiser Wilhelm Exchange Professor at Columbia
+ University for 1914-15, and well-known Professor of Kiel
+ University, has addressed the following letter to the editor of The
+ New Yorker Staats-Zeitung._
+
+
+KIEL, 14th August, 1914.
+
+_To the Editor of the New Yorker Staats-Zeitung_:
+
+Dear Sir: English papers publish a telegram from Mr. Andrew Carnegie, in
+which the view is expressed that the German Emperor, "in declining to
+take part In the peace conference proposed by Sir Edward Grey, an
+advocate of peace," proved unfaithful to that love of peace which he has
+shown during the past twenty-five years--that he, on the contrary, has
+taken up the rôle of a disturber of the peace of Europe.
+
+To the best of my knowledge, the German press has only referred to this
+telegram with the simple remark that intelligence of the real state of
+affairs has evidently not yet reached the ears of the sender of the
+telegram.
+
+This attitude of the German press is in conformity with its firm
+consciousness of the justice of its cause and its confidence in the
+ultimate triumph of truth. Both in this consciousness and in this
+confidence I will not be surpassed by any one, but to observe silence in
+the face of such accusations is beyond my power. To allow such a
+misconstruction to pass unchallenged through the world seems to me (and
+doubtless to many thousands besides me) unbearable.
+
+The misunderstanding about the Peace Conference is easily put right. Sir
+Edward Grey did not propose any peace conference at all, but a
+conference of the Ambassadors of those four powers which were at that
+time not directly concerned, namely Germany, England, France, and Italy.
+These powers were to attempt to exert their influence on Austria-Hungary
+and Russia in the same way as the Ambassador's Conference (or rather
+Ambassadorial Reunion) in London had done, in 1912 and 1913, on the
+Balkan States and Turkey. What the united six powers at that time
+undertook toward the Balkan States was now to be done by
+four--discordant--powers upon two others who are in a state of highest
+political tension. To this proposal Germany replied that the apparatus
+of an Ambassadorial Conference does not work quickly or effectually
+enough for the emergency of the moment, or to be able to ease the tense
+political situation.
+
+
+*The Kaiser's Efforts.*
+
+In place of this, however, the German Emperor undertook to negotiate in
+person with the Russian and Austrian monarch and was overwhelmed with
+grief when the leaders of Muscovite policy frustrated all his exertions
+by completely ignoring his efforts for peace, (made at the express
+desire of the Czar,) and then in real earnest amassing Russian forces on
+the German frontier, evidently resolved to force on a war under any
+circumstances--even against the will of the Czar.
+
+It is here that the clue to all the terrible events of the present day
+is to be found.
+
+The incessant intriguing of the Russian military party for many years
+past has at last succeeded in drawing first France and then England to
+their cause, by turning the mistrust, the dread of competition, the
+hopes of revenge, and the ever-increasing armaments to their use with
+incomparable skill. The task was facilitated by Germany's industrial
+up-growth, which--in willful misconstruction of the truths of the laws
+of international communities--has been represented as a calamity for
+other States.
+
+
+*England's Growing Friendship.*
+
+In quite recent times people in England began to recognize this
+misconstruction of facts as such. They began to understand that
+friendship with Germany might be a blessing and that in this way peace
+would be possible. This, however, meant the possibility of the Muscovite
+policy being completely frustrated. An Anglo-German understanding seemed
+already to be shaking the very foundations of the Triple Entente. Russia
+had been obliged during the two Balkan wars (the London Ambassadorial
+Conference was in fact the clearing house for this) to make important
+concessions to the detriment of her protégés, Servia and Montenegro, in
+order to retain the friendship of England, which ardently strove for
+peace. Now, however, it was highest time for Russia to pocket her gains;
+for the English people were slowly beginning to realize that in St.
+Petersburg they were trying to engage England in the cause of
+Pan-Slavism. The unnatural alliance was becoming more and more unpopular
+from day to day. How long would it be before Russia lost England's help
+forever?
+
+Before this took place Russia must bring about a European war. The iron,
+which had been prepared with the help of the English military party, had
+to be forged, for never again would there be a moment so favorable for
+the complete destruction of Austria and the humiliation of Germany.
+Servia was thrust to the front. Russia's Ambassador managed that
+wonderfully. The fire was set in so skillful a manner that the
+incendiaries knew in advance there was no possibility of extinguishing
+it. The conflagration must spread and soon blaze in all corners of
+Europe.
+
+What was the use of a Peace Conference in such circumstances? Conscious
+of the irresistible consequences of their action the real rulers of
+Russia sent forward their armies; it was now or never, if the work was
+to be done with the help of England. And without England perhaps even
+France would not consent to join.
+
+Thus it came about, and thus we have seen the peaceful policy of the
+German Emperor, which he has upheld for twenty-five years, completely
+wrecked.
+
+We are now fighting not only for our Fatherland, but also for the
+emancipation of our culture from a menace that has become insupportable.
+
+Yours faithfully,
+
+TH. NIEMEYER,
+
+Kaiser Wilhelm Professor, Columbia University.
+
+
+
+
+*Comment by Dr. Max Walter*
+
+
+To the letter addressed by Prof. Th. Niemeyer to the editor of The New
+Yorker Staats-Zeitung (see No. 237, 3, 2, of Frankfurter Zeitung) I
+should like to add the following remarks: During my activity as
+Professor of the Methodics of Foreign Language Teaching at Teachers
+College, Columbia University, New York, (January-June, 1911,) I was
+introduced to Mr. Andrew Carnegie, with whom I had a long interview. He
+expressed his views upon the peace question and arbitration, and spoke
+for a long time about the German Emperor who had repeatedly received him
+during his visits to Germany. He expressed his great appreciation of the
+important services rendered by our Emperor for the maintenance of peace,
+and declared that he, above all others, deserved the title of the
+Peace-loving Monarch, (Friedensfürst.) To him it was chiefly due that,
+during the various crises which had repeatedly brought Europe to the
+brink of war, the disaster had again and again been averted. The German
+Emperor, he considered, looked upon it as his chief pride that no war
+should take place during his reign, that Germany should develop and
+prosper in peaceful emulation with other countries, and his greatest
+desire was that other nations should recognize ungrudgingly that all
+Germany did to raise the moral and ethical standard of mankind was for
+the benefit of all.
+
+If now Carnegie has really declared, as this letter maintains, that he
+considers the German Emperor the "Disturber of Peace," it shows clearly
+how baleful the influence of the English press has been--that it could
+shake such a firm conviction in our Emperor's love of peace. Let us hope
+that this letter of Prof. Niemeyer's and other explanations to the same
+effect will induce him to recognize the horrible misrepresentations of
+English papers and to return to his former conviction.
+
+It was on this occasion, too, that Andrew Carnegie indorsed Prof.
+Burgess's view, that the three nations--America, Germany, and
+England--should unite, and then they would be able to keep the peace of
+the world. When I expressed my doubts in the real friendship of England,
+he replied, then America and Germany, at least, must hold together to
+secure universal peace. Hitherto I have refrained from publishing this
+interview, but now I consider it my duty to make known the views that
+Carnegie once held, and to which, if he has really changed them, we may
+hope he, who has done so much in his noble striving after peace, will
+return right away.
+
+If there should remain the least doubt in Mr. Andrew Carnegie's mind, he
+has only to read the telegrams exchanged between the Emperor William and
+the Czar on the one hand, and King George and the Emperor on the other.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of New York Times, Current History, Vol
+1, Issue 1, by Various
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+ content="HTML Tidy for Linux/x86 (vers 1st November 2002), see www.w3.org" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Current History, The European War Volume I, by The New York Times
+ Company.</title>
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of New York Times, Current History, Vol 1,
+Issue 1, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: New York Times, Current History, Vol 1, Issue 1
+ From the Beginning to March, 1915 With Index
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 5, 2004 [EBook #13635]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEW YORK TIMES, CURRENT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Miranda van de Heijning and the PG
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src='images/thenewyorktimes.jpg' height='60' alt='The New York Times'
+ title='The New York Times' />
+ </center>
+ <h1>CURRENT HISTORY</h1>
+ <h3>A MONTHLY MAGAZINE</h3>
+ <h2>THE EUROPEAN WAR</h2>
+ <h2>VOLUME I.</h2>
+ <h3>From the Beginning to March, 1915</h3>
+ <h4>With Index</h4>
+ <center>
+ <img src='images/logo.jpg' height='60' alt='The New York Times Logo'
+ title='The New York Times Logo' />
+ </center>
+ <h4>NEW YORK<br />
+ THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY<br />
+ 1915</h4>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <h4>Copyright 1914, 1915,<br />
+ By The New York Times Company</h4>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <table align='center' border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='2'
+ summary='Table of contents'>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h3>NUMBER I.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>WHAT MEN OF LETTERS SAY</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left' width='90%'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='left' width='10%'>Page</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>COMMON SENSE ABOUT THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page11">11</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Bernard Shaw</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SHAW'S NONSENSE ABOUT BELGIUM</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page60">60</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Arnold Bennett</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BENNETT STATES THE GERMAN CASE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page63">63</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Bernard Shaw</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FLAWS IN SHAW'S LOGIC</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page65">65</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Cunninghame Graham</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>EDITORIAL COMMENT ON SHAW</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page66">66</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SHAW EMPTY OF GOOD SENSE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page68">68</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Christabel Pankhurst</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>COMMENT BY READING OF SHAW</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page73">73</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT WILSON</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page76">76</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Bernard Shaw</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A GERMAN LETTER TO G. BERNARD SHAW</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page80">80</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Herbert Eulenberg</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BRITISH AUTHORS DEFEND ENGLAND'S WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page82">82</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>With Facsimile Signatures</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FOURTH OF AUGUST--EUROPE AT WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page87">87</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H. G. Wells</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>IF THE GERMANS RAID ENGLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page89">89</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H. G. Wells</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SIR OLIVER LODGE'S COMMENT</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page92">92</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHAT THE GERMAN CONSCRIPT THINKS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page93">93</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Arnold Bennett</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FELIX ADLER'S COMMENT</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page95">95</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHEN PEACE IS SERIOUSLY DESIRED</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page97">97</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Arnold Bennett</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BARRIE AT BAY: WHICH WAS BROWN?</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page100">100</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>An Interview on the War</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A CREDO FOR KEEPING FAITH</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page102">102</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Galsworthy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HARD BLOWS, NOT HARD WORDS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page103">103</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Jerome K. Jerome</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"AS THEY TESTED OUR FATHERS"</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page106">106</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Rudyard Kipling</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>KIPLING AND "THE TRUCE OF THE BEAR"</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page107">107</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ON THE IMPENDING CRISIS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page107">107</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Norman Angell</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHY ENGLAND CAME TO BE IN IT</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page108">108</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Gilbert K. Chesterton</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SOUTH AFRICA'S BOERS AND BRITONS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page125">125</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H. Rider Haggard</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CAPT. MARK HAGGARD'S DEATH IN BATTLE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page128">128</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H. Rider Haggard</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AN ANTI-CHRISTIAN WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page129">129</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Robert Bridges</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ENGLISH ARTISTS' PROTEST</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page130">130</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO ARMS!</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page132">132</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CONAN DOYLE ON BRITISH MILITARISM</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page140">140</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE NEED OF BEING MERCILESS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page144">144</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Maurice Maeterlinck</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LETTERS TO DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page146">146</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE VITAL ENERGIES OF FRANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page153">153</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Henri Bergson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FRANCE THROUGH ENGLISH EYES</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page153">153</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>With Rene Bazin's Appreciation</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SOLDIER OF 1914</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page156">156</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Rene Doumic</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY'S CIVILIZED BARBARISM</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page160">160</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Emile Boutroux</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE GERMAN RELIGION OF DUTY</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page170">170</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Gabriele Reuter</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A LETTER TO GERHART HAUPTMANN</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page174">174</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Romain Rolland</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A REPLY TO ROLLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page175">175</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Gerhart Hauptmann</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ANOTHER REPLY TO ROLLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page176">176</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Karl Wolfskehl</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ARE WE BARBARIANS?</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page178">178</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Gerhart Hauptmann</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO AMERICANS FROM A GERMAN FRIEND</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page180">180</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Ludwig Fulda</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>APPEAL TO THE CIVILIZED WORLD</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page185">185</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Professors of Germany</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>APPEAL OF THE GERMAN UNIVERSITIES</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page187">187</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>REPLY TO THE GERMAN PROFESSORS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page188">188</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By British Scholars</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CONCERNING THE GERMAN PROFESSORS</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page192">192</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Frederic Harrison</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE REPLY FROM FRANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page194">194</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By M. Yves Guyot and Prof Bellet</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO AMERICANS IN GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page198">198</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Prof. Adolf von Harnack</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A REPLY TO PROF. HARNACK</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page201">201</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Some British Theologians</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PROF. HARNACK IN REBUTTAL</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page203">203</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE CAUSES OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page206">206</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Theodore Niemeyer</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>COMMENT BY DR. MAX WALTER</td>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#page208">208</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER II.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>WHO BEGAN THE WAR AND WHY?</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SPEECHES BY KAISER WILHELM II.</td>
+ <td align='left'>210</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE MIGHTY FATE OF EUROPE</td>
+ <td align='left'>219</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>As Interpreted by Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg, German
+ Imperial Chancellor.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AUSTRIA-HUNGARY'S VERSION OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>226</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Kaiser Frawz Josef and Count Berchtold</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A GERMAN REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>228</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Certified by Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, German ex-Colonial
+ Secretary</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"TRUTH ABOUT GERMANY"</td>
+ <td align='left'>244</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Attested by Thirty-four German Dignitaries</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SPECULATIONS ABOUT PEACE, SEPTEMBER, 1914</td>
+ <td align='left'>273</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Report by James W. Gerard, American Ambassador at Berlin, to
+ President Wilson.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FIRST WARNINGS OF EUROPE'S PERIL</td>
+ <td align='left'>277</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Speeches by British Ministers</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GREAT BRITAIN'S MOBILIZATION</td>
+ <td align='left'>294</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Measures Taken Throughout the Empire Upon the Outbreak of
+ War</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SUMMONS OF THE NATION TO ARMS</td>
+ <td align='left'>308</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>British People Roused by Their Leaders</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TEACHINGS OF GEN. VON BERNHARDI</td>
+ <td align='left'>343</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Viscount Bryce</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ENTRANCE OF FRANCE INTO THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>350</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By President Poincare and Premier Viviani</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIA TO HER ENEMY</td>
+ <td align='left'>358</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"THE FACTS ABOUT BELGIUM"</td>
+ <td align='left'>365</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Statement Issued by the Belgian Legation at
+ Washington</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BELGO-BRITISH PLOT ALLEGED BY GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'>369</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Statement Issued by German Embassy at Washington, Oct.
+ 13.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ATROCITIES OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>374</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BOMBARDMENT OF RHEIMS CATHEDRAL</td>
+ <td align='left'>392</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Protest Issued to Neutral Powers from French Foreign Office,
+ Bordeaux, Sept. 21.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SOCIALISTS' PART</td>
+ <td align='left'>397</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER III.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>WHAT AMERICANS SAY TO EUROPE</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CIVILIZATION</td>
+ <td align='left'>413</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Argued by James M. Beck</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CRITICS DISPUTE MR. BECK</td>
+ <td align='left'>431</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>DEFENSE OF THE DUAL ALLIANCE--REPLY</td>
+ <td align='left'>438</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Dr. Edmund von Mach</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHAT GLADSTONE SAID ABOUT BELGIUM</td>
+ <td align='left'>448</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Louis Beer</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FIGHT TO THE BITTER END</td>
+ <td align='left'>451</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>An Interview with Andrew Carnegie</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WOMAN AND WAR--"Shot, Tell His Mother" (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>458</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By W.E.P. French, Captain, U.S. Army</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE WAY TO PEACE</td>
+ <td align='left'>459</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>An Interview with Jacob H. Schiff</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PROF. MATHER ON MR. SCHIFF</td>
+ <td align='left'>464</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE ELIOT-SCHIFF LETTERS</td>
+ <td align='left'>465</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Jacob H. Schiff and Charles W. Eliot</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LA CATHEDRALE (Poem Translated by Frances C. Fay)</td>
+ <td align='left'>472</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Edmond Rostand</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PROBABLE CAUSES AND OUTCOME OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>473</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Series of Five Letters by Charles W. Eliot, with Related
+ Correspondence</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE LORD OF HOSTS (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>501</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Joseph B. Gilder</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A WAR OF DISHONOR</td>
+ <td align='left'>502</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By David Starr Jordan</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>MIGHT OR RIGHT</td>
+ <td align='left'>503</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Grier Hibben</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>JEANNE D'ARC--1914 (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>506</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Alma Durant Nicholson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE KAISER AND BELGIUM (With controversial letters)</td>
+ <td align='left'>507</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John W. Burgess</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AMERICA'S PERIL IN JUDGING GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'>515</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William M. Sloane</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>POSSIBLE PROFITS FROM WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>526</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Interview with Franklin H. Giddings</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"TO AMERICANS LEAVING GERMANY"</td>
+ <td align='left'>533</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>A German Circular</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN DECLARATIONS</td>
+ <td align='left'>534</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Rudolf Eucken and Ernst Haeckel</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE EUCKEN AND HAECKEL CHARGES</td>
+ <td align='left'>537</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Warbeke</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CONCERNING GERMAN CULTURE</td>
+ <td align='left'>541</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Brander Matthews</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CULTURE VS. KULTUR</td>
+ <td align='left'>543</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Frank Jewett Mather, Jr.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE TRESPASS IN BELGIUM</td>
+ <td align='left'>545</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Grier Hibben</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>APPORTIONING THE BLAME</td>
+ <td align='left'>548</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Arthur v. Briesen</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PARTING (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>553</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Louise von Wetter</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FRENCH HATE AND ENGLISH JEALOUSY</td>
+ <td align='left'>554</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Kuno Francke</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>IN DEFENSE OF AUSTRIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>559</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Baron L. Hengelmuller</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIAN ATROCITIES</td>
+ <td align='left'>563</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By George Haven Putnam</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"THE UNITED STATES OF EUROPE"</td>
+ <td align='left'>565</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Interview with Nicholas Murray Butler</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A NEW WORLD MAP</td>
+ <td align='left'>571</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Wilhelm Ostwald</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE VERDICT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE</td>
+ <td align='left'>573</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Newell Dwight Hillis</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TIPPERARY (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>581</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John B. Kennedy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AS AMERICA SEES THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>582</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Harold Begbie</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO MELOS, POMEGRANATE ISLE (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>587</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Grace Harriet Macurdy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHAT AMERICA CAN DO</td>
+ <td align='left'>588</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Lord Channing of Wellingborough</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO A COUSIN GERMAN (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>593</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Adeline Adams</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHAT THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS MAY BE</td>
+ <td align='left'>594</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Irving Fisher</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>EFFECTS OF WAR ON AMERICA</td>
+ <td align='left'>600</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Roland G. Usher</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY OF THE FUTURE</td>
+ <td align='left'>605</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Interview with M. de Lapredelle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY THE AGGRESSOR</td>
+ <td align='left'>609</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Albert Sauveur</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>MILITARISM AND CHRISTIANITY</td>
+ <td align='left'>610</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Lyman Abbott</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>VIGIL (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>612</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Hortense Flexner</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>NIETZSCHE AND GERMAN CULTURE</td>
+ <td align='left'>613</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Abraham Solomon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BELGIUM'S BITTER NEED</td>
+ <td align='left'>614</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sir Gilbert Parker</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER IV.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>THE WAR AT CLOSE QUARTERS</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SIR JOHN FRENCH'S OWN STORY</td>
+ <td align='left'>619</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Famous Dispatches of the British Commander in Chief to Lord
+ Kitchener</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>STORY OF THE "EYE WITNESS"</td>
+ <td align='left'>650</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Col. E.D. Swinton of the Intelligence Department of the
+ British General Staff</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE DAWN OF A NEW DAY (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>678</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Edward Neville Vose</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE GERMAN ENTRY INTO BRUSSELS (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>679</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Boon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FALL OF ANTWERP</td>
+ <td align='left'>682</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AS THE FRENCH FELL BACK ON PARIS</td>
+ <td align='left'>689</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By G. H. Perris</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE RETREAT TO PARIS</td>
+ <td align='left'>691</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Philip Gibbs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A ZOUAVE'S STORY</td>
+ <td align='left'>704</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Philip Gibbs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHEN WAR BURST ON ARRAS</td>
+ <td align='left'>707</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Special Correspondent</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BATTLES IN BELGIUM (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>711</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SEEKING WOUNDED ON BATTLE FRONT</td>
+ <td align='left'>714</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Philip Gibbs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AT THE KAISER'S HEADQUARTERS</td>
+ <td align='left'>718</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Cyril Brown of The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW THE BELGIANS FIGHT</td>
+ <td align='left'>725</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily News</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A VISIT TO THE FIRING LINE IN FRANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>727</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>UNBURIED DEAD STREW LORRAINE (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>729</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Philip Gibbs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ALONG THE GERMAN LINES NEAR METZ</td>
+ <td align='left'>731</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SLAUGHTER IN ALSACE</td>
+ <td align='left'>736</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John H. Cox</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RENNENKAMPF ON THE RUSSIAN BORDER</td>
+ <td align='left'>738</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FIRST FIGHT AT LODZ (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>740</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Perceval Gibbon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FIRST INVASION OF SERBIA (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>742</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Standard</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE ATTACK ON TSING-TAU</td>
+ <td align='left'>745</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Jefferson Jones</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE GERMAN ATTACK ON TAHITI</td>
+ <td align='left'>748</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>As Told by Miss Geni La France, an Eyewitness</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BLOODLESS CAPTURE OF GERMAN SAMOA</td>
+ <td align='left'>749</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Malcolm Ross, F.R.G.S.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW THE CRESSY SANK</td>
+ <td align='left'>752</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Edgar Rowan</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN STORY OF THE HELIGOLAND FIGHT</td>
+ <td align='left'>754</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Special Correspondent of The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SINKING OF THE CRESSY AND THE HOGUE</td>
+ <td align='left'>755</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By the Senior Surviving Officers, Commander Bertram W.L.
+ Nicholson and</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>Commander Reginald A. Norton</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SINKING OF THE HAWKE</td>
+ <td align='left'>757</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE EMDEN'S LAST FIGHT</td>
+ <td align='left'>758</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By the Cable Operator at Cocos Islands</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CROWDS SEE THE NIGER SINK</td>
+ <td align='left'>760</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LIEUTENANT WEDDIGEN'S OWN STORY</td>
+ <td align='left'>762</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Herbert B. Swope and Capt. Lieut. Otto Weddigen</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE SOLILOQUY OF AN OLD SOLDIER (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>764</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By O.C.A. Child</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE EFFECTS OF WAR IN FOUR COUNTRIES</td>
+ <td align='left'>765</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Irvin S. Cobb</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW PARIS DROPPED GAYETY</td>
+ <td align='left'>767</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Anne Rittenhouse</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PARIS IN OCTOBER</td>
+ <td align='left'>770</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The London Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FRANCE AND ENGLAND AS SEEN IN WAR TIME</td>
+ <td align='left'>772</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Interview with F. Hopkinson Smith</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE HELPLESS VICTIMS</td>
+ <td align='left'>776</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Mrs. Nina Larrey Duryee</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A NEW RUSSIA MEETS GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'>777</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Perceval Gibbon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BELGIAN CITIES GERMANIZED</td>
+ <td align='left'>780</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Cyril Brown of The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BELGIAN RUIN</td>
+ <td align='left'>786</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By J.H. Whitehouse, M.P.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE WOUNDED SERB</td>
+ <td align='left'>788</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The London Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SPY ORGANIZATION IN ENGLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'>790</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>British Home Office Communication</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>793</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE MEN OF THE EMDEN (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>816</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Thomas R. Ybarra</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER V.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>THE NEW RUSSIA SPEAKS</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AN APPEAL BY RUSSIAN AUTHORS, ARTISTS AND ACTORS</td>
+ <td align='left'>817</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>With Their Signatures</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIA IN LITERATURE</td>
+ <td align='left'>819</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By British Men of Letters</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIA AND EUROPE'S WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>821</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Paul Vinogradoff</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RUSSIAN APPEAL FOR THE POLES</td>
+ <td align='left'>825</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By A. Konovalov of the Russian Duma</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>I AM FOR PEACE (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>826</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Lurana Sheldon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>UNITED RUSSIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>827</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Peter Struve</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PRINCE TRUBETSKOI'S APPEAL TO RUSSIANS</td>
+ <td align='left'>830</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>To Help the Polish Victims of War</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW PROHIBITION CAME TO RUSSIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>831</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>An Interview with the Reformer Tchelisheff</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>INFLUENCE OF THE WAR UPON RUSSIAN INDUSTRY</td>
+ <td align='left'>834</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By the Russian Ministry of Commerce</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>DECLARATION OF THE RUSSIAN INDUSTRIAL INTERESTS</td>
+ <td align='left'>835</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A RUSSIAN FINANCIAL AUTHORITY ON THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>836</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Prof. Migoulin</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PROPOSED INTERNAL LOANS OF RUSSIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>837</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>(<i>Prof. Migoulin's Plan</i>)</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW RUSSIAN MANUFACTURERS FEEL</td>
+ <td align='left'>838</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Digested from Russkia Vedomosti</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>NEW SOURCES OF REVENUE NEEDED</td>
+ <td align='left'>839</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By A. Sokolov</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>OUR RUSSIAN ALLY</td>
+ <td align='left'>840</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CONFISCATION OF GERMAN PATENTS</td>
+ <td align='left'>849</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By the Russian Ministry of Commerce</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A RUSSIAN INCOME TAX</td>
+ <td align='left'>850</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Proposed by the Ministry of Finance</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TOOLS OF THE RUSSIAN JUGGERNAUT</td>
+ <td align='left'>851</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By M.J. Bonn</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FATE OF THE JEWS IN POLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'>854</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Georg Brandes</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>COMMERCIAL TREATIES AFTER THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>863</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By P. Maslov</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PHOTOGRAPHIC REVIEW OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>865</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>48 War Pictures Printed in Rotogravure</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PATRIOTISM AND ENDURANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>913</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>The Pastoral Letter of Cardinal D.J. Mercier, Archbishop of
+ Malines</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>APPEAL TO AMERICA FOR BELGIUM (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>924</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Thomas Hardy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WITH THE GERMAN ARMY</td>
+ <td align='left'>925</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Cyril Brown</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>STORY OF THE MAN WHO FIRED ON RHEIMS CATHEDRAL</td>
+ <td align='left'>928</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RICHARD HARDING DAVIS'S COMMENT</td>
+ <td align='left'>931</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE GERMAN AIRMEN</td>
+ <td align='left'>932</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN GENERALS TALK OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>934</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SWIFT REVERSAL TO BARBARISM</td>
+ <td align='left'>939</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Vance Thompson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CIVIL LIFE IN BERLIN</td>
+ <td align='left'>943</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The London Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BELGIAN BOY TELLS STORY OF AERSCHOT</td>
+ <td align='left'>945</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE NEUTRALS (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>948</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Beatrice Barry</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FIFTEEN MINUTES ON THE YSER</td>
+ <td align='left'>949</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SEEING NIEUPORT UNDER SHELL FIRE</td>
+ <td align='left'>951</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RAID ON SCARBOROUGH SEEN FROM A WINDOW</td>
+ <td align='left'>954</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Ruth Kauffmann</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW THE BARONESS HID HER HUSBAND ON A VESSEL</td>
+ <td align='left'>956</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WARSAW SWAMPED WITH REFUGEES</td>
+ <td align='left'>957</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H.W. Bodkinson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AFTER THE RUSSIAN ADVANCE IN GALICIA</td>
+ <td align='left'>958</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The London Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>OFFICER IN BATTLE HAD LITTLE FEELING</td>
+ <td align='left'>959</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BATTLE OF NEW YEAR'S DAY</td>
+ <td align='left'>961</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Perceval Gibbon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BASS'S STORY</td>
+ <td align='left'>963</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE WASTE OF GERMAN LIVES</td>
+ <td align='left'>964</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Perceval Gibbon</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE FLIGHT INTO SWITZERLAND</td>
+ <td align='left'>966</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Ethel Therese Hugh</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ONCE FAIR BELGRADE IS A SKELETON CITY</td>
+ <td align='left'>969</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From The New York Times</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LETTERS AND DIARIES</td>
+ <td align='left'>971</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>A Group of Soldiers' Letters</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"CHANT OF HATE AGAINST ENGLAND"</td>
+ <td align='left'>984</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>How Ernst Lissauer's Lines were "Sung to Pieces" in
+ Germany</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ANSWERING THE "CHANT OF HATE"</td>
+ <td align='left'>988</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Beatrice M. Barry</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ENGLAND CAUSED THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>989</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By T. von Bethmann-Hollweg, German Imperial
+ Chancellor</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A SONG OF THE SIEGE GUN (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>992</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Katharine Drayton Mayrant Simons, Jr.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHY ENGLAND FIGHTS GERMANY</td>
+ <td align='left'>993</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Hilaire Belloc</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>AT THE VILLA ACHILLEION, CORFU (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>999</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H.T. Sudduth</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY'S STRATEGIC RAILWAYS (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1000</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Walter Littlefield</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GLORY OF WAR (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1004</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Adeline Adams</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>1007</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <br />
+ <h3>NUMBER VI.</h3>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan='2'>
+ <h2>THE CALDRON OF THE BALKANS</h2>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOW TURKEY WENT TO WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>1025</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SERBIA AND HER NEIGHBORS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1036</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LITTLE MONTENEGRO SPEAKS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1043</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BULGARIA'S ATTITUDE</td>
+ <td align='left'>1044</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GREECE'S WATCHFUL WAITING</td>
+ <td align='left'>1050</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WHERE RUMANIA STANDS IN THE CRISIS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1054</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>EXIT ALBANIA?</td>
+ <td align='left'>1062</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE WAR IN THE BALKANS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1068</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By A. T. Polyzoides</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE EUROPEAN WAR AS SEEN BY CARTOONISTS</td>
+ <td align='left'>1073</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMANY VS. BELGIUM</td>
+ <td align='left'>1101</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>Case of the Secret Military Documents Presented by Both
+ Sides</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BIG AND THE GREAT (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1114</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William Archer</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"FROM THE BODY OF THIS DEATH" (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1119</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sidney Low</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>"A SCRAP OF PAPER"</td>
+ <td align='left'>1120</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg and Sir Edward
+ Grey</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE KAISER AT DONCHERY</td>
+ <td align='left'>1125</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HAIL! A HYMN TO BELGIUM (Music by F. H. Cowen)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1126</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By John Galsworthy</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HOLLAND'S FUTURE (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1128</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H.G. Wells</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FRENCH OFFICIAL REPORT ON GERMAN ATROCITIES</td>
+ <td align='left'>1133</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>A FRENCH MAYOR'S PUNISHMENT</td>
+ <td align='left'>1163</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WE WILL FIGHT TO THE END</td>
+ <td align='left'>1164</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Premier Viviani of France</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>NUITS BLANCHES</i></td>
+ <td align='left'>1166</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By H.S. Haskins</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>UNCONQUERED FRANCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>1167</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From the Bulletin Francais</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>FOUR MONTHS OF WAR (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1169</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>From the Bulletin des Armees</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LONG LIVE THE ALLIES!</td>
+ <td align='left'>1174</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Claude Monet</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>UNITED STATES FAIR TO ALL</td>
+ <td align='left'>1175</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William J. Bryan, American Secretary of State</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE HOUSE WITH SEALED DOORS (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1183</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Edith M. Thomas</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>SEIZURES OF AMERICAN CARGOES</td>
+ <td align='left'>1184</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William J. Bryan, American Secretary of State</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN CROWN PRINCE TO AMERICA</td>
+ <td align='left'>1187</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By The Associated Press</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE OFFICIAL BRITISH EXPLANATION</td>
+ <td align='left'>1188</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Sir Edward Grey</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>ITALY AND THE WAR (With Map)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1192</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William Roscoe Thayer</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>HE HEARD THE BUGLES CALLING (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1198</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Carey C.D. Briggs</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GERMAN SOLDIERS WRITE HOME</td>
+ <td align='left'>1199</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>WAR CORRESPONDENCE</td>
+ <td align='left'>1207</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE BROKEN ROSE (TO KING ALBERT)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1210</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Annie Vivanti Chartres</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>THE HEROIC LANGUAGE (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1216</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By Alice Meynell</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR</td>
+ <td align='left'>1224</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TO HIS MAJESTY KING ALBERT (Poem)</td>
+ <td align='left'>1228</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><i>By William Watson</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/shaw.jpg"><img src='images/shaw_thumb.jpg' width='264' height='400'
+ alt='GEORGE BERNARD SHAW' title='GEORGE BERNARD SHAW' /></a> <a
+ href="images/bennett.jpg"><img src='images/bennet_thumb.jpg' width='245'
+ height='400' alt='ARNOLD BENNETT. See Page 60.' title='ARNOLD BENNETT' />
+ </a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>GEORGE BERNARD SHAW</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>ARNOLD BENNETT. See <a href="#page60">Page 60</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>{11}</span>
+ <h2>"Common Sense About the War"</h2>
+ <h3>By George Bernard Shaw.</h3>
+ <h3>I.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"<i>Let a European war break out&mdash;the war, perhaps, between the Triple
+ Alliance and the Triple Entente, which so many journalists and politicians in
+ England and Germany contemplate with criminal levity. If the combatants prove to be
+ equally balanced, it may, after the first battles, smoulder on for thirty years.
+ What will be the population of London, or Manchester, or Chemnitz, or Bremen, or
+ Milan, at the end of it</i>?" ("The Great Society," by Graham Wallas. June,
+ 1914.)</p>
+ <p>(<i>Copyright, 1914, By The New York Times Company.</i>)</p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The time has now come to pluck up courage and begin to talk and write soberly
+ about the war. At first the mere horror of it stunned the more thoughtful of us; and
+ even now only those who are not in actual contact with or bereaved relation to its
+ heartbreaking wreckage can think sanely about it, or endure to hear others discuss it
+ coolly. As to the thoughtless, well, not for a moment dare I suggest that for the
+ first few weeks they were all scared out of their wits; for I know too well that the
+ British civilian does not allow his perfect courage to be questioned; only
+ experienced soldiers and foreigners are allowed the infirmity of fear. But they
+ certainly were&mdash;shall I say a little upset? They felt in that solemn hour that
+ England was lost if only one single traitor in their midst let slip the truth about
+ anything in the universe. It was a perilous time for me. I do not hold my tongue
+ easily; and my inborn dramatic faculty and professional habit as a playwright prevent
+ me from taking a one-sided view even when the most probable result of taking a
+ many-sided one is prompt lynching. Besides, until Home Rule emerges from its present
+ suspended animation, I shall retain my Irish capacity for criticising England with
+ something of the detachment of a foreigner, and perhaps with a certain slightly
+ malicious taste for taking the conceit out of her. Lord Kitchener made a mistake the
+ other day in rebuking the Irish volunteers for not rallying faster to the defense of
+ "their country." They do not regard it as their country yet. He should have asked
+ them to come forward as usual and help poor old England through a stiff fight. Then
+ it would have been all right.</p>
+ <p>Having thus frankly confessed my bias, which you can allow for as a rifleman
+ allows for the wind, I give my views for what they are worth. They will be of some
+ use; because, however blinded I may be by prejudice or perversity, my prejudices in
+ this matter are not those which blind the British patriot, and therefore I am fairly
+ sure to see some things that have not yet struck him.</p>
+ <p>And first, I do not see this war as one which has welded Governments and peoples
+ into complete and sympathetic solidarity as against the common enemy. I see the
+ people of England united in a fierce detestation and defiance of the views and acts
+ of Prussian Junkerism. And I see the German people stirred to the depths by a similar
+ antipathy to English Junkerism, and anger at the apparent treachery and duplicity of
+ the attack made on them by us in their extremest peril from France and Russia. I see
+ both nations duped, but alas! not quite unwillingly duped, by their Junkers and
+ Militarists into wreaking on one another the wrath they should have <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>{12}</span>spent in destroying
+ Junkerism and Militarism in their own country. And I see the Junkers and Militarists
+ of England and Germany jumping at the chance they have longed for in vain for many
+ years of smashing one another and establishing their own oligarchy as the dominant
+ military power in the world. No doubt the heroic remedy for this tragic
+ misunderstanding is that both armies should shoot their officers and go home to
+ gather in their harvests in the villages and make a revolution in the towns; and
+ though this is not at present a practicable solution, it must be frankly mentioned,
+ because it or something like it is always a possibility in a defeated conscript army
+ if its commanders push it beyond human endurance when its eyes are opening to the
+ fact that in murdering its neighbours it is biting off its nose to vex its face,
+ besides riveting the intolerable yoke of Militarism and Junkerism more tightly than
+ ever on its own neck. But there is no chance&mdash;or, as our Junkers would put it,
+ no danger&mdash;of our soldiers yielding to such an ecstasy of common sense. They
+ have enlisted voluntarily; they are not defeated nor likely to be; their
+ communications are intact and their meals reasonably punctual; they are as pugnacious
+ as their officers; and in fighting Prussia they are fighting a more deliberate,
+ conscious, tyrannical, personally insolent, and dangerous Militarism than their own.
+ Still, even for a voluntary professional army, that possibility exists, just as for
+ the civilian there is a limit beyond which taxation, bankruptcy, privation, terror,
+ and inconvenience cannot be pushed without revolution or a social dissolution more
+ ruinous than submission to conquest. I mention all this, not to make myself wantonly
+ disagreeable, but because military persons, thinking naturally that there is nothing
+ like leather, are now talking of this war as likely to become a permanent institution
+ like the Chamber of Horrors at Madame Tussaud's, forgetting, I think, that the rate
+ of consumption maintained by modern military operations is much greater relatively to
+ the highest possible rate of production maintainable under the restrictions of war
+ time than it has ever been before.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Day of Judgment.</b></p>
+ <p>The European settlement at the end of the war will be effected, let us hope, not
+ by a regimental mess of fire-eaters sitting around an up-ended drum in a vanquished
+ Berlin or Vienna, but by some sort of Congress in which all the Powers (including,
+ very importantly, the United States of America) will be represented. Now I foresee a
+ certain danger of our being taken by surprise at that Congress, and making ourselves
+ unnecessarily difficult and unreasonable, by presenting ourselves to it in the
+ character of Injured Innocence. We shall not be accepted in that character. Such a
+ Congress will most certainly regard us as being, next to the Prussians (if it makes
+ even that exception), the most quarrelsome people in the universe. I am quite
+ conscious of the surprise and scandal this anticipation may cause among my more
+ highminded (<i>hochnaesig</i>, the Germans call it) readers. Let me therefore break
+ it gently by expatiating for a while on the subject of Junkerism and Militarism
+ generally, and on the history of the literary propaganda of war between England and
+ Potsdam which has been going on openly for the last forty years on both sides. I beg
+ the patience of my readers during this painful operation. If it becomes unbearable,
+ they can always put the paper down and relieve themselves by calling the Kaiser
+ Attila and Mr. Keir Hardie a traitor twenty times or so. Then they will feel, I hope,
+ refreshed enough to resume. For, after all, abusing the Kaiser or Keir Hardie or me
+ will not hurt the Germans, whereas a clearer view of the political situation will
+ certainly help us. Besides, I do not believe that the trueborn Englishman in his
+ secret soul relishes the pose of Injured Innocence any more than I do myself. He puts
+ it on only because he is told that it is respectable.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Junkers All.</b></p>
+ <p>What is a Junker? Is it a German <span class="pagenum"><a name="page13"
+ id="page13"></a>{13}</span>officer of twenty-three, with offensive manners, and a
+ habit of cutting down innocent civilians with his sabre? Sometimes; but not at all
+ exclusively that or anything like that. Let us resort to the dictionary. I turn to
+ the <i>Encyclopaedisches Woerterbuch</i> of Muret Sanders. Excuse its quaint
+ German-English.</p>
+ <p><b>Junker</b> = Young nobleman, younker, lording, country squire, country
+ gentleman, squirearch. <b>Junkerberrschaft</b> = squirearchy, landocracy.
+ <b>Junkerleben</b> = life of a country gentleman, (<i>figuratively</i>) a jolly life.
+ <b>Junkerpartei</b> = country party. <b>Junkerwirtschaft</b> = doings of the country
+ party.</p>
+ <p>Thus we see that the Junker is by no means peculiar to Prussia. We may claim to
+ produce the article in a perfection that may well make Germany despair of ever
+ surpassing us in that line. Sir Edward Grey is a Junker from his topmost hair to the
+ tips of his toes; and Sir Edward is a charming man, incapable of cutting down even an
+ Opposition front bencher, or of telling a German he intends to have him shot. Lord
+ Cromer is a Junker. Mr. Winston Churchill is an odd and not disagreeable compound of
+ Junker and Yankee: his frank anti-German pugnacity is enormously more popular than
+ the moral babble (Milton's phrase) of his sanctimonious colleagues. He is a bumptious
+ and jolly Junker, just as Lord Curzon is an uppish Junker. I need not string out the
+ list. In these islands the Junker is literally all over the shop.</p>
+ <p>It is very difficult for anyone who is not either a Junker or a successful
+ barrister to get into an English Cabinet, no matter which party is in power, or to
+ avoid resigning when we strike up the drum. The Foreign Office is a Junker Club. Our
+ governing classes are overwhelmingly Junker: all who are not Junkers are riff-raff
+ whose only claim to their position is the possession of ability of some sort: mostly
+ ability to make money. And, of course, the Kaiser is a Junker, though less true-blue
+ than the Crown Prince, and much less autocratic than Sir Edward Grey, who, without
+ consulting us, sends us to war by a word to an ambassador and pledges all our wealth
+ to his foreign allies by a stroke of his pen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>What Is a Militarist?</b></p>
+ <p>Now that we know what a Junker is, let us have a look at the Militarists. A
+ Militarist is a person who believes that all real power is the power to kill, and
+ that Providence is on the side of the big battalions. The most famous Militarist at
+ present, thanks to the zeal with which we have bought and quoted his book, is General
+ Friedrich von Bernhardi. But we cannot allow the General to take precedence of our
+ own writers as a Militarist propagandist. I am old enough to remember the beginning
+ of the anti-German phase of that very ancient propaganda in England. The
+ Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left Europe very much taken aback. Up to that date
+ nobody was afraid of Prussia, though everybody was a little afraid of France; and we
+ were keeping "buffer States" between ourselves and Russia in the east. Germany had
+ indeed beaten Denmark; but then Denmark was a little State, and was abandoned in her
+ hour of need by those who should have helped her, to the great indignation of Ibsen.
+ Germany had also beaten Austria; but somehow everybody seems able to beat Austria,
+ though nobody seems able to draw the moral that defeats do not matter as much as the
+ Militarists think, Austria being as important as ever. Suddenly Germany beat France
+ right down into the dust, by the exercise of an organized efficiency in war of which
+ nobody up to then had any conception. There was not a State in Europe that did not
+ say to itself: "Good Heavens! what would happen if she attacked <i>us</i>?" We in
+ England thought of our old-fashioned army and our old-fashioned commander George
+ Ranger (of Cambridge), and our War Office with its Crimean tradition of imbecility;
+ and we shook in our shoes. But we were not such fools as to leave it at that. We soon
+ produced the first page of the Bernhardian literature: an anonymous booklet entitled
+ <i>The Battle of Dorking</i>. It was not the first page of English <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>{14}</span>Militarist literature:
+ you have only to turn back to the burst of glorification of war which heralded the
+ silly Crimean campaign (Tennyson's <i>Maud</i> is a surviving sample) to find paeans
+ to Mars which would have made Treitschke blush (perhaps they did); but it was the
+ first page in which it was assumed as a matter of course that Germany and not France
+ or Russia was England's natural enemy. <i>The Battle of Dorking</i> had an enormous
+ sale; and the wildest guesses were current as to its authorship. And its moral was
+ "To arms; or the Germans will besiege London as they besieged Paris." From that time
+ until the present, the British propaganda of war with Germany has never ceased. The
+ lead given by <i>The Battle of Dorking</i> was taken up by articles in the daily
+ press and the magazines. Later on came the Jingo fever (anti-Russian, by the way; but
+ let us not mention that just now), Stead's <i>Truth About the Navy</i>, Mr. Spenser
+ Wilkinson, the suppression of the Channel Tunnel, Mr. Robert Blatchford, Mr. Garvin,
+ Admiral Maxse, Mr. Newbolt, Mr. Rudyard Kipling, <i>The National Review</i>, Lord
+ Roberts, the Navy League, the imposition of an Imperialist Foreign Secretary on the
+ Liberal Cabinet, Mr. Wells's <i>War in the Air</i> (well worth re-reading just now),
+ and the Dreadnoughts. Throughout all these agitations the enemy, the villain of the
+ piece, the White Peril, was Prussia and her millions of German conscripts. At first,
+ in <i>The Battle of Dorking</i> phase, the note was mainly defensive. But from the
+ moment when the Kaiser began to copy our Armada policy by building a big fleet, the
+ anti-German agitation became openly aggressive; and the cry that the German fleet or
+ ours must sink, and that a war between England and Germany was bound to come some
+ day, speedily ceased to be merely a cry with our Militarists and became an axiom with
+ them. And what our Militarists said our Junkers echoed; and our Junker diplomatists
+ played for. The story of how they manoeuvred to hem Germany and Austria in with an
+ Anglo-Franco-Russian combination will be found told with soldierly directness and
+ with the proud candor of a man who can see things from his own side only in the
+ article by Lord Roberts in the current number of <i>The Hibbert Journal</i> (October,
+ 1914). There you shall see also, after the usual nonsense about Nietzsche, the vision
+ of "British administrators bearing the White Man's Burden," of "young men, fresh from
+ the public schools of Britain, coming eagerly forward to carry on the high traditions
+ of Imperial Britain in each new dependency which comes under our care," of "our
+ fitness as an Imperial race," of "a great task committed to us by Providence," of
+ "the will to conquer that has never failed us," of our task of "assuming control of
+ one-fifth of the earth's surface and the care of one in five of all the inhabitants
+ of the world." Not a suggestion that the inhabitants of the world are perhaps able to
+ take care of themselves. Not even a passing recollection when that White Man's Burden
+ is in question that the men outside the British Empire, and even inside the German
+ Empire, are by no means exclusively black. Only the <i>sancta simplicitas</i> that
+ glories in "the proud position of England," the "sympathy, tolerance, prudence and
+ benevolence of our rule" in the east (as shown, the Kaiser is no doubt sarcastically
+ remarking, in the Delhi sedition trial), the chivalrous feeling that it is our
+ highest duty to save the world from the horrible misfortune of being governed by
+ anybody but those young men fresh from the public schools of Britain. Change the
+ words Britain and British to Germany and German, and the Kaiser will sign the article
+ with enthusiasm. <i>His</i> opinion, <i>his</i> attitude (subject to that merely
+ verbal change) word for word.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Six of One: Half-a-Dozen of The Other.</b></p>
+ <p>Now, please observe that I do not say that the agitation was unreasonable. I
+ myself steadily advocated the formation of a formidable armament, and ridiculed the
+ notion that, we, who are wasting hundreds of millions annually on idlers and wasters,
+ could not easily afford double, treble, quadruple our military <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15"></a>{15}</span>and naval expenditure. I
+ advocated the compulsion of every man to serve his country, both in war and peace.
+ The idlers and wasters perceiving dimly that I meant the cost to come out of their
+ pockets and meant to use the admission that riches should not exempt a man from
+ military service as an illustration of how absurd it is to allow them to exempt him
+ from civil service, did not embrace my advocacy with enthusiasm; so I must reaffirm
+ it now lest it should be supposed that I am condemning those whose proceedings I am
+ describing. Though often horribly wrong in principle, they were quite right in
+ practice as far as they went. But they must stand to their guns now that the guns are
+ going off. They must not pretend that they were harmless Radical lovers of peace, and
+ that the propaganda of Militarism and of inevitable war between England and Germany
+ is a Prussian infamy for which the Kaiser must be severely punished. That is not
+ fair, not true, not gentlemanly. We began it; and if they met us half-way, as they
+ certainly did, it is not for us to reproach them. When the German fire-eaters drank
+ to The Day (of Armageddon) they were drinking to the day of which our Navy League
+ fire-eaters had first said "It's bound to come." Therefore, let us have no more
+ nonsense about the Prussian Wolf and the British Lamb, the Prussian Machiavelli and
+ the English Evangelist. We cannot shout for years that we are boys of the bulldog
+ breed, and then suddenly pose as gazelles. No. When Europe and America come to settle
+ the treaty that will end this business (for America is concerned in it as much as we
+ are), they will not deal with us as the lovable and innocent victims of a treacherous
+ tyrant and a savage soldiery. They will have to consider how these two incorrigibly
+ pugnacious and inveterately snobbish peoples, who have snarled at one another for
+ forty years with bristling hair and grinning fangs, and are now rolling over with
+ their teeth in one another's throats, are to be tamed into trusty watch-dogs of the
+ peace of the world. I am sorry to spoil the saintly image with a halo which the
+ British Jingo journalist sees just now when he looks in the glass; but it must be
+ done if we are to behave reasonably in the imminent day of reckoning.</p>
+ <p>And now back to Friedrich von Bernhardi.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>General Von Bernhardi.</b></p>
+ <p>Like many soldier-authors, Friedrich is very readable; and he maintains the good
+ and formidable part of the Bismarck tradition: that is, he is not a humbug. He looks
+ facts in the face; he deceives neither himself nor his readers; and if he were to
+ tell lies&mdash;as he would no doubt do as stoutly as any British, French, or Russian
+ officer if his country's safety were at stake&mdash;he would know that he was telling
+ them. Which last we think very bad taste on his part, if not downright
+ wickedness.</p>
+ <p>It is true that he cites Frederick the Great as an exemplary master of war and of
+ <i>Weltpolitik</i>. But his chief praise in this department is reserved for England.
+ It is from our foreign policy, he says, that he has learnt what our journalists
+ denounce as "the doctrine of the bully, of the materialist, of the man with gross
+ ideals: a doctrine of diabolical evil." He frankly accepts that doctrine from us (as
+ if our poor, honest muddle-heads had ever formulated anything so intellectual as a
+ doctrine), and blames us for nothing but for allowing the United States to achieve
+ their solidarity and become formidable to us when we might have divided them by
+ backing up the South in the Civil War. He shows in the clearest way that if Germany
+ does not smash England, England will smash Germany by springing at her the moment she
+ can catch her at a disadvantage. In a word he prophesies that we, his great masters
+ in <i>Realpolitik</i>, will do precisely what our Junkers have just made us do, It is
+ we who have carried out the Bernhardi programme: it is Germany who has neglected it.
+ He warned Germany to make an alliance with Italy, Austria, Turkey, and America,
+ before undertaking the subjugation, first of France, then of England. But a prophet
+ is not with<span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>{16}</span>out
+ honour save in his own country; and Germany has allowed herself to be caught with no
+ ally but Austria between France and Russia, and thereby given the English Junkers
+ their opportunity. They have seized it with a punctuality that must flatter Von
+ Bernhardi, even though the compliment be at the expense of his own country. The
+ Kaiser did not give them credit for being keener Junkers than his own. It was an
+ unpleasant, indeed an infuriating surprise. All that a Kaiser could do without
+ unbearable ignominy to induce them to keep their bulldogs off and give him fair play
+ with his two redoubtable foes, he did. But they laughed Frederick the Great's laugh
+ and hurled all our forces at him, as he might have done to us, on Bernhardian
+ principles, if he had caught us at the same disadvantage. Officially, the war is
+ Junker-cut-Junker, militarist-cut-Militarist; and we must fight it out, not
+ <i>Heuchler</i>-cut-Hypocrite, but hammer and tongs.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Militarist Myopia.</b></p>
+ <p>Unofficially, it is quite another matter. Democracy, even Social-Democracy, though
+ as hostile to British Junkers as to German ones, and under no illusion as to the
+ obsolescence and colossal stupidity of modern war, need not lack enthusiasm for the
+ combat, which may serve their own ends better than those of their political
+ opponents. For Bernhardi the Brilliant and our own very dull Militarists are alike
+ mad: the war will not do any of the things for which they rushed into it. It is much
+ more likely to do the things they most dread and deprecate: in fact, it has already
+ swept them into the very kind of organization they founded an Anti-Socialist League
+ to suppress. To shew how mad they are, let us suppose the war carries out their
+ western program to the last item. Suppose France rises from the war victorious, happy
+ and glorious, with Alsace and Lorraine regained, Rheims cathedral repaired in the
+ best modern trade style, and a prodigious indemnity in her pocket! Suppose we tow the
+ German fleet into Portsmouth, and leave Hohenzollern metaphorically under the heel of
+ Romanoff and actually in a comfortable villa in Chislehurst, the hero of all its tea
+ parties and the judge of all its gymkhanas! Well, cry the Militarists, suppose it by
+ all means: could we desire anything better? Now I happen to have a somewhat active
+ imagination; and it flatly refuses to stop at this convenient point. I must go on
+ supposing. Suppose France, with its military prestige raised once more to the
+ Napoleonic point, spends its indemnity in building an invincible Armada, stronger and
+ nearer to us than the German one we are now out to destroy! Suppose Sir Edward Grey
+ remonstrates, and Monsieur Delcasse replies, "Russia and France have humbled one
+ Imperial Bully, and are prepared to humble another. I have not forgotten Fashoda.
+ Stop us if you can; or turn, if you like, for help to the Germany we have smashed and
+ disarmed!" Of what use will all this bloodshed be then, with the old situation
+ reproduced in an aggravated form, the enemy closer to our shores, a raid far more
+ feasible, the tradition of "natural enmity" to steel the foe, and Waterloo to be
+ wiped out like Sedan? A child in arms should be able to see that this idiotic notion
+ of relaxing the military pressure on us by smashing this or that particular Power is
+ like trying to alter the pressure of the ocean by dipping up a bucket of water from
+ the North Sea and pouring it into the Bay of Biscay.</p>
+ <p>I purposely omit more easterly supposings as to what victorious Russia might do.
+ But a noble emancipation of Poland and Finland at her own expense, and of Bosnia and
+ Harzegovina at Austria's, might easily suggest to our nervous Militarists that a
+ passion for the freedom of Egypt and India might seize her, and remind her that we
+ were Japan's ally in the day of Russia's humiliation in Manchuria. So there at once
+ is your Balance of Power problem in Asia enormously aggravated by throwing Germany
+ out of the anti-Russian scale and grinding her to powder. Even in North
+ Africa&mdash;but enough is enough. You can <i>durchhauen</i> your way out of the
+ frying pan, but only into the fire. Better take Nietzsche's brave advice, and make it
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>{17}</span>your point of
+ honour to "live dangerously." History shews that it is often the way to live
+ long.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Learning Nothing: Forgetting Everything.</b></p>
+ <p>But let me test the Militarist theory, not by a hypothetical future, but by the
+ accomplished and irrevocable past. Is it true that nations must conquer or go under,
+ and that military conquest means prosperity and power for the victor and annihilation
+ for the vanquished? I have already alluded in passing to the fact that Austria has
+ been beaten repeatedly: by France, by Italy, by Germany, almost by everybody who has
+ thought it worth while to have a whack at her; and yet she is one of the Great
+ Powers; and her alliance has been sought by invincible Germany. France was beaten by
+ Germany in 1870 with a completeness that seemed impossible; yet France has since
+ enlarged her territory whilst Germany is still pleading in vain for a place in the
+ sun. Russia was beaten by the Japanese in Manchuria on a scale that made an end
+ forever of the old notion that the West is the natural military superior of the East;
+ yet it is the terror of Russia that has driven Germany into her present desperate
+ onslaught on France; and it is the Russian alliance on which France and England are
+ depending for their assurance of ultimate success. We ourselves confess that the
+ military efficiency with which we have so astonished the Germans is the effect, not
+ of Waterloo and Inkerman, but of the drubbing we got from the Boers, who we aid
+ probably have beaten us if we had been anything like their own size. Greece has
+ lately distinguished herself in war within a few years by a most disgraceful beating
+ of the Turks. It would be easy to multiply instances from remoter history: for
+ example, the effect on England's position of the repeated defeats of our troops by
+ the French under Luxembourg in the Balance of Power War at the end of the seventeenth
+ century differed surprisingly little, if at all, from the effect of our subsequent
+ victories under Marlborough. And the inference from the Militarist theory that the
+ States which at present count for nothing as military Powers necessarily count for
+ nothing at all is absurd on the face of it. Monaco seems to be, on the whole, the
+ most prosperous and comfortable State in Europe.</p>
+ <p>In short, Militarism must be classed as one of the most inconsiderately foolish of
+ the bogus "sciences" which the last half century has produced in such profusion, and
+ which have the common characteristic of revolting all sane souls, and being stared
+ out of countenance by the broad facts of human experience. The only rule of thumb
+ that can be hazarded on the strength of actual practice is that wars to maintain or
+ upset the Balance of Power between States, called by inaccurate people Balance of
+ Power wars, and by accurate people Jealousy of Power wars, never establish the
+ desired peaceful and secure equilibrium. They may exercise pugnacity, gratify spite,
+ assuage a wound to national pride, or enhance or dim a military reputation; but that
+ is all. And the reason is, as I shall shew very conclusively later on, that there is
+ only one way in which one nation can really disable another, and that is a way which
+ no civilized nation dare even discuss.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Are We Hypocrites?</b></p>
+ <p>And now I proceed from general considerations to the diplomatic history of the
+ present case, as I must in order to make our moral position clear. But first, lest I
+ should lose all credit by the startling incompatibility between the familiar personal
+ character of our statesmen and the proceedings for which they are officially
+ responsible, I must say a word about the peculiar psychology of English
+ statesmanship, not only for the benefit of my English readers (who do not know that
+ it is peculiar just as they do not know that water has any taste because it is always
+ in their mouths), but as a plea for a more charitable construction from the wider
+ world.</p>
+ <p>We know by report, however unjust it may seem to us, that there is an opinion
+ abroad, even in the quarters most friendly to us, that our excellent qualities are
+ marred by an incorrigible hypocrisy. To <span class="pagenum"><a name="page18"
+ id="page18"></a>{18}</span>France we have always been Perfidious Albion. In Germany,
+ at this moment, that epithet would be scorned as far too flattering to us. Victor
+ Hugo explained the relative unpopularity of <i>Measure for Measure</i> among
+ Shakespeare's plays on the ground that the character of the hypocrite Angelo was a
+ too faithful dramatization of our national character. Pecksniff is not considered so
+ exceptional an English gentleman in America as he is in England.</p>
+ <p>Now we have not acquired this reputation for nothing. The world has no greater
+ interest in branding England with this particular vice of hypocrisy than in branding
+ France with it; yet the world does not cite Tartuffe as a typical Frenchman as it
+ cites Angelo and Pecksniff as typical Englishmen. We may protest against it as
+ indignantly as the Prussian soldiers protest against their equally universal
+ reputation for ferocity in plunder and pillage, sack and rapine; but there is
+ something in it. If you judge an English statesman, by his conscious intentions, his
+ professions, and his personal charm, you will often find him an amiable, upright,
+ humane, anxiously truthful man. If you judge him, as a foreigner must, solely on the
+ official acts for which he is responsible, and which he has to defend in the House of
+ Commons for the sake of his party, you will often be driven to conclude that this
+ estimable gentleman is, in point of being an unscrupulous superprig and fool, worse
+ than Caesar Borgia and General Von Bernhardi rolled into one, and in foreign affairs
+ a Bismarck in everything except commanding ability, blunt common sense, and freedom
+ from illusion as to the nature and object of his own diplomacy. And the permanent
+ officials in whose hands he is will probably deserve all that and something to spare.
+ Thus you will get that amazing contrast that confronts us now between the
+ Machiavellian Sir Edward Grey of the Berlin newspapers and the amiable and popular
+ Sir Edward Grey we know in England. In England we are all prepared to face any World
+ Congress and say, "We know that Sir Edward Grey is an honest English gentleman, who
+ meant well as a true patriot and friend of peace; we are quite sure that what he did
+ was fair and right; and we will not listen to any nonsense to the contrary." The
+ Congress will reply, "We know nothing about Sir Edward Grey except what he did; and
+ as there is no secret and no question as to what he did, the whole story being
+ recorded by himself, we must hold England responsible for his conduct, whilst taking
+ your word for the fact, which has no importance for us, that his conduct has nothing
+ to do with his character."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Our Intellectual Laziness.</b></p>
+ <p>The general truth of the situation is, as I have spent so much of my life in
+ trying to make the English understand, that we are cursed with a fatal intellectual
+ laziness, an evil inheritance from the time when our monopoly of coal and iron made
+ it possible for us to become rich and powerful without thinking or knowing how; a
+ laziness which is becoming highly dangerous to us now that our monopoly is gone or
+ superseded by new sources of mechanical energy. We got rich by pursuing our own
+ immediate advantage instinctively; that is, with a natural childish selfishness; and
+ when any question of our justification arose, we found it easy to silence it with any
+ sort of plausible twaddle (provided it flattered us, and did not imply any trouble or
+ sacrifice) provided by our curates at &pound;70 a year, or our journalists at a penny
+ a line, or commercial moralists with axes to grind. In the end we became fatheaded,
+ and not only lost all intellectual consciousness of what we were doing, and with it
+ all power of objective self-criticism, but stacked up a lumber of pious praises for
+ ourselves which not only satisfied our corrupted and half atrophied consciences, but
+ gave us a sense that there is something extraordinarily ungentlemanly and politically
+ dangerous in bringing these pious phrases to the test of conduct. We carried Luther's
+ doctrine of Justification by Faith to the insane point of believing that as long as a
+ man says what we have agreed to accept as the right thing it does not <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>{19}</span>matter in the least what
+ he actually does. In fact, we do not clearly see why a man need introduce the subject
+ of morals at all, unless there is something questionable to be whitewashed. The
+ unprejudiced foreigner calls this hypocrisy: that is why we call him prejudiced. But
+ I, who have been a poor man in a poor country, understand the foreigner better.</p>
+ <p>Now from the general to the particular. In describing the course of the diplomatic
+ negotiations by which our Foreign Office achieved its design of at last settling
+ accounts with Germany at the most favourable moment from the Militarist point of
+ view, I shall have to exhibit our Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs as behaving
+ almost exactly as we have accused the Kaiser of behaving. Yet I see him throughout as
+ an honest gentleman, "perplexed in the extreme," meaning well, revolted at the last
+ moment by the horror of war, clinging to the hope that in some vague way he could
+ persuade everybody to be reasonable if they would only come and talk to him as they
+ did when the big Powers were kept out of the Balkan war, but hopelessly destitute of
+ a positive policy of any kind, and therefore unable to resist those who had positive
+ business in hand. And do not for a moment imagine that I think that the conscious Sir
+ Edward Grey was Othello, and the subconscious, Iago. I do think that the Foreign
+ Office, of which Sir Edward is merely the figure head, was as deliberately and
+ consciously bent on a long deferred Militarist war with Germany as the Admiralty was;
+ and that is saying a good deal. If Sir Edward Grey did not know what he wanted, Mr.
+ Winston Churchill was in no such perplexity. He was not an "ist" of any sort, but a
+ straightforward holder of the popular opinion that if you are threatened you should
+ hit out, unless you are afraid to. Had he had the conduct of the affair he might
+ quite possibly have averted the war (and thereby greatly disappointed himself and the
+ British public) by simply frightening the Kaiser. As it was, he had arranged for the
+ co-operation of the French and British fleets; was spoiling for the fight; and must
+ have restrained himself with great difficulty from taking off his coat in public
+ whilst Mr. Asquith and Sir Edward Grey were giving the country the assurances which
+ were misunderstood to mean that we were not bound to go to war, and not more likely
+ to do so than usual. But though Sir Edward did not clear up the misunderstanding, I
+ think he went to war with the heavy heart of a Junker Liberal (such centaurs exist)
+ and not with the exultation of a Junker Jingo.</p>
+ <p>I may now, without more than the irreducible minimum of injustice to Sir Edward
+ Grey, proceed to tell the story of the diplomatic negotiations as they will appear to
+ the Congress which, I am assuming, will settle the terms on which Europe is to live
+ more or less happily ever after.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Diplomatic History of the War.</b></p>
+ <p>The evidence of how the Junker diplomatists of our Foreign Office let us in for
+ the war is in the White Paper, Miscellaneous No. 6 (1914), containing correspondence
+ respecting the European crisis, and since reissued, with a later White Paper and some
+ extra matter, as a penny bluebook in miniature. In these much-cited and little-read
+ documents we see the Junkers of all the nations, the men who have been saying for
+ years "It's bound to come," and clamouring in England for compulsory military service
+ and expeditionary forces, momentarily staggered and not a little frightened by the
+ sudden realization that it has come at last. They rush round from foreign office to
+ embassy, and from embassy to palace, twittering "This is awful. Can't you stop it?
+ Won't you be reasonable? Think of the consequences," etc., etc. One man among them
+ keeps his head and looks the facts in the face. That man is Sazonoff, the Russian
+ Secretary for Foreign Affairs. He keeps steadily trying to make Sir Edward Grey face
+ the inevitable. He says and reiterates, in effect, "You know very well that you
+ cannot keep out of a European war. You know you are pledged to fight Germany <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>{20}</span>if Germany attacks
+ France. You know that your arrangments for the fight are actually made; that already
+ the British army is commanded by a Franco-British Council of War; that there is no
+ possible honourable retreat for you. You know that this old man in Austria, who would
+ have been superannuated years ago if he had been an exciseman, is resolved to make
+ war on Servia, and sent that silly forty-eight hours ultimatum when we were all out
+ of town so that he could begin fighting before we could get back to sit on his head.
+ You know that he has the Jingo mob of Vienna behind him. You know that if he makes
+ war, Russia must mobilize. You know that France is bound to come in with us as you
+ are with France. You know that the moment we mobilize, Germany, the old man's ally,
+ will have only one desperate chance of victory, and that is to overwhelm our ally,
+ France, with one superb rush of her millions, and then sweep back and meet us on the
+ Vistula. You know that nothing can stop this except Germany remonstrating with
+ Austria, and insisting on the Servian case being dealt with by an international
+ tribunal and not by war. You know that Germany dares not do this, because her
+ alliance with Austria is her defence against the Franco-Russian alliance, and that
+ she does not want to do it in any case, because the Kaiser naturally has a strong
+ class prejudice against the blowing up of Royal personages by irresponsible
+ revolutionists, and thinks nothing too bad for Servia after the assassination of the
+ Archduke. There is just one chance of avoiding Armageddon: a slender one, but worth
+ trying. You averted war in the Algeciras crisis, and again in the Agadir crisis, by
+ saying you would fight. Try it again. The Kaiser is stiffnecked because he does not
+ believe you are going to fight this time. Well, convince him that you are. The odds
+ against him will then be so terrible that he may not dare to support the Austrian
+ ultimatum to Servia at such a price. And if Austria is thus forced to proceed
+ judicially against Servia, we Russians will be satisfied; and there will be no
+ war."</p>
+ <p>Sir Edward could not see it. He is a member of a Liberal Government, in a country
+ where there is no political career for the man who does not put his party's tenure of
+ office before every other consideration. What would <i>The Daily News</i> and <i>The
+ Manchester Guardian</i> have said had he, Bismarck-like, said bluntly: "If war once
+ breaks out, the old score between England and Prussia will be settled, not by
+ ambassadors' tea parties and Areopaguses, but by blood and iron?" In vain did
+ Sazonoff repeat, "But if you are going to fight, as you know you are, why not say
+ so?" Sir Edward, being Sir Edward and not Winston Churchill or Lloyd George, could
+ not admit that he was going to fight. He might have forestalled the dying Pope and
+ his noble Christian "I bless peace" by a noble, if heathen, "I fight war." Instead,
+ he persuaded us all that he was under no obligation whatever to fight. He persuaded
+ Germany that he had not the slightest serious intention of fighting. Sir Owen Seaman
+ wrote in <i>Punch</i> an amusing and witty No-Intervention poem. Sporting Liberals
+ offered any odds that there would be no war for England. And Germany, confident that
+ with Austria's help she could break France with one hand and Russia with the other if
+ England held aloof, let Austria throw the match into the magazine.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Battery Unmasked.</b></p>
+ <p>Then the Foreign Office, always acting through its amiable and popular but
+ confused instrument Sir Edward, unmasked the Junker-Militarist battery. He suddenly
+ announced that England must take a hand in the war, though he did not yet tell the
+ English people so, it being against the diplomatic tradition to tell them anything
+ until it is too late for them to object. But he told the German Ambassador, Prince
+ Lichnowsky, caught in a death trap, pleaded desperately for peace with Great Britain.
+ Would we promise to spare Germany if Belgium were left untouched? No. Would we say on
+ what conditions we would spare Germany? No. Not if the Germans promised not to annex
+ French territory? No. Not even if they prom<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21"
+ id="page21"></a>{21}</span>ised not to touch the French colonies? No. Was there no
+ way out? Sir Edward Grey was frank. He admitted there was just one chance; that
+ Liberal opinion might not stand the war if the neutrality of Belgium were not
+ violated. And he provided against that chance by committing England to the war the
+ day before he let the cat out of the bag in Parliament.</p>
+ <p>All this is recorded in the language of diplomacy in the White Paper on or between
+ the lines. That language is not so straightforward as my language; but at the crucial
+ points it is clear enough. Sazonoff's tone is politely diplomatic in No. 6; but in
+ No. 17 he lets himself go. "I do not believe that Germany really wants war; but her
+ attitude is decided by yours. If you take your stand firmly with France and Russia
+ there will be no war. If you fail them now, rivers of blood will flow, and you will
+ in the end be dragged into war." He was precisely right; but he did not realize that
+ war was exactly what our Junkers wanted. They did not dare to tell themselves so; and
+ naturally they did not dare to tell him so. And perhaps his own interest in war was
+ too strong to make him regret the rejection of his honest advice. To break up the
+ Austrian Empire and achieve for Russia the Slav Caliphate of South-East Europe whilst
+ defeating Prussia with the help of France and of Russia's old enemy and Prussia's old
+ ally England, was a temptation so enormous that Sazonoff, in resisting it so far as
+ to shew Sir Edward Grey frankly the only chance of preventing it, proved himself the
+ most genuine humanitarian in the diplomatic world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Number 123.</b></p>
+ <p>The decisive communication between Sir Edward Grey and Prince Lichnowsky is
+ recorded in the famous No. 123. With the rather childish subsequent attempt to
+ minimize No. 123 on the ground that the Prince was merely an amiable nincompoop who
+ did not really represent his fiendish sovereign, neither I nor any other serious
+ person need be concerned. What is beyond all controversy is that after that
+ conversation Prince Lichnowsky could do nothing but tell the Kaiser that the
+ <i>Entente</i>, having at last got his imperial head in chancery, was not going to
+ let him off on any terms, and that it was now a fight to a finish between the British
+ and German empires. Then the Kaiser said: "We are Germans. God help us!" When a crowd
+ of foolish students came cheering for the war under his windows, he bade them go to
+ the churches and pray. His telegrams to the Tsar (the omission of which from the
+ penny bluebook is, to say the least, not chivalrous) were dignified and pathetic. And
+ when the Germans, taking a line from the poet they call "unser Shakespeare," said:
+ "Come the four quarters of the world in arms and we shall shock them," it was, from
+ the romantic militarist point of view, fine. What Junker-led men could do they have
+ since done to make that thrasonical brag good. But there is no getting over the fact
+ that, in Tommy Atkins's phrase, they had asked for it. Their Junkers, like ours, had
+ drunk to The Day; and they should not have let us choose it after riling us for so
+ many years. And that is why Sir Edward had a great surprise when he at last owned up
+ in Parliament.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>How the Nation Took It.</b></p>
+ <p>The moment he said that we could not "stand aside with our arms folded" and see
+ our friend and neighbour France "bombarded and battered," the whole nation rose to
+ applaud him. All the Foreign Office distrust of public opinion, the concealment of
+ the Anglo-French plan of campaign, the disguise of the <i>Entente</i> in a quaker's
+ hat, the duping of the British public and the Kaiser with one and the same
+ prevarication, had been totally unnecessary and unpopular, like most of these
+ ingenuities which diplomatists think subtle and Machiavellian. The British Public had
+ all along been behind Mr. Winston Churchill. It had wanted Sir Edward to do just what
+ Sazonoff wanted him to do, and what I, in the columns of <i>The Daily News</i>
+ proposed he should do nine months ago (I must really be allowed to claim that I am
+ not merely wise after the event), which was to arm <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page22" id="page22"></a>{22}</span>to the teeth regardless of an expense which
+ to us would have been a mere fleabite, and tell Germany that if she, laid a finger on
+ France we would unite with France to defeat her, offering her at the same time as
+ consolation for that threat, the assurance that we would do as much to France if she
+ wantonly broke the peace in the like fashion by attacking Germany. No unofficial
+ Englishman worth his salt wanted to snivel hypocritically about our love of peace and
+ our respect for treaties and our solemn acceptance of a painful duty, and all the
+ rest of the nauseous mixture of school-master's twaddle, parish magazine cant, and
+ cinematograph melodrama with which we were deluged. We were perfectly ready to knock
+ the Kaiser's head off just to teach him that if he thought he was going to ride
+ roughshod over Europe, including our new friends the French, and the plucky little
+ Belgians, he was reckoning without old England. And in this pugnacious but perfectly
+ straightforward and human attitude the nation needed no excuses because the nation
+ honestly did not know that we were taking the Kaiser at a disadvantage, or that the
+ Franco-Russian alliance had been just as much a menace to peace as the Austro-German
+ one. But the Foreign Office knew that very well, and therefore began to manufacture
+ superfluous, disingenuous, and rather sickening excuses at a great rate. The nation
+ had a clean conscience, and was really innocent of any aggressive strategy: the
+ Foreign Office was redhanded, and did not want to be found out. Hence its
+ sermons.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Mr. H.G. Wells Hoists the Country's Flag.</b></p>
+ <p>It was Mr. H.G. Wells who at the critical moment spoke with the nation's voice.
+ When he uttered his electric outburst of wrath against "this drilling, trampling
+ foolery in the heart of Europe" he gave expression to the pent-up exasperation of
+ years of smouldering revolt against swank and domineer, guff and bugaboo, calling
+ itself blood and iron, and mailed fist, and God and conscience and anything else that
+ sounded superb. Like Nietzsche, we were "fed up" with the Kaiser's imprisonments of
+ democratic journalists for <i>Majestaetsbeleidigung</i> (monarch disparagement), with
+ his ancestors, and his mission, and his gospel of submission and obedience for poor
+ men, and of authority, tempered by duelling, for rich men. The world had become
+ sore-headed, and desired intensely that they who clatter the sword shall perish by
+ the sword. Nobody cared twopence about treaties: indeed, it was not for us, who had
+ seen the treaty of Berlin torn up by the brazen seizure of Bosnia and Herzegovina by
+ Austria in 1909, and taken that lying down, as Russia did, to talk about the
+ sacredness of treaties, even if the wastepaper baskets of the Foreign Offices were
+ not full of torn up "scraps of paper," and a very good thing too; for General von
+ Bernhardi's assumption that circumstances alter treaties is not a page from
+ Machiavelli: it is a platitude from the law books. The man in the street understood
+ little or nothing about Servia or Russia or any of the cards with which the
+ diplomatists were playing their perpetual game of Beggar my Neighbour. We were rasped
+ beyond endurance by Prussian Militarism and its contempt for us and for human
+ happiness and common sense; and we just rose at it and went for it. We have set out
+ to smash the Kaiser exactly as we set out to smash the Mahdi. Mr. Wells never
+ mentioned a treaty. He said, in effect: "There stands the monster all freedom-loving
+ men hate; and at last we are going to fight it." And the public, bored by the
+ diplomatists, said: "Now you're talking!" We did not stop to ask our consciences
+ whether the Prussian assumption that the dominion of the civilized earth belongs to
+ German culture is really any more bumptious than the English assumption that the
+ dominion of the sea belongs to British commerce. And in our island security we were
+ as little able as ever to realize the terrible military danger of Germany's
+ geographical position between France and England on her west flank and Russia on her
+ east: all three leagued for her de<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23"
+ id="page23"></a>{23}</span>struction; and how unreasonable it was to ask Germany to
+ lose the fraction of a second (much less Sir Maurice de Runsen's na&iuml;ve "a few
+ days' delay") in dashing at her Western foe when she could obtain no pledge as to
+ Western intentions. "We are now in a state of necessity; and Necessity knows no law,"
+ said the Imperial Chancellor in the Reichstag. "It is a matter of life and death to
+ us," said the German Minister for Foreign Affairs to our Ambassador in Berlin, who
+ had suddenly developed an extraordinary sense of the sacredness of the Treaty of
+ London, dated 1839, and still, as it happened, inviolate among the torn fragments of
+ many subsequent and similar "scraps of paper." Our Ambassador seems to have been of
+ Sir Maurice's opinion that there could be no such tearing hurry. The Germans could
+ enter France through the line of forts between Verdun and Toul if they were really
+ too flustered to wait a few days on the chance of Sir Edward Grey's persuasive
+ conversation and charming character softening Russia and bringing Austria to
+ conviction of sin. Thereupon the Imperial Chancellor, not being quite an angel, asked
+ whether we had counted the cost of crossing the path of an Empire fighting for its
+ life (for these Militarist statesmen do really believe that nations can be killed by
+ cannon shot). That was a threat; and as we cared nothing about Germany's peril, and
+ wouldn't stand being threatened any more by a Power of which we now had the inside
+ grip, the fat remained in the fire, blazing more fiercely than ever. There was only
+ one end possible to such a clash of high tempers, national egotisms, and reciprocal
+ ignorances.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Delicate Position of Mr. Asquith.</b></p>
+ <p>It seemed a splendid chance for the Government to place itself at the head of the
+ nation. But no British Government within my recollection has ever understood the
+ nation. Mr. Asquith, true to the Gladstonian tradition (hardly just to Gladstone, by
+ the way) that a Liberal Prime Minister should know nothing concerning foreign
+ politics and care less, and calmly insensible to the real nature of the popular
+ explosion, fell back on 1839, picking up the obvious barrister's point about the
+ violation of the neutrality of Belgium, and tried the equally obvious barrister's
+ claptrap about "an infamous proposal" on the jury. He assured us that nobody could
+ have done more for peace than Sir Edward Grey, though the rush to smash the Kaiser
+ was the most popular thing Sir Edward had ever done.</p>
+ <p>Besides, there was another difficulty. Mr. Asquith himself, though serenely
+ persuaded that he is a Liberal statesman, is, in effect, very much what the Kaiser
+ would have been if he had been a Yorkshireman and a lawyer, instead of being only
+ half English and the other half Hohenzollern, and an anointed emperor to boot. As far
+ as popular liberties are concerned, history will make no distinction between Mr.
+ Asquith and Metternich. He is forced to keep on the safe academic ground of Belgium
+ by the very obvious consideration that if he began to talk of the Kaiser's
+ imprisonments of editors and democratic agitators and so forth, a Homeric laughter,
+ punctuated with cries of, "How about Denshawai?" "What price Tom Mann?" "Votes for
+ women!" "Been in India lately?" "Make McKenna Kaiser," "Or dear old Herbert
+ Gladstone," etc., etc., would promptly spoil that pose. The plain fact is that,
+ Militarism apart, Germany is in many ways more democratic in practice than England;
+ indeed the Kaiser has been openly reviled as a coward by his Junkers because he falls
+ short of Mr. Asquith in calm indifference to Liberal principles and blank ignorance
+ of working-class sympathies, opinions, and interests.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Asquith had also to distract public attention from the fact that three
+ official members of his Government, all men of unquestioned and conspicuous
+ patriotism and intellectual honesty, walked straight out into private life on the
+ declaration of war. One of them, Mr. John Burns, did so at an enormous personal
+ sacrifice, and has since maintained a grim silence far more eloquent than the famous
+ speech <span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>{24}</span>Germany
+ invented for him. It is not generally believed that these three statesmen were
+ actuated by a passion for the violation of Belgian neutrality.</p>
+ <p>On the whole, it was impossible for the Government to seize its grand chance and
+ put itself at the head of the popular movement that responded to Sir Edward Grey's
+ declaration: the very simple reason being that the Government does not represent the
+ nation, and is in its sympathies just as much a Junker government as the Kaiser's.
+ And so, what the Government cannot do has to be done by unofficial persons with clean
+ and brilliant anti-Junker records like Mr. Wells, Mr. Arnold Bennett, Mr. Neil Lyons,
+ and Mr. Jerome K. Jerome. Neither Mr. Asquith nor Sir Edward Grey can grasp, as these
+ real spokesmen of their time do, the fact that we just simply want to put an end to
+ Potsdamnation, both at home and abroad. Both of them probably think Potsdam a very
+ fine and enviable institution, and want England to out-Potsdam Potsdam and to
+ monopolize the command of the seas; a monstrous aspiration. We, I take it, want to
+ guarantee that command of the sea which is the common heritage of mankind to the
+ tiniest State and the humblest fisherman that depends on the sea for a livelihood. We
+ want the North Sea to be as safe for everybody, English or German, as Portland
+ Place.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Need for Recrimination.</b></p>
+ <p>And now somebody who would rather I had not said all this (having probably talked
+ dreadful nonsense about Belgium and so forth for a month past) is sure to ask: "Why
+ all this recrimination? What is done is done. Is it not now the duty of every
+ Englishman to sink all differences in the face of the common peril?" etc., etc. To
+ all such prayers to be shielded from that terrible thing, the truth, I must reply
+ that history consists mainly of recrimination, and that I am writing history because
+ an accurate knowledge of what has occurred is not only indispensable to any sort of
+ reasonable behaviour on our part in the face of Europe when the inevitable day of
+ settlement comes, but because it has a practical bearing on the most perilously
+ urgent and immediate business before us: the business of the appeal to the nation for
+ recruits and for enormous sums of money. It has to decide the question whether that
+ appeal shall be addressed frankly to our love of freedom, and our tradition (none the
+ less noble and moving because it is so hard to reconcile with the diplomatic facts)
+ that England is a guardian of the world's liberty, and not to bad law about an
+ obsolete treaty, and cant about the diabolical personal disposition of the Kaiser,
+ and the wounded propriety of a peace-loving England, and all the rest of the slosh
+ and tosh that has been making John Bull sick for months past. No doubt at first, when
+ we were all clasping one another's hands very hard and begging one another not to be
+ afraid, almost anything was excusable. Even the war notes of Mr. Garvin, which stood
+ out as the notes of a gentleman amid a welter of scurrilous rubbish and a rather
+ blackguardly <i>Punch</i> cartoon mocking the agony of Berlin (<i>Punch</i> having
+ turned its non-interventionist coat very promptly), had sometimes to run: "We know
+ absolutely nothing of what is happening at the front, except that the heroism of the
+ British troops will thrill the ages to the last syllable of recorded time," or words
+ to that effect. But now it is time to pull ourselves together; to feel our muscle; to
+ realize the value of our strength and pluck; and to tell the truth unashamed like men
+ of courage and character, not to shirk it like the official apologists of a Foreign
+ Office plot.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>What Germany Should Have Done.</b></p>
+ <p>And first, as I despise critics who put people in the wrong without being able to
+ set them right, I shall, before I go any further with my criticism of our official
+ position, do the Government and the Foreign Office the service of finding a correct
+ official position for them; for I admit that the popular position, though sound as
+ far as it goes, is too crude for official use. This correct official position can be
+ found only by considering what Germany should have done, and might have done had she
+ not <span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>{25}</span>been, like our
+ own Junkers, so fascinated by the Militarist craze, and obsessed by the chronic
+ Militarist panic, that she was "in too great hurry to bid the devil good morning."
+ The matter is simple enough: she should have entrusted the security of her western
+ frontier to the public opinion of the west of Europe and to America, and fought
+ Russia, if attacked, with her rear not otherwise defended. The Militarist theory is
+ that we, France and England, would have immediately sprung at her from behind; but
+ that is just how the Militarist theory gets its votaries into trouble by assuming
+ that Europe is a chess board. Europe is not a chess board; but a populous continent
+ in which only a very few people are engaged in military chess; and even those few
+ have many other things to consider besides capturing their adversary's king. Not only
+ would it have been impossible for England to have attacked Germany under such
+ circumstances; but if France had done so England could not have assisted her, and
+ might even have been compelled by public opinion to intervene by way of a joint
+ protest from England and America, or even by arms, on her behalf if she were
+ murderously pressed on both flanks. Even our Militarists and diplomatists would have
+ had reasons for such an intervention. An aggressive Franco-Russian hegemony, if it
+ crushed Germany, would be quite as disagreeable to us as a German one. Thus Germany
+ would at worst have been fighting Russia and France with the sympathy of all the
+ other Powers, and a chance of active assistance from some of them, especially those
+ who share her hostility to the Russian Government. Had France not attacked
+ her&mdash;and though I am as ignorant of the terms of the Franco-Russian alliance as
+ Sir Edward Grey is strangely content to be, I cannot see how the French Government
+ could have justified to its own people a fearfully dangerous attack on Germany had
+ Russia been the aggressor&mdash;Germany would have secured fair play for her fight
+ with Russia. But even the fight with Russia was not inevitable. The ultimatum to
+ Servia was the escapade of a dotard: a worse crime than the assassination that
+ provoked it. There is no reason to doubt the conclusion in Sir Maurice de Bunsen's
+ despatch (No. 161) that it could have been got over, and that Russia and Austria
+ would have thought better of fighting and come to terms. Peace was really on the
+ cards; and the sane game was to play for it.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Achilles Heel of Militarism.</b></p>
+ <p>Instead, Germany flew at France's throat, and by incidentally invading Belgium
+ gave us the excuse our Militarists wanted to attack her with the full sympathy of the
+ nation. Why did she do this stupid thing? Not because of the counsels of General von
+ Bernhardi. On the contrary, he had warned her expressly against allowing herself to
+ be caught between Russia and a Franco-British combination until she had formed a
+ counterbalancing alliance with America, Italy, and Turkey. And he had most certainly
+ not encouraged her to depend on England sparing her: on the contrary, he could not
+ sufficiently admire the wily ruthlessness with which England watches her opportunity
+ and springs at her foe when the foe is down. (He little knew, poor man, how much he
+ was flattering our capacity for Realpolitik!) But he had reckoned without his creed's
+ fatal and fundamental weakness, which is, that as Junker-Militarism promotes only
+ stupid people and snobs, and suppresses genuine realists as if they were snakes, it
+ always turns out when a crisis arrives that "the silly people don't know their own
+ silly business." The Kaiser and his ministers made an appalling mess of their job.
+ They were inflamed by Bernhardi; but they did not understand him. They swallowed his
+ flattery, but did not take in his strategy or his warnings. They knew that when the
+ moment came to face the Franco-Russian alliance, they were to make a magnificient
+ dash at France and sweep her pieces off the great chess board before the Russians had
+ time to mobilize; and then return and crush <span class="pagenum"><a name="page26"
+ id="page26"></a>{26}</span>Russia, leaving the conquest of England for another day.
+ This was honestly as much as their heads could hold at one time; and they were
+ helplessly unable to consider whether the other conditions postulated by Bernhardi
+ were present, or indeed, in the excitement of their schoolboyish imaginations, to
+ remember whether he had postulated any at all. And so they made their dash and put
+ themselves in the wrong at every point morally, besides making victory humanly
+ impossible for themselves militarily. That is the nemesis of Militarism: the
+ Militarist is thrown into a big game which he is too stupid to be able to play
+ successfully. Philip of Spain tried it 300 years ago; and the ruin he brought on his
+ empire has lasted to this day. He was so stupid that though he believed himself to be
+ the chosen instrument of God (as sure a sign of a hopeless fool in a man who cannot
+ see that every other man is equally an instrument of that Power as it is a guarantee
+ of wisdom and goodwill in the man who respects his neighbor as himself) he attempted
+ to fight Drake on the assumption that a cannon was a weapon that no real gentleman
+ and good Catholic would condescend to handle. Louis XIV. tried again two centuries
+ ago, and, being a more frivolous fool, got beaten by Marlborough and sent his
+ great-grandson from the throne to the guillotine. Napoleon tried it 100 years ago. He
+ was more dangerous, because he had prodigious personal ability and technical military
+ skill; and he started with the magnificent credential of the French Revolution. All
+ that carried him farther than the Spanish bigot or the French fop; but he, too,
+ accreted fools and knaves, and ended defeated in St. Helena after pandering for
+ twenty years to the appetite of idiots for glory and bloodshed; waging war as "a
+ great game"; and finding in a field strewn with corpses "un beau spectacle." In
+ short, as strong a magnet to fools as the others, though so much abler.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Our Own True Position</b>.</p>
+ <p>Now comes the question, in what position did this result of a mad theory and a
+ hopelessly incompetent application of it on the part of Potsdam place our own
+ Government? It left us quite clearly in the position of the responsible policeman of
+ the west. There was nobody else in Europe strong enough to chain "the mad dog."
+ Belgium and Holland, Norway and Sweden, Denmark and Switzerland could hardly have
+ been expected to take that duty on themselves, even if Norway and Sweden had not good
+ reason to be anti-Russian, and the Dutch capitalists were not half convinced that
+ their commercial prosperity would be greater under German than under native rule. It
+ will not be contended that Spain could have done anything; and as to Italy, it was
+ doubtful whether she did not consider herself still a member of the Triple Alliance.
+ It was evidently England or nobody. For England to have refrained, from hurling
+ herself into the fray, horse, foot, and artillery, was impossible from every point of
+ view. From the democratic point of view it would have meant an acceptance of the
+ pretension of which Potsdam, by attacking the French Republic, had made itself the
+ champion: that is, the pretension of the Junker class to dispose of the world on
+ Militarist lines at the expense of the lives and limbs of the masses. From the
+ international Socialist point of view, it would have been the acceptance of the
+ extreme nationalist view that the people of other countries are foreigners, and that
+ it does not concern us if they choose to cut one another's throats. Our Militarist
+ Junkers cried "If we let Germany conquer France it will be our turn next." Our
+ romantic Junkers added "and serve us right too: what man will pity us when the hour
+ strikes for us, if we skulk now?" Even the wise, who loathe war, and regard it as
+ such a dishonour and disgrace in itself that all its laurels cannot hide its brand of
+ Cain, had to admit that police duty is necessary and that war must be made on such
+ war as the Germans had made by attacking France in an avowed attempt to substitute a
+ hegemony of cannon for the comity of nations. There was no <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page27" id="page27"></a>{27}</span>alternative. Had the Foreign Office been the
+ International Socialist Bureau, had Sir Edward Grey been Jaures, had Mr. Ramsay
+ MacDonald been Prime Minister, had Russia been Germany's ally instead of ours, the
+ result would still have been the same: we must have drawn the sword to save France
+ and smash Potsdam as we smashed and always must smash Philip, Louis, Napoleon, <i>et
+ hoc genus omne</i>.</p>
+ <p>The case for our action is thus as complete as any <i>casus belli</i> is ever
+ likely to be. In fact its double character as both a democratic and military (if not
+ Militarist) case makes it too complete; for it enables our Junkers to claim it
+ entirely for themselves, and to fake it with pseudo-legal justifications which
+ destroy nine-tenths of our credit, the military and legal cases being hardly a tenth
+ of the whole: indeed, they would not by themselves justify the slaughter of a single
+ Pomeranian grenadier. For instance, take the Militarist view that we must fight
+ Potsdam because if the Kaiser is victorious, it will be our turn next! Well: are we
+ not prepared to fight always when our turn comes? Why should not we also depend on
+ our navy, on the extreme improbability of Germany, however triumphant, making two
+ such terrible calls on her people in the same generation as a war involves, on the
+ sympathy of the defeated, and on the support of American and European public opinion
+ when our turn comes, if there is nothing at stake now but the difference between
+ defeat and victory in an otherwise indifferent military campaign? If the welfare of
+ the world does not suffer any more by an English than by a German defeat who cares
+ whether we are defeated or not? As mere competitors in a race of armaments and an
+ Olympic game conducted with ball cartridge, or as plaintiffs in a technical case of
+ international law (already decided against us in 1870, by the way, when Gladstone had
+ to resort to a new treaty made <i>ad hoc</i> and lapsing at the end of the war) we
+ might as well be beaten as not, for all the harm that will ensue to anyone but
+ ourselves, or even to ourselves apart from our national vanity. It is as the special
+ constables of European life that we are important, and can send our men to the
+ trenches with the assurance that they are fighting in a worthy cause. In short, the
+ Junker case is not worth twopence: the Democratic case, the Socialist case, the
+ International case is worth all it threatens to cost.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The German Defence to Our Indictment.</b></p>
+ <p>What is the German reply to this case? Or rather, how would the Germans reply to
+ it if their official Militarist and Kaiserist panjandrums had the wit to find the
+ effective reply? Undoubtedly they would say that our Social-Democratic professions
+ are all very fine, but that our conversion to them is suspiciously sudden and recent.
+ They would remark that it is a little difficult for a nation in deadly peril to trust
+ its existence to a foreign public opinion which has not only never been expressed by
+ the people who really control England's foreign policy, but is flatly opposed to all
+ their known views and prejudices. They would ask why, instead of making an
+ <i>Entente</i> with France and Russia and refusing to give Germany any assurance
+ concerning its object except that we would not pledge ourselves to remain neutral if
+ the Franco-Russian <i>Entente</i> fell on Germany, we did not say straight out in
+ 1912 (when they put the question flatly to us), and again last July when Sazonoff
+ urged us so strongly to shew our hand, that if Germany attacked France we should
+ fight her, Russia or no Russia (a far less irritating and provocative attitude),
+ although we knew full well that an attack on France through Belgium would be part of
+ the German program if the Russian peril became acute. They would point out that if
+ our own Secretary for Foreign Affairs openly disclaimed any knowledge of the terms of
+ the Franco-Russian alliance, it was hard for a German to believe that they were
+ wholly fit for publication. In short, they would say "If you were so jolly wise and
+ well intentioned before the event, why did not your Foreign Minister and your
+ ambassadors in Berlin and Vienna and St. Petersburg&mdash;we beg pardon, Petro<span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>{28}</span>grad&mdash;invite us to
+ keep the peace and rely on western public opinion instead of refusing us every pledge
+ except the hostile one to co-operate with France against us in the North Sea, and
+ making it only too plain to us that your policy was a Junker policy as much as ours,
+ and that we had nothing to hope from your goodwill? What evidence had we that you
+ were playing any other game than this Militarist chess of our own, which you now so
+ piously renounce, but which none of you except a handful of Socialists whom you
+ despise and Syndicalists whom you imprison on Militarist pretexts has opposed for
+ years past, though it has been all over your Militarist anti-German platforms and
+ papers and magazines? Are your Social-Democratic principles sincere, or are they only
+ a dagger you keep up your sleeve to stab us in the back when our two most formidable
+ foes are trying to garotte us? If so, where does your moral superiority come in,
+ hypocrites that you are? If not, why, we repeat, did you not make them known to all
+ the world, instead of making an ambush for us by your senseless silence?"</p>
+ <p>I see no reply to that except a frank confession that we did not know our own
+ minds; that we came to a knowledge of them only when Germany's attack on France
+ forced us to make them up at last; that though doubtless a chronic state of perfect
+ lucidity and long prevision on our part would have been highly convenient, yet there
+ is a good deal to be said for the policy of not fording a stream until you come to
+ it; and that in any case we must entirely decline to admit that we are more likely
+ than other people to do the wrong thing when circumstances at last oblige us to think
+ and act. Also that the discussion is idle on the shewing of the German case itself;
+ for whether the Germans assumed us to be unscrupulous Militarists or conscientious
+ Democrats they were bound to come to the same conclusion: namely, that we should
+ attack them if they attacked France; consequently their assumption that we would not
+ interfere must have been based on the belief that we are simply "contemptible," which
+ is the sort of mistake people have to pay for in this wicked world.</p>
+ <p>On the whole, we can hector our way in the Prussian manner out of that discussion
+ well enough, provided we hold our own in the field. But the Prussian manner hardly
+ satisfies the conscience. True, the fact that our diplomatists were not able to
+ discover the right course for Germany does not excuse Germany for being unable to
+ find it for herself. Not that it was more her business than ours: it was a European
+ question, and should have been solved by the united counsels of all the ambassadors
+ and Foreign Offices and chanceries. Indeed it could not have been stably solved
+ without certain assurances from them. But it was, to say the least, as much Germany's
+ business as anyone else's, and terribly urgent for her: "a matter of life and death,"
+ the Imperial Chancellor thought. Still, it is not for us to claim moral superiority
+ to Germany. It was for us a matter of the life and death of many Englishmen; and
+ these Englishmen are dead because our diplomatists were as blind as the Prussians.
+ The war is a failure for secret Junker diplomacy, ours no less than the enemy's.
+ Those of us who have still to die must be inspired, not by devotion to the
+ diplomatists, but, like the Socialist hero of old on the barricade, by the vision of
+ "human solidarity." And if he purchases victory for that holy cause with his blood, I
+ submit that we cannot decently allow the Foreign Office to hang up his martyr's palm
+ over the War Office Mantelpiece.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The First Penalty of Disingenuousness.</b></p>
+ <p>The Foreign Office, however, can at lease shift its ground, and declare for the
+ good cause instead of belittling it with quibbling excuses. For see what the first
+ effect of the nonsense about Belgium has been! It carried with it the inevitable
+ conclusion that when the last German was cleared off Belgian soil, peace-loving
+ England, her reluctant work in this shocking war done, would calmly retire from the
+ conflict, and leave her <span class="pagenum"><a name="page29"
+ id="page29"></a>{29}</span>Allies to finish the deal with Potsdam. Accordingly, after
+ Mr. Asquith's oration at the Mansion House, the Allies very properly insisted on our
+ signing a solemn treaty between the parties that they must all stand together to the
+ very end. A pitifully thin attempt has been made to represent that the mistrusted
+ party was France, and that the Kaiser was trying to buy her off. All one can say to
+ that is that the people who believe that any French Government dare face the French
+ people now with anything less than Alsace and Lorraine as the price of peace, or that
+ an undefeated and indeed masterfully advancing German Kaiser (as he seemed then) dare
+ offer France such a price, would believe anything. Of course we had to sign; but if
+ the Prime Minister had not been prevented by his own past from taking the popular
+ line, we should not have been suspected of a possible backing-out when the demands of
+ our sanctimoniousness were satisfied. He would have known that we are not vindicating
+ a treaty which by accident remains among the fragments of treaties of Paris, of
+ Prague, of Berlin, of all sorts of places and dates, as the only European treaty that
+ has hitherto escaped flat violation: we are supporting the war as a war on war, on
+ military coercion, on domineering, on bullying, on brute force, on military law, on
+ caste insolence, on what Mrs. Fawcett called insensable deviltry (only to find the
+ papers explaining apologetically that she, as a lady, had of course been alluding to
+ war made by foreigners, not by England). Some of us, remembering the things we have
+ ourselves said and done, may doubt whether Satan can cast out Satan; but as the job
+ is not exactly one for an unfallen angel, we may as well let him have a try.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Blank Cheque.</b></p>
+ <p>In the meantime behold us again hopelessly outwitted by Eastern diplomacy as a
+ direct consequence of this ill-starred outburst of hypocrisy about treaties!
+ Everybody has said over and over again that this war is the most tremendous war ever
+ waged. Nobody has said that this new treaty is the most tremendous blank cheque we
+ have ever been forced to sign by our Parliamentary party trick of striking moral
+ attitudes. It is true that Mr. J.A. Hobson realised the situation at once, and was
+ allowed to utter a little croak in a corner; but where was the trumpet note of
+ warning that should have rung throughout the whole Press? Just consider what the
+ blank cheque means. France's draft on it may stop at the cost of recovering Alsace
+ and Lorraine. We shall have to be content with a few scraps of German colony and the
+ heavy-weight championship. But Russia? When will she say "Hold! Enough!" Suppose she
+ wants not only Poland, but Baltic Prussia? Suppose she wants Constantinople as her
+ port of access to the unfrozen seas, in addition to the dismemberment of Austria?
+ Suppose she has the brilliant idea of annexing all Prussia, for which there is really
+ something to be said by ethnographical map-makers, Militarist madmen, and Pan-Slavist
+ megalomaniacs? It may be a reasonable order; but it is a large one; and the fact that
+ we should have been committed to it without the knowledge of Parliament, without
+ discussion, without warning, without any sort of appeal to public opinion or
+ democratic sanction, by a stroke of Sir Edward Grey's pen within five weeks of his
+ having committed us in the same fashion to an appalling European war, shews how
+ completely the Foreign Office has thrown away all pretence of being any less absolute
+ than the Kaiser himself. It simply offers <i>carte blanche</i> to the armies of the
+ Allies without a word to the nation until the cheque is signed. The only limit there
+ is to the obligation is the certainty that the cheque will be dishonoured the moment
+ the draft on it becomes too heavy. And that may furnish a virtuous pretext for
+ another war between the Allies themselves. In any case no treaty can save each Ally
+ from the brute necessity of surrendering and paying up if beaten, whether the defeat
+ is shared by the others or not. Did I not say that the sooner we made up our minds to
+ the terms of the treaty of peace, so that we might know what we were fighting for,
+ and how far we <span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>{30}</span>were
+ bound to go, the better? Instead of which we sign a ridiculous "scrap of paper" to
+ save ourselves the intolerable fatigue of thought.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Belgium Crucified Between the European Powers.</b></p>
+ <p>And now, before I leave the subject of Belgium, what have we done for Belgium?
+ Have we saved her soil from invasion? Were we at her side with half a million men
+ when the avalanche fell on her? Or were we safe in our own country praising her
+ heroism in paragraphs which all contrived to convey an idea that the Belgian soldier
+ is about four feet high, but immensely plucky for his size? Alas, when the Belgian
+ soldier cried: "Where are the English?" the reply was "a mass of concrete as large as
+ a big room," blown into the air by a German siege gun, falling back and crushing him
+ into the earth we had not succeeded in saving from the worst of the horrors of war.
+ We have not protected Belgium: Belgium has protected us at the cost of being
+ conquered by Germany. It is now our sacred duty to drive the Germans out of Belgium.
+ Meanwhile we might at least rescue her refugees by a generous grant of public money
+ from the caprices of private charity. We need not press our offer to lend her money:
+ German capitalists will do that for her with the greatest pleasure when the war is
+ over. I think the Government realizes that now; for I note the after-thought that a
+ loan from us need not bear interest.</p>
+ <p>Now that we begin to see where we really are, what practical morals can we
+ draw?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Unpreparedness the Price of Secrecy.</b></p>
+ <p>First, that our autocratic foreign policy, in which the Secretary for Foreign
+ Affairs is always a Junker, and makes war and concludes war without consulting the
+ nation, or confiding in it, or even refraining from deceiving it as to his
+ intentions, leads inevitably to a disastrous combination of war and unpreparedness
+ for war. Wars are planned which require huge expeditionary armies trained and
+ equipped for war. But as such preparation could not be concealed from the public, it
+ is simply deferred until the war is actually declared and begun, at the most
+ frightful risk of such an annihilation of our little peace army as we escaped by the
+ skin of our teeth at Mons and Cambrai. The military experts tell us that it takes
+ four months to make an infantry and six to make a cavalry soldier. And our way of
+ getting an army able to fight the German army is to declare war on Germany just as if
+ we had such an army, and then trust to the appalling resultant peril and disaster to
+ drive us into wholesale enlistment, voluntary or (better still from the Junker point
+ of view) compulsory. It seems to me that a nation which tolerates such insensate
+ methods and outrageous risks must shortly perish from sheer lunacy. And it is all
+ pure superstition: the retaining of the methods of Edward the First in the reign of
+ George the Fifth. I therefore suggest that the first lesson of the war is that the
+ Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs be reduced to the level of a simple Prime
+ Minister, or even of a constitutional monarch, powerless to fire a single shot or
+ sign a treaty without the authority of the House of Commons, all diplomatic business
+ being conducted in a blaze of publicity, and the present regulation which exacts the
+ qualification of a private income of at least &pound;400 a year for a position in the
+ Diplomatic Service replaced by a new regulation that at least half the staff shall
+ consist of persons who have never dined out at the houses of hosts of higher rank
+ than unfashionable solicitors or doctors.</p>
+ <p>In these recommendations I am not forgetting that an effective check on diplomacy
+ is not easy to devise, and that high personal character and class disinterestedness
+ (the latter at present unattainable) on the part of our diplomatists will be as vital
+ as ever. I well know that diplomacy is carried on at present not only by official
+ correspondence meant for possible publication and subject to an inspection which is
+ in some degree a responsible inspection, but by private letters which the King
+ himself has no right <span class="pagenum"><a name="page31"
+ id="page31"></a>{31}</span>to read. I know that even in the United States, where
+ treaties and declarations of war must be made by Parliament, it is nevertheless
+ possible for the President to bring about a situation in which Congress, like our
+ House of Commons in the present instance, has no alternative but to declare war. But
+ though complete security is impracticable, it does not follow that no precautions
+ should be taken, or that a democratic tradition is no safer than a feudal tradition.
+ A far graver doubt is raised by the susceptibility of the masses to war fever, and
+ the appalling danger of a daily deluge of cheap newspapers written by nameless men
+ and women whose scandalously low payment is a guarantee of their ignorance and their
+ servility to the financial department, controlled by a moneyed class which not only
+ curries favour with the military caste for social reasons, but has large direct
+ interests in war as a method of raising the price of money, the only commodity the
+ moneyed class has to sell. But I am quite unable to see that our Junkers are less
+ susceptible to the influence of the Press than the people educated by public
+ elementary schools. On the contrary, our Democrats are more fool-proof than our
+ Plutocrats; and the ravings our Junkers send to the papers for nothing in war time
+ would be dear at a halfpenny a line. Plutocracy makes for war because it offers
+ prizes to Plutocrats: Socialism makes for peace because the interests it serves are
+ international. So, as the Socialist side is the democratic side, we had better
+ democratize our diplomacy if we desire peace.</p>
+ <h3>II.</h3>
+ <h3>RECRUITING.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>And now as to the question of recruiting. This is pressing, because it is not
+ enough for the Allies to win: we and not Russia must be the decisive factor in the
+ victory, or Germany will not be fairly beaten, and we shall be only rescued
+ <i>proteges</i> of Russia instead of the saviours of Western Europe. We must have the
+ best army in Europe; and we shall not get it under existing arrangements. We are
+ passing out of the first phase of the war fever, in which men flock to the colours by
+ instinct, by romantic desire for adventure, by the determination not, as Wagner put
+ it, "to let their lives be governed by fear of the end," by simple destitution
+ through unemployment, by rancour and pugnacity excited by the inventions of the
+ Press, by a sense of duty inculcated in platform orations which would not stand half
+ an hour's discussion, by the incitements and taunts of elderly non-combatants and
+ maidens with a taste for mischief, and by the verses of poets jumping at the cheapest
+ chance in their underpaid profession. The difficulty begins when all the men
+ susceptible to these inducements are enlisted, and we have to draw on the solid,
+ sceptical, sensible residuum who know the value of their lives and services and
+ liberties, and will not give them except on substantial and honourable conditions.
+ These Ironsides know that it is one thing to fight for your country, and quite
+ another to let your wife and children starve to save our rich idlers from a rise in
+ the supertax. They also know that it is one thing to wipe out the Prussian drill
+ sergeant and snob officer as the enemies of manhood and honour, and another to let
+ that sacred mission be made an excuse for subjecting us to exactly the same tyranny
+ in England. They have not forgotten the "On the knee" episode, nor the floggings in
+ our military prisons, nor the scandalous imprisonment of Tom Mann, nor the warnings
+ as to military law and barrack life contained even in Robert Blatchford's testimony
+ that the army made a man of him.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>What the Labour Party Owes to the Army.</b></p>
+ <p>And here is where the Labour Party should come in. The Labour Party's business is
+ to abolish the Militarist soldier, who is only a quaint survival of the King's
+ footman (himself a still quainter survival of the medieval baron's retainer), and
+ substitute for him a trained combatant with full civil rights, receiving the Trade
+ Union rate of wages proper to a skilled worker at <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page32" id="page32"></a>{32}</span>a dangerous trade. It must co-operate with
+ the Trade Unions in fixing this moral minimum wage for the citizen soldier, and in
+ obtaining for him a guarantee that the wage shall continue until he obtains civil
+ employment on standard terms at the conclusion of the war. It must make impossible
+ the scandal of a monstrously rich peer (his riches, the automatic result of ground
+ land-landlordism, having "no damned nonsense of merit about them") proclaiming the
+ official weekly allowance for the child of the British soldier in the trenches. That
+ allowance is eighteenpence, being less than one third of the standard allowance for
+ an illegitimate child under an affiliation order. And the Labour Party must deprive
+ the German bullet of its present double effect in killing an Englishman in France and
+ simultaneously reducing his widow's subsistence from a guinea a week to five
+ shillings. Until this is done we are simply provoking Providence to destroy us.</p>
+ <p>I wish I could say that it is hardly necessary to add that Trade Unionism must be
+ instituted in the Army, so that there shall be accredited secretaries in the field to
+ act as a competent medium of communication between the men on service and the
+ political representatives of their class at the War Office (for I shall propose this
+ representative innovation presently). It will shock our colonels; but I know of no
+ bodies of men for whom repeated and violent shocking is more needed and more likely
+ to prove salutary than the regimental masses of the British army. One rather pleasant
+ shock in store for them is the discovery that an officer and a gentleman, whose sole
+ professional interest is the honour and welfare of his country, and who is bound to
+ the mystical equality of life-and-death duty for all alike, will get on much more
+ easily with a Trade Union secretary than a commercial employer whose aim is simply
+ private profit and who regards every penny added to the wages of his employees as a
+ penny taken off his own income. Howbeit, whether the colonels like it or
+ not&mdash;that is, whether they have become accustomed to it or not&mdash;it has to
+ come, and its protection from Junker prejudice is another duty of the Labour Party.
+ The Party as a purely political body must demand that the defender of his country
+ shall retain his full civil rights unimpaired; that, the unnecessary, mischievous,
+ dishonourable and tyrannical slave code called military law, which at its most
+ savagely stern point produced only Wellington's complaint that "it is impossible to
+ get a command obeyed in the British Army," be carted away to the rubbish heap of
+ exploded superstitions; and that if Englishmen are not to be allowed to serve their
+ country in the field as freely as they do in the numerous civil industries in which
+ neglect and indiscipline are as dangerous as they are in war, their leaders and
+ Parliamentary representatives will not recommend them to serve at all. In wartime
+ these things may not matter: discipline either goes by the board or keeps itself
+ under the pressure of the enemy's cannon; and bullying sergeants and insolent
+ officers have something else to do than to provoke men they dislike into striking
+ them and then reporting them for two years' hard labour without trial by jury. In
+ battle such officers are between two fires. But soldiers are not always, or even
+ often, at war; and the dishonour of abdicating dearly-bought rights and liberties is
+ a stain both on war and peace. Now is the time to get rid of that stain. If any
+ officer cannot command men without it, as civilians and police inspectors do, that
+ officer has mistaken his profession and had better come home.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <center>
+ <br />
+ <a href="images/galsworthy.jpg"> <img src='images/galsworthy_thumb.jpg' width='252'
+ height='400' alt='JOHN GALSWORTHY. (Photo by E.O. Hoppe.) See Page 102' title='
+ JOHN GALSWORTHY' /></a> <a href="images/kipling.jpg"><img src='images/kipling_thumb.jpg'
+ width='253' height='400' alt='RUDYARD KIPLING (Photo by E.O. Hoppe)See Page 106'
+ title='RUDYARD KIPLING' /> <br />
+ </a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>JOHN GALSWORTHY. (Photo by E.O. Hoppe.) See <a href="#page102">Page
+ 102</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>RUDYARD KIPLING. (Photo by E.O. Hoppe.) See <a href="#page106">Page
+ 106</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <p><b>Obsolete Tests in the Army.</b></p>
+ <p>Another matter needs to be dealt with at the same time. There are immense numbers
+ of atheists in this country; and though most of them, like the Kaiser, regard
+ themselves as devout Christians, the best are intellectually honest enough to object
+ to profess beliefs they do not hold, especially in the solemn act of dedicating
+ themselves to death in the service of their country. Army form E 501 A (September,
+ 1912) secured to these the benefit<span class="pagenum"><a name="page33"
+ id="page33"></a>{33}</span> of the Bradlaugh Affirmation Act of 1888, as the
+ enlisting soldier said simply "I, So and So, do make Oath, &amp;c." But recruits are
+ now confronted with another form (E 501, June, 1914) running "I, So and So, swear by
+ Almighty God, &amp;c." On September 1st, at Lord Kitchener's call, a civil servant
+ obtained leave to enlist and had the oath put to him, in this form by the attesting
+ officer. He offered to swear in the 1912 form. This was refused; and we accordingly
+ lost a recruit of just that sturdily conscientious temper which has made the most
+ formidable soldiers known to history. I am bound to add, however, that the attesting
+ officer, on being told that the oath would be a blasphemous farce to the conscience
+ of the recruit, made no difficulty about that, and was quite willing to accept him if
+ he, on his part, would oblige by professing what he did not believe. Thus a Ghoorka's
+ religious conscience is respected: an Englishman's is insulted and outraged.</p>
+ <p>But, indeed, all these oaths are obstructive and useless superstitions. No recruit
+ will hesitate to pledge his word of honour to fight to the death for his country or
+ for a cause with which he sympathizes; and that is all we require. There is no need
+ to drag in Almighty God and no need to drag in the King. Many an Irishman, many a
+ colonial Republican, many an American volunteer who would fight against the Prussian
+ monarchy shoulder to shoulder with the French Republicans with a will, would rather
+ not pretend to do it out of devotion to the British throne. To vanquish Prussia in
+ this war we need the active aid or the sympathy of every Republican in the world.
+ America, for instance, sympathizes with England, but classes the King with the Kaiser
+ as an obsolete institution. Besides, even from the courtly point of view the
+ situation is a delicate one. Why emphasize the fact that, formally speaking, the war
+ is between two grandsons of Albert the Good, that thoroughbred German whose London
+ monument is so much grander than Cromwell's?</p>
+ <p>The Labour Party should also set its face firmly against the abandonment of Red
+ Cross work and finance, or the support of soldiers' families, or the patrolling of
+ the streets, to amateurs who regard the war as a wholesome patriotic exercise, or as
+ the latest amusement in the way of charity bazaars, or as a fountain of
+ self-righteousness. Civil volunteering is needed urgently enough: one of the
+ difficulties of war is that it creates in certain departments a demand so abnormal
+ that no peace establishment can cope with it. But the volunteers should be
+ disciplined and paid: we are not so poor that we need spunge on anyone. And in
+ hospital and medical service war ought not at present to cost more than peace would
+ if the victims of our commercial system were properly tended, and our Public Health
+ service adequately extended and manned. We should therefore treat our Red Cross
+ department as if it were destined to become a permanent service. No charity and no
+ amateur anarchy and incompetence should be tolerated. As to allowing that admirable
+ detective agency for the defence of the West End against begging letter writers, the
+ Charity Organization Society to touch the soldier's home, the very suggestion is an
+ outrage. The C.O.S., the Poor Law, and the charitable amateur, whether of the
+ patronizing or prying or gushing variety, must be kept as far from the army and its
+ folk as if they were German spies. The business of our fashionable amateurs is to pay
+ Income Tax and Supertax. This time they will have to pay through the nose, vigorously
+ wrung for that purpose by the House of Commons; so they had better set their own
+ houses in order and leave the business of the war to be officially and responsibly
+ dealt with and paid for at full standard rates.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Wanted: Labour Representation in the War Office.</b></p>
+ <p>But parliamentary activity is not sufficient. There must be a more direct contact
+ between representative Labour and the Army, because Parliament can only remedy
+ grievances, and that not be<span class="pagenum"><a name="page34"
+ id="page34"></a>{34}</span>fore years of delay and agitation elapse. Even then the
+ grievances are not dealt with on their merits; for under our party system, which is
+ the most abominable engine for the perversion and final destruction of all political
+ conscience ever devized by man, the House of Commons never votes on any question but
+ whether the Government shall remain in office or give the Opposition a turn, no
+ matter what the pretext for the division may be. Only in such emergencies as the
+ present, when the Government is forced to beg the Labour members to help them to
+ recruit, is there a chance of making reasonable conditions for the soldier.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Four Inoculations.</b></p>
+ <p>It is therefore necessary that the War Office should have working class
+ representatives on all committees and councils which issue notices to the public.
+ There is at present, it would seem, not a single person in authority there who has
+ the faintest notion of what the immense majority of possible British recruits are
+ thinking about. The results have been beyond description ludicrous and dangerous.
+ Every proclamation is urgently worded so as to reassure recruits with &pound;5,000 a
+ year and repel recruits with a pound a week. On the very day when the popular Lord
+ Kitchener, dropping even the <i>et rex meus</i> of Wolsey, frankly asked the nation
+ for 100,000 men for his army, and when it was a matter of life and death that every
+ encouragement should be held out to working men to enlist, the War Office decided
+ that this was the psychological moment to remind everybody that soldiers on active
+ service often die of typhoid fever, and to press inoculation on the recruits pending
+ the officially longed-for hour when Sir Almroth Wright's demand for compulsion can be
+ complied with. I say nothing here about the efficacy of inoculation. Efficacious or
+ not, Sir Almroth Wright himself bases his demand for compulsion on the ground that it
+ is hopeless to expect the whole army to submit to it voluntarily. That being so, it
+ seems to me that when men are hesitating on the threshold of the recruiting station,
+ only a German spy or our War Office (always worth ten thousand men to our enemies)
+ would seize that moment to catch the nervous postulant by the sleeve and say, "Have
+ you thought of the danger of dysentery?" The fact that the working class forced the
+ Government, very much against its doctor-ridden will, to abolish compulsory
+ vaccination, shews the extent to which its households loathe and dread these vaccines
+ (so called, but totally unconnected with cows or Jenner) which, as they are
+ continually reminded by energetic anti-inoculation propagandists in largely
+ circulated journals and pamphlets, not to mention ghastly photographs of disfigured
+ children, sometimes produce worse effects than the diseases they are supposed to
+ prevent. Indifferent or careless recruits are easily induced to submit to inoculation
+ by little privileges during the ensuing indisposition or by small money bribes; and
+ careful ones are proselytized by Sir Almroth's statistics; but on the whole both
+ inoculation and amateur medical statistics are regarded with suspicion by the poor;
+ and the fact that revaccination is compulsory in the regular army, and that the moral
+ pressure applied to secure both typhoid inoculation and vaccination both in the
+ regular army and the Territorials is such as only a few stalwarts are able to resist,
+ is deeply resented. At present the inoculation mania has reached the pitch of
+ proposing no less than four separate inoculations: revaccination, typhoid, cholera,
+ and&mdash;Sir Almroth's last staggerer&mdash;inoculation against wounds! When the War
+ Office and its medical advisers have been successfully inoculated against political
+ lunacy, it will be time enough to discuss such extravagances. Meanwhile, the sooner
+ the War Office issues a proclamation that no recruit will be either compelled or
+ importuned to submit to any sort of inoculation whatever against his will, the better
+ for the recruiting, and the worse for the enemy.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The War Office Bait of Starvation.</b></p>
+ <p>But this blunder was a joke compared <span class="pagenum"><a name="page35"
+ id="page35"></a>{35}</span>to the next exploit of the War Office. It suddenly began
+ to placard the country with frantic assurances to its five-thousand-a-year friends
+ that they would be "discharged with all possible speed THE MINUTE THE WAR IS OVER."
+ Only considerations of space restrained them, I presume, from adding "LAWN TENNIS,
+ SHOOTING, AND ALL THE DELIGHTS OF FASHIONABLE LIFE CAN BE RESUMED IMMEDIATELY ON THE
+ FIRING OF THE LAST SHOT." Now what does this mean to the wage worker? Simply that the
+ moment he is no longer wanted in the trenches he will be flung back into the labour
+ market to sink or swim without an hour's respite. If we had had a Labour
+ representative or two to help in drawing up these silly placards&mdash;I am almost
+ tempted to say if we had had any human being of any class with half the brains of a
+ rabbit there&mdash;the placards would have contained a solemn promise that no single
+ man should be discharged at the conclusion of the war, save at his own request, until
+ a job had been found for him in civil life. I ask the heavens, with a shudder, do
+ these class-blinded people in authority really intend to take a million men out of
+ their employment; turn them into soldiers; and then at one blow hurl them back,
+ utterly unprovided for, into the streets?</p>
+ <p>But a War Office capable of placarding Lord Roberts's declaration that the men who
+ are enlisting are doing "what all able-bodied men in the kingdom should do" is
+ clearly ignorant enough for anything. I do not blame Lord Roberts for his oratorical
+ flourish: we have all said things just as absurd on the platform in moments of
+ enthusiasm. But the officials who reproduced it in cold blood would have us believe
+ that soldiers live on air; that ammunition drops from heaven like manna; and that an
+ army could hold the field for twenty-four hours without the support of a still more
+ numerous body of civilians working hard to support it. Sane men gasp at such placards
+ and ask angrily, "What sort of fools do you take us for?" I have in my hand a copy of
+ <i>The Torquay Times</i> containing a hospitable invitation to soldiers' wives to
+ call at the War Office, Whitehall, S.W., if they desire "assistance and explanation
+ of their case." The return fare from Torquay to London is thirty shillings and
+ sixpence third class; but the War Office no doubt assumes that all soldiers' wives
+ keep motor cars. Still, let us be just even to the War Office. It did <i>not</i> ask
+ the soldiers' wives for forms of authorization to pay the separation allowance to
+ their bankers every six months. It actually offered the money monthly!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Delusive Promises.</b></p>
+ <p>The middle and upper classes are nearly as bad as the War Office. They talk of
+ keeping every man's place open for him until the end of the war. Obviously this is
+ flatly impossible. Some places can be kept, and no doubt are being kept. Some
+ functions are suspended by the war and cannot be resumed until the troops return to
+ civil life and resume them. Employers are so hardened to the daily commercial
+ necessity for discharging men without a thought as to what is to become of them that
+ they are quite ready to undertake to sack the replacers when the troops come back.
+ Also the return of peace may be followed by a revival of trade in which employment
+ may not be hard to find, even by discharged soldiers, who are always passed over in
+ the labour market in favour of civilians, as those well know who have the task of
+ trying to find places for them. But these considerations do not justify an attempt to
+ persuade recruits that they can go off soldiering for months&mdash;they are told by
+ Lord Kitchener that it will probably be for years&mdash;and then come back and walk
+ to their benches or into their offices and pick up their work as if they had left
+ only the night before. The very people who are promising this are raising the cry
+ "business as usual" in the same breath. How can business be carried on as usual, or
+ carried on at all, on unoccupied office stools and at counters with no men behind
+ them? Such rubbish is an insult to the recruit's intelligence. These promises of
+ keeping places open were made to the men who enlisted for <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page36" id="page36"></a>{36}</span>South Africa, and were of course broken, as
+ a promise to supply green cheese by quarrying the moon would have been broken. New
+ employees must be found to do the work of the men who are in the field; and these new
+ ones will not all be thrown into the street when the war is over to make room for
+ discharged soldiers, even if a good many of these soldiers are not disqualified by
+ their new training and habits for their old employment. I repeat, there is only one
+ assurance that can be given to the recruits without grossly and transparently
+ deluding them; and that is that they shall not be discharged, except at their own
+ request, until civil employment is available for them.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Funking Controversy.</b></p>
+ <p>This is not the only instance of the way in which, under the first scare of the
+ war, we shut our eyes and opened our mouths to every folly. For example, there was a
+ cry for the suspension of all controversy in the face of the national danger. Now the
+ only way to suspend controversial questions during a period of intense activity in
+ the very departments in which the controversy has arisen is to allow them all to be
+ begged. Perhaps I should not object if they were all begged in favour of my own side,
+ as, for instance, the question of Socialism was begged in favour of Socialism when
+ the Government took control of the railways; bought up all the raw sugar; regulated
+ prices; guaranteed the banks; suspended the operation of private contracts; and did
+ all the things it had been declaring utterly and eternally Utopian and imposible when
+ Socialists advocated them. But it is now proposed to suspend all popular liberties
+ and constitutional safeguards; to muzzle the Press, and actually to have no contests
+ at bye-elections! This is more than a little too much. We have submitted to have our
+ letters, our telegrams, our newspapers censored, our dividends delayed, our trains
+ cut off, our horses and even our houses commandeered, our streets darkened, our
+ restaurants closed, and ourselves shot dead on the public highways if we were slow to
+ realize that some excited person bawling in the distance was a sentry challenging us.
+ But that we are to be politically gagged and enslaved as well; that the able-bodied
+ soldier in the trenches, who depends on the able-minded civilian at home to guard the
+ liberties of his country and protect him from carelesness or abuse of power by the
+ authorities whom he must blindly and dumbly obey, is to be betrayed the moment his
+ back is turned to his fellow-citizens and his face to the foe, is not patriotism: it
+ is the paralysis of mortal funk: it is the worst kind of cowardice in the face of the
+ enemy. Let us hear no more of it, but contest our elections like men, and regain the
+ ancient political prestige of England at home as our expeditionary force has regained
+ it abroad.</p>
+ <p>The Labour Party, then, need have no hesitation in raising all the standing
+ controversies between Democracy and Junkerism in their acutest form, and taking
+ advantage of the war emergency to press them to a series of parliamentary victories
+ for Labour, whether in negotiations with the Government whips, in divisions on the
+ floor of the House, or in strenuously contested bye-elections. No doubt our Junkers
+ will try to disarm their opponents by representing that it would be in the last
+ degree unfair, un-English, and ungentlemanly on the part of the Labour members to
+ seize any tactical advantage in parliamentary warfare, and most treacherous and
+ unpatriotic to attack their country (meaning the Junker Party) when it is at war.
+ Some Labour members will be easily enough gulled in this way: it would be laughable,
+ if the consequences were not so tragic, to see how our parliamentary beginners from
+ the working class succumb to the charm of the Junker appeal. The Junkers themselves
+ are not to be coaxed in this manner: it is no use offering tracts to a missionary, as
+ the poor Kaiser found when he tried it on. The Labour Party will soon learn the value
+ of these polite demonstrations that it is always its duty not to hamper the governing
+ classes in their very difficult and delicate and dangerous task of safeguard<span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37"></a>{37}</span>ing the interests of this
+ great empire: in short, to let itself be gammoned by elegant phrases and by adroit
+ practisings on its personal good-nature, its inveterate proletarian sentimentality,
+ and its secret misgivings as to the correctness of its manners. The Junkers have
+ already taken the fullest advantage of the war to paralyze democracy. If the Labour
+ members do not take a vigorous counter-offensive, and fight every parliamentary
+ trench to the last division, the Labour Movement will be rushed back as precipitately
+ as General von Kluck rushed the Allies back from Namur to the gates of Paris. In
+ truth, the importance of the war to the immense majority of Englishmen, Frenchmen,
+ and Germans lies in the possibility that when Junkers fall out common men may come by
+ their own.</p>
+ <h3>III.</h3>
+ <h3>THE TERMS OF PEACE.</h3>
+ <br />
+ <b>Natural Limits to Duration of the War.</b> <br />
+
+ <p>So much for the recruiting. Now for the terms of peace. It is time to take that
+ subject in hand; for Lord Kitchener's notion that we are going to settle down to
+ years of war as we did a century ago is soldierly, but not sensible. It is, of
+ course, physically possible for us to continue for twenty years digging trenches and
+ shelling German troops and shoving German armies back when they are not shoving us,
+ whilst old women pull turnips and tend goats in the fire zones across which soldiers
+ run to shelter. But we cannot afford to withdraw a million male adults who have
+ passed a strictish health test from the work of parentage for several years unless we
+ intend to breed our next generation from parents with short sight, varicose veins,
+ rotten teeth, and deranged internal organs. Soldiers do not think of these things:
+ "theirs not to reason why: theirs but to do and die"; but sensible civilians have to.
+ And even soldiers know that you cannot make ammunition as fast as you can burn it,
+ nor produce men and horses as instantaneously as you can kill them by machinery. It
+ would be well, indeed, if our papers, instead of writing of ten-inch shells, would
+ speak of &pound;1,000 shells, and regimental bands occasionally finish the National
+ Anthem and the Braban&ccedil;onne and the Marseillaise with the old strain, "That's
+ the way the money goes: Pop goes the Ten Inch." It is easy to rebuke Mr. Norman
+ Angell and Herr Bloch for their sordid references to the cost of war; and Mr. H.G.
+ Wells is profoundly right in pointing out that the fact that war does not pay
+ commercially is greatly to its credit, as no high human activity ever does pay
+ commercially. But modern war does not even pay its way. Already our men have "pumped
+ lead" into retreating Germans who had no lead left to pump back again; and sooner or
+ later, if we go on indefinitely, we shall have to finish the job with our fists, and
+ congratulate ourselves that both Georges Carpentier and Bombardier Wells are on our
+ side. This war will stop when Germany throws up the sponge, which will happen long
+ before she is utterly exhausted, but not before we ourselves shall be glad enough of
+ a rest. Nations are like bees: they cannot kill except at the cost of their own
+ lives.</p>
+ <p>The question of terms will raise a fierce controversy. At the extremes of our
+ public opinion we have two temperaments, first, our gentlemen, our sportsmen, our
+ daredevils, our <i>preux chevaliers</i>. To these the notion of reviling your enemy
+ when he is up; kicking him when he is knocked down by somebody else; and gouging out
+ his eyes, cutting out his tongue, hewing off his right arm, and stealing all his
+ money, is abhorrent and cowardly. These gallants say, "It is not enough that we can
+ fight Germany to-day. We can fight her any day and every day. Let her come again and
+ again and yet again. We will fight her one to three; and if she comes on ten to one,
+ as she did at Mons, we will mill on the retreat, and drive her back again when we
+ have worn her down to our weight. If her fleet will not come out to fight us because
+ we have too many ships, we will send all the odds in our favour back to Portsmouth
+ and fight <span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>{38}</span>ship to
+ ship in the North Sea, and let the bravest and best win." That is how gallant
+ fighters talk, and how Drake is popularly (though erroneously) supposed to have
+ tackled the Armada.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Ignoble Attitude of Cruel Panic.</b></p>
+ <p>But we are not all <i>preux chevaliers.</i> We have at the other extremity the
+ people who are craving for loot and vengeance, who clamour for the humiliation and
+ torture of the enemy, who rave against the village burnings and shootings by the
+ Prussians in one column and exult in the same proceedings by the Russians in another,
+ who demand that German prisoners of war shall be treated as criminals, who depict our
+ Indian troops as savage cutthroats because they like to think of their enemies being
+ mauled in the spirit of the Indian Mutiny, who shriek that the Kaiser must be sent to
+ Devil's Island because St. Helena is too good for him, and who declare that Germany
+ must be so maimed and trodden into the dust that she will not be able to raise her
+ head again for a century. Let us call these people by their own favourite name, Huns,
+ even at the risk of being unjust to the real Huns. And let us send as many of them to
+ the trenches as we can possibly induce to go, in the hope that they may presently
+ join the lists of the missing. Still, as they rather cling to our soil, they will
+ have to be reckoned with when the settlement comes. But they will not count for much
+ then. Most of them will be heartily ashamed of what they said in those first three or
+ four weeks of blue funk (I am too timid myself not to make allowances for that most
+ distressing and universal, but fortunately transient effect of war); and most of
+ those who are not will be ashamed to bear malice publicly.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Commercial Attitude.</b></p>
+ <p>Far more weighty in the matter will be the intermediate sections. First, our
+ commercial main body, which thinks that chivalry is not business, and that rancour is
+ childish, but cannot see why we should not make the Germans pay damages and supply us
+ with some capital to set the City going again, forgetting that when France did that
+ after 1871 for Berlin, Berlin was set going so effectually that it went headlong to a
+ colossal financial smash, whilst the French peasant who had provided the capital from
+ his old stocking throve soberly on the interest at the expense of less vital classes.
+ Unfortunately Germany has set the example of this kind of looting. Prussian generals,
+ like Napoleon's marshals, have always been shameless brigands, keeping up the
+ seventeenth and eighteenth century tradition of making cities bribe them to refrain
+ from sack and pillage and even billeting, and being quite incapable of the
+ magnificence of the great Cond&eacute; (or was it Turenne?), who refused a payment
+ offered by a city on the ground that he had not intended to march through it.
+ Blucher's fury when Wellington would not allow him to plunder Paris, and his
+ exclamation when he saw London "What a city to loot!" is still regarded as fair
+ soldiering; and the blackmail levied recently by the Prussian generals on the Belgian
+ and French towns they have occupied must, I suppose, be let pass as ransom, not as
+ ordinary criminal looting. But if the penalty of looting be thus spared, the Germans
+ can hardly complain if they are themselves held to ransom when the fortunes of war go
+ against them. Li&egrave;ge and Lille and Antwerp and the rest must be paid their
+ money back with interest; and there will be a big builder's bill at Rheims. But we
+ should ourselves refrain strictly from blackmail. We should sell neither our blood
+ nor our mercy. If we sell either we are as much brigands as Blucher.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Vindictive Damages.</b></p>
+ <p>And we must not let ourselves be tempted to soil our hands under pretext of
+ vindictive damages. The man who thinks that all the money in Germany could pay for
+ the life of a single British drummer boy ought to be shot merely as an expression of
+ the feeling that he is unfit to live. We stake our blood as the Germans stake theirs;
+ and in that <i>ganz besonderes Saft</i> alone should we <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page39" id="page39"></a>{39}</span>[make**] or accept payment. We had better
+ not say to the Kaiser at the end of the war, "Scoundrel: you can never replace the
+ Louvain library, nor the sculpture of Rheims; and it follows logically that you shall
+ empty your pockets into ours." Much better say: "God forgive us all!" If we cannot
+ rise to this, and must soil our hands with plunder, at least let us call it plunder,
+ and not profane our language and our souls by giving it fine names.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Our Annihilationists.</b></p>
+ <p>Then we shall have the Militarists, who will want to have Germany "bled to the
+ white," dismembered and maimed, so that she may never do it again. Well, that is
+ quite simple, if you are Militarist enough to do it. Loading Germany with debt will
+ not do it. Towing her fleet into Portsmouth or sinking it will not do it. Annexing
+ provinces and colonies will not do it. The effective method is far shorter and more
+ practical. What has made Germany formidable in this war? Obviously her overwhelmingly
+ superior numbers. That was how she rushed us back almost to the gates of Paris. The
+ organization, the readiness, the sixteen-inch howitzer helped; but it was the
+ multitudinous <i>Kanonenfutter</i> that nearly snowed us under. The British soldier
+ at Cambrai and Le Cateau killed and killed until his rifle was too hot to hold and
+ his hand was paralyzed with slayer's cramp; but still they came and came.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Why Not Kill the German Women?</b></p>
+ <p>Well, there is no obscurity about that problem. Those Germans who took but an
+ instant to kill had taken the travail of a woman for three-quarters of a year to
+ breed, and eighteen years to ripen for the slaughter. All we have to do is to kill,
+ say, 75 per cent, of all the women in Germany under 60. Then we may leave Germany her
+ fleet and her money, and say "Much good may they do you." Why not, if you are really
+ going in to be what you, never having read "this Neech they talk of," call a
+ Nietzschean Superman? War is not an affair of sentiment. Some of our newspapers
+ complain that the Germans kill the wounded and fire on field hospitals and Red Cross
+ Ambulances. These same newspapers fill their columns with exultant accounts of how
+ our wounded think nothing of modern bullet wounds and hope to be back at the front in
+ a week, which I take to be the most direct incitement to the Germans to kill the
+ wounded that could be devized. It is no use being virtuously indignant: "stone dead
+ hath no fellow" is an English proverb, not a German one. Even the killing of
+ prisoners is an Agincourt tradition. Now it is not more cowardly to kill a woman than
+ to kill a wounded man. And there is only one reason why it is a greater crime to kill
+ a woman than a man, and why women have to be spared and protected when men are
+ exposed and sacrificed. That reason is that the destruction of the women is the
+ destruction of the community. Men are comparatively of no account: kill 90 per cent,
+ of the German men, and the remaining 10 per cent. can repeople her. But kill the
+ women, and <i>Delenda est Carthago</i>. Now this is exactly what our Militarists want
+ to happen to Germany. Therefore the objection to killing women becomes in this case
+ the reason for doing it. Why not? No reply is possible from the Militarist,
+ disable-your-enemy point of view. If disablement is your will, there is your way, and
+ the only effectual way. We really must not call the Kaiser and Von Bernhardi
+ disciples of the mythical Neech when they have either overlooked or shrunk from such
+ a glaring "biological necessity." A pair of puling pious sentimentalists if you like.
+ But Supermen! Nonsense. O, my brother journalists, if you revile the Prussians, call
+ them sheep led by snobs, call them beggars on horseback, call them sausage eaters,
+ depict them in the good old English fashion in spectacles and comforter, seedy
+ overcoat buttoned over paunchy figure, playing the contrabass tuba in a street band;
+ but do not flatter them with the heroic title of Superman, and hold up as magnificent
+ villainies worthy of Milton's Lucifer these common crimes of violence and raid and
+ lust that any <span class="pagenum"><a name="page40"
+ id="page40"></a>{40}</span>drunken blackguard can commit when the police are away,
+ and that no mere multiplication can dignify. As to Nietzsche, with his Polish hatred
+ of Prussia (who heartily reciprocated the sentiment), when did he ever tell the
+ Germans to allow themselves to be driven like sheep to the slaughter in millions by
+ mischievous dolts who, being for the most part incapable of reading ten sentences of
+ a philosophic treatise without falling asleep, allow journalists as illiterate as
+ themselves to persuade them that he got his great reputation by writing a cheap
+ gospel for bullies? Strictly between ourselves, we also are an illiterate people; but
+ we may at least hold our tongues about matters we don't understand, and not say in
+ the face of Europe that the English believe that the composer of Parsifal was a
+ Militarist Prussian (he was an exiled revolutionist); that Nietzsche was a diciple of
+ Wagner (Nietzsche preferred the music of Bizet, a Frenchman); and that the Kaiser is
+ a disciple of Nietzsche, who would have laughed his childish pietism to scorn.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Simple Answer.</b></p>
+ <p>Nietzsche would certainly have agreed that we must kill the German women if we
+ mean business when we talk of destroying Germany. But he would also have answered my
+ Why not?, which is more than any consistent Militarist can. Indeed, it needs no
+ philosopher to give the answer. The first ordinary anti-Militarist human person you
+ meet will tell you that it would be too horrible; that life would be unbearable if
+ people did such things. And he would be quite right; so please let us hear no more of
+ kicking your enemy when he is down so that he may be unable to rise for a whole
+ century. We may be unable to resist the temptation to loot Germany more or less if we
+ conquer her. We are already actively engaged in piracy against her, stealing her
+ ships and selling them in our prize courts, instead of honestly detaining them until
+ the war is over and keeping a strict account of them. When gentlemen rise in the
+ House of Commons and say that they owe Germans money and do not intend to pay it, one
+ must face the fact that there will be a strong popular demand for plunder. War, after
+ all, is simply a letting loose of organized murder, theft, and piracy on a foe; and I
+ have no doubt the average Englishman will say to me what Falstaff said to Pistol
+ concerning his share in the price of the stolen fan: "Reason, you rogue, reason: do
+ you think I'll endanger my soul <i>gratis</i>?" To which I reply, "If you can't
+ resist the booty, take it frankly, and know yourself for half patriot, half brigand;
+ but don't talk nonsense about disablement. Cromwell tried it in Ireland. He had
+ better have tried Home Rule. And what Cromwell could not do to Ireland we cannot do
+ to Germany."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Sensible People.</b></p>
+ <p>Finally we come to the only body of opinion in which there is any hope of
+ civilization: the opinion of the people who are bent, not on gallantry nor revenge
+ nor plunder nor pride nor panic nor glory nor any of the invidiousnesses of
+ patriotism, but on the problem of how to so redraw the map of Europe and reform its
+ political constitutions that this abominable crime and atrocious nuisance, a European
+ war, shall not easily occur again. The map is very important; for the open sores
+ which have at last suppurated and burst after having made the world uneasy for years,
+ were produced by altering the colour of Alsace and Lorraine and of Bosnia and
+ Herzegovina on the map. And the new map must be settled, not by conquest, but by
+ consent of the people immediately concerned. One of the broken treaties of Europe
+ which has been mentioned less frequently of late than the Belgian treaty is the
+ treaty of Prague, by which a plebiscite was to have been taken on the subject of the
+ nationality of Schleswig and Holstein. That plebiscite has never been taken. It may
+ have to be taken, with other plebiscites, before this war is settled.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>German Unity Inviolable.</b></p>
+ <p>But here let me warn those who are hoping for a disintegrated Germany like that
+ which Thackeray ridiculed, that their hopes are vain. The southern <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page41" id="page41"></a>{41}</span>Germans, the,
+ friendliest, most easy-going people in the world (as far as I know the world) dislike
+ the Prussians far more heartily than we do; but they know that they are respected and
+ strong and big as part of United Germany, and that they were weak and despised and
+ petty as separate kingdoms. Germany will hold together. No doubt the Germans may
+ reasonably say to the Prussian drill sergeant and his master Hohenzollern, "A nice
+ mess you have made of your job after all we have endured from you because we believed
+ you could make us invincible. We thought that if you were hard masters you were at
+ any rate good grenadiers; but here are these piffling little Belgians and these
+ Russians who were beaten by the Japanese, and these English who made such a poor show
+ against a handful of Boer farmers, fighting and organizing just as well as you. So,
+ as the French and English are organized as a republic and an extremely limited
+ monarchy, we will try how that sort of constitution will suit us." But they will not
+ break up: on the contrary, they are much more likely to extend the German community
+ by incorporating German Austria. And as this would raise the question whether
+ Hohenzollern or Hapsburg should rule the roost, the simplest solution would be to get
+ rid of them both, and take the sooner or later inevitable step into the democratic
+ republican form of Government to which Europe is visibly tending, though "this king
+ business," as my American correspondents call it, has certain conveniences when it is
+ limited and combined with an aristocracy also limited by primogeniture and
+ politically controlled by a commonalty into which all but the eldest brothers in the
+ aristocratic families fall, thus making the German segregation of the <i>adel</i>
+ class impossible. Such a monarchy, especially when the monarch is a woman, as in
+ Holland today, and in England under Victoria, is a fairly acceptable working
+ substitute for a formal republic in old civilizations with inveterate monarchical
+ traditions, absurd as it is in new and essentially democratic States. At any rate, it
+ is conceivable that the western allies might demand the introduction of some such
+ political constitution in Germany and Austria as a guarantee; for though the demand
+ would not please Russia, some of Russia's demands will not please us; and there must
+ be some give and take in the business.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Limits of Constitutional Interference.</b></p>
+ <p>Let us consider this possibility for a moment. First, it must be firmly postulated
+ that civilized nations cannot have their political constitutions imposed on them from
+ without if the object of the arrangement is peace and stability. If a victorious
+ Germany were to attempt to impose the Prussian constitution on France and England,
+ they would submit to it just as Ireland submitted to Dublin Castle, which, to say the
+ least, would not be a millennial settlement. Profoundly as we are convinced that our
+ Government of India is far better than any native Indian government could be (the
+ assumption that "natives" could govern at all being made for the sake of argument
+ with due reluctance), it is quite certain that until it becomes as voluntary as the
+ parliamentary government of Australia, and has been modified accordingly, it will
+ remain an artificial, precarious, and continually threatening political structure.
+ Nevertheless, we need not go to the opposite extreme and conclude that a political
+ constitution must fit a country so accurately that it must be home-made to measure.
+ Europe has a stock of ready-made constitutions, both Monarchical and Republican,
+ which will fit any western European nation comfortably enough. We are at present
+ considerably bothered by the number of Germans who, though their own country and
+ constitution is less than a day's journey away, settle here and marry Englishwomen
+ without feeling that our constitution is unbearable. Englishmen are never tired of
+ declaring that "they do things better abroad" (as a matter of fact they often do),
+ and that the ways of Prussia are smarter than the ways of Paddington. It is therefore
+ quite possible that a reach-me-down constitution proposed, <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page42" id="page42"></a>{42}</span>not by the conquerors, but by an
+ international congress with no interest to serve but the interests of peace, might
+ prove acceptable enough to a nation thoroughly disgusted with its tyrants.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Physician: Heal Thyself.</b></p>
+ <p>Now a congress which undertook the Liberalization of Germany would certainly not
+ stop there. If we invite a congress to press for a democratization of the German
+ constitution, we must consent to the democratization of our own. If we send the
+ Kaiser to St. Helena (or whatever the title of the Chiselhurst villa may be) we must
+ send Sir Edward Grey there, too. For if on the morrow of the peace we may all begin
+ to plot and plan one another's destruction over again in the secrecy of our Foreign
+ Office, so that in spite of Parliament and free democratic institutions the Foreign
+ Secretary may at any moment step down from the Foreign Office to the House of Commons
+ and say, "I arranged yesterday with the ambassador from Cocagne that England is to
+ join his country in fighting Brobdingnag; so vote me a couple of hundred millions,
+ and off with you to the trenches," we shall be just where we were before as far as
+ any likelihood of putting an end to war is concerned. The congress will certainly ask
+ us to pledge ourselves that if we shake the mailed fist at all we shall shake it
+ publicly, and that though we may keep our sword ready (let me interject in passing
+ that disarmament is all nonsense: nobody is going to disarm after this experience) it
+ shall be drawn by the representatives of the nation, and not by Junker diplomatists
+ who despise and distrust the nation, and have planned war behind its back for years.
+ Indeed they will probably demur to its being drawn even by the representative of the
+ nation until the occasion has been submitted to the judgment of the representatives
+ of the world, or such beginnings of a world representative body as may be possible.
+ That is the true <i>Weltpolitik</i>.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Hegemony of Peace.</b></p>
+ <p>For the main business of the settlement, if it is to have any serious business at
+ all, must be the establishment of a Hegemony of Peace, as desired by all who are
+ really capable of high civilization, and formulated by me in the daily Press in a
+ vain attempt to avert this mischief whilst it was brewing. Nobody took the smallest
+ public notice of me; so I made a lady in a play say "Not bloody likely," and
+ instantly became famous beyond the Kaiser, beyond the Tsar, beyond Sir Edward Grey,
+ beyond Shakespeare and Homer and President Wilson, the papers occupying themselves
+ with me for a whole week just as they are now occupying themselves with the war, and
+ one paper actually devoting a special edition to a single word in my play, which is
+ more than it has done for the Treaty of London (1839). I concluded then that this was
+ a country which really could not be taken seriously. But the habits of a lifetime are
+ not so easily broken; and I am not afraid to produce another dead silence by renewing
+ my good advice, as I can easily recover my popularity by putting still more shocking
+ expressions into my next play, especially now that events have shewn that I was right
+ on the point of foreign policy.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>East Is East; and West Is West.</b></p>
+ <p>I repeat, then, that there should be a definite understanding that whatever may
+ happen or not happen further east, England, France, and Germany solemnly pledge
+ themselves to maintain the internal peace of the west of Europe, and renounce
+ absolutely all alliances and engagements that bind them to join any Power outside the
+ combination in military operations, whether offensive or defensive, against one
+ inside it. We must get rid of the monstrous situation that produced the present war.
+ France made an alliance with Russia as a defence against Germany. Germany made an
+ alliance with Austria as a defence against Russia. England joined the Franco-Russian
+ alliance as a defence against Germany and Austria. The result was that Germany became
+ involved in a quarrel between Austria and Russia. Having no quarrel with France, and
+ only a second-hand quarrel with Russia, she was, nevertheless, <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page43" id="page43"></a>{43}</span>forced to attack France
+ in order to disable her before she could strike Germany from behind when Germany was
+ fighting France's ally, Russia. And this attack on France forced England to come to
+ the rescue of England's ally, France. Not one of the three nations (as distinguished
+ from their tiny Junker-Militarist cliques) wanted to fight; for England had nothing
+ to gain and Germany had everything to lose, whilst France had given up hope of her
+ Alsace-Lorraine <i>revanche</i>, and would certainly not have hazarded a war for it.
+ Yet because Russia, who has a great deal to gain by victory and nothing except
+ military prestige to lose by defeat, had a quarrel with Austria over Servia, she has
+ been able to set all three western friends and neighbours shedding "rivers of blood"
+ from one another's throats; an outrageous absurdity. Fifty years ago the notion of
+ England helping Russia and Japan to destroy Germany would have seemed as suicidal as
+ Canada helping the Apaches to destroy the United States of America; and though we now
+ think much better of the Japanese (and also, by the way, of the Apaches), that does
+ not make us any the more patient with the man who burns down his own street because
+ he admires the domestic architecture of Yokohama, especially when the fire presently
+ spreads to the cathedral of Rheims. It is bad enough that we should have betrayed
+ oriental Persia to oriental Russia as we did (and get nothing for our pains but what
+ we deserved); but when it comes to sacrificing occidental Germany to her as well, we
+ are sharpening a knife for our own occidental throat. The Russian Government is the
+ open enemy of every liberty we boast of. Charles I.'s unsuccessful attempt to arrest
+ five members of the House of Commons for disagreeing with him is ancient history
+ here: it occurred 272 years ago; but the Tsar's successful attempt to arrest thirty
+ members of the Duma and to punish them as dangerous criminals is a fact of to-day.
+ Under Russian government people whose worst crime is to find <i>The Daily News</i> a
+ congenial newspaper are hanged, flogged, or sent to Siberia as a matter of daily
+ routine; so that before 1906 even the articles in <i>The Times</i> on such events as
+ the assassinations of Bobrikoff and the Grand Duke were simply polite paraphrases of
+ "Serve him right." It may be asked why our newspapers have since ceased to report
+ examples of Russia's disregard of the political principles we are supposed to stand
+ for. The answer is simple. It was in 1906 that we began to lend Russia money, and
+ Russia began to advertise in <i>The Times</i>. Since then she has been welcome to
+ flog and hang her H.G. Wellses and Lloyd Georges by the dozen without a word of
+ remonstrance from our plutocratic Press, provided the interest is paid punctually.
+ Russia has been embraced in the large charity of cosmopolitan capital, the only
+ charity that does not begin at home.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Russian Russians and Their Prussian Tsars.</b></p>
+ <p>And here I must save my face with my personal friends who are either Russians or
+ discoverers of the soul of the Russian people. I hereby declare to Sasha Kropotkin
+ and Cunninghame Graham that my heart is with their Russia, the Russia of Tolstoy and
+ Turgenieff and Dostoieffsky, of Gorki and Tchekoff, of the Moscow Art Theatre and the
+ Drury Lane Ballet, of Peter Kropotkin and all the great humanitarians, great artists,
+ and charming people whom their very North German Tsars exile and imprison and flog
+ and generally do what in them lies to suppress and abolish. For the sake of Russian
+ Russia, I am prepared to strain every point in Prussian Russia's favour. I grant that
+ the Nihilists, much as we loved them, were futile romantic people who could have done
+ nothing if Alexander II. had abdicated and offered them the task of governing Russia
+ instead of persecuting them and being finally blown to bits by them. I grant that the
+ manners of the Fins to the Russians are described as insufferable both by the Swedes
+ and the Russians, and that we never listened to the Russian side of that story. I am
+ ready to grant Gil<span class="pagenum"><a name="page44"
+ id="page44"></a>{44}</span>bert Murray's plea that the recent rate of democratic
+ advance has been greater in Russia than anywhere else in Europe, though it does
+ remind me a little of the bygone days when the Socialists, scoring 20 votes at one
+ general election and forty at the next, were able to demonstrate that their gain of
+ 100 per cent. was immensely in excess of the wretched two or three per cent. that was
+ the best the Unionists or Liberals could shew. I am willing to forget how short a
+ time it is since Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman said: "The Duma is dead: long live the
+ Duma!" and since we refused to allow the Tsar to land in England when his ship was
+ within gangway's length of our shore, on which occasion I myself held up the
+ Anglo-Russian agreement for the partition of Persia to the execration of a crowd in
+ Trafalgar Square, whilst our Metropolitan Police snatched the <i>l'sarbeleidigend</i>
+ English newspapers from the sellers and tore them up precisely in the Cossack manner.
+ I have an enormous relish for the art of Russia; I perceive a spirit in Russia which
+ is the natural antidote to Potsdamnation; and I like most of the Russians I know
+ quite unaffectedly. I could find it in my heart to reproach the Kaiser for making war
+ on the Russia of these delightful people, just as I like to think that at this very
+ moment good Germans may be asking him how he can bring himself to discharge shrapnel
+ at the England of Bernard Shaw and Cunninghame Graham. History may not forgive him
+ for it; but the practical point at the moment is that he does it, and no doubt
+ attributes the perfidy of England to the popularity of our works. And as we have to
+ take the Kaiser as we find him, and not as the Hohenzollern legend glorifies him, I
+ have to take the Tsar as I find him. When we fight the Kaiser we are not fighting
+ Bach and Wagner and Strauss, to whom we have just joyfully surrendered without a blow
+ at the battle of Queen's Hall, but all the forces in Germany that made things hard
+ for Wagner and Strauss. And when we fight for the Tsar we are not fighting for
+ Tolstoy and Gorki, but for the forces that Tolstoy thundered against all his life and
+ that would have destroyed him had he not been himself a highly connected Junker as
+ well as a revolutionary Christian. And if I doubt whether the Tsar would feel
+ comfortable as a member of a Democratic League of Peace, I am not doubting the good
+ intent of Kropotkin: I am facing the record of Kropotkin's imperial jailer, and
+ standing on the proud fact that England is the only country in Europe, not excepting
+ even France, in which Kropotkin has been allowed to live a free man, and had his
+ birthday celebrated by public meetings all over the country, and his articles
+ welcomed by the leading review. In point of fact, it is largely on Kropotkin's
+ account that I regard the Tsar as a gentleman of slightly different views to
+ President Wilson, and hate the infamous tyranny of which he is the figurehead as I
+ hate the devil. And I know that practically all our disinterested and thoughtful
+ supporters of the war feel deeply uneasy about the Russian alliance. At all events, I
+ should be trifling grossly with the facts of the situation if I pretended that the
+ most absolute autocracy in Europe, commanding an inexhaustible army in an invincible
+ country with a dominion stretching from the Baltic to the Pacific, may not, if it
+ achieves a military success against the most dreaded military Power in Europe, be
+ stirred to ambitions far more formidable to western liberty and human welfare than
+ those of which Germany is now finding out the vanity after worrying herself and
+ everyone else with them for forty years. When all is said that can be said for
+ Russia, the fact remains that a forcibly Russianized German province would be just
+ such another open sore in Europe as Alsace-Lorraine, Poland, Macedonia or Ireland. It
+ is useless to dream of guarantees: if Russia undertook to govern democratically she
+ would not be able to redeem her promise: she would do better with primitive
+ Communism. Her city populations may be as capable of Democracy as our own (it is,
+ alas! not saying much); but the overwhelming mass of peasants to whom the Tsar is a
+ personal God will for a long time to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page45"
+ id="page45"></a>{45}</span>come make his bureaucracy irresistible. As against Russian
+ civilization German and Austrian civilization is our civilization: there is no
+ getting over that. A constitutional kingship of Poland and a sort of Caliphate of the
+ Slavs in remapped southeastern Europe, with that access to warm sea water which is
+ Russia's common human right, valid against all Balances of Power and Keys to India
+ and the like, must be her reward for her share in the war, even if we have to
+ nationalize Constantinople to secure it to her. But it cannot be too frankly said at
+ the outset that any attempt to settle Europe on the basis of the present hemming in
+ of a consolidated Germany and German Austria by a hostile combination of Russia and
+ the extreme states against it, would go to pieces by its own inherent absurdity, just
+ as it has already exploded most destructively by its own instability. Until Russia
+ becomes a federation of several separate democratic States, and the Tsar is either
+ promoted to the honourable position of hereditary President or else totally
+ abolished, the eastern boundary of the League of Peace must be the eastern boundary
+ of Swedish, German, and Italian civilization; and Poland must stand between it and
+ the quite different and for the moment unassimilable, civilization of Russia, whose
+ friendship we could not really keep on any other terms, as a closer alliance would
+ embarrass her as much as it would embarrass us. Meanwhile, we must trust to the march
+ of Democracy to de-Russianize Berlin and de-Prussianize Petrograd, and to put the
+ nagaikas of the Cossacks and the riding-whips with which Junker officers slash German
+ privates, and the forty tolerated homosexual brothels of Berlin, and all the other
+ psychopathic symptoms of overfeeding and inculcated insolence and sham virility in
+ their proper place, which I take to be the dustbin.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Driving Capital Out of the Country</b>.</p>
+ <p>But I must here warn everyone concerned that the most formidable opposition to the
+ break-up of these unnatural alliances between east and west, between Democracy and
+ Autocracy, between the twentieth century and the Dark Ages, will not come from the
+ Balancers of Power. They are not really Balance of Power alliances: in fact, they are
+ tending to an enormous overbalance of power in favor of the east as against the west
+ and in favor of Militarist Autocracy as against Democracy. They are at root
+ absolutely unpatriotic, even absolutely conscienceless products of commercial
+ finance; and the Balance of Power theories are only the attempts of our diplomats to
+ put a public spirited face on the operations of private cupidity. This is not the
+ first time nor the second that I have had to urge that the greatest danger to us in
+ the sphere of foreign politics is the tendency of capital to run away from
+ civilization: the one running downhill to hell as naturally as the other struggles
+ uphill to the Celestial City. The Englishman is allowed to produce the subsistence of
+ himself and his family only on condition that he produces the subsistence of the
+ capitalist and his retainers as well; and lo! he finds more and more that these
+ retainers are not Englishmen, but Russians, South Americans, Kaffirs, Persians, or
+ yellow or black barbarians armed for his destruction (not to mention Prussians and
+ Austrians), and that the treaties made by our diplomatists have less and less to do
+ with the security of the nation or the balance of power or any other public business,
+ and more and more with capitalist opportunities of making big dividends out of
+ slavish labour. For instance, the Anglo-Russian agreement is not a national treaty:
+ it is the memorandum of a commercial agreement settling what parts of Persia are to
+ be exploited by the Russian and English capitalists respectively; the capitalists,
+ always against State interference for the benefit of the people, being very strongly
+ in favor of it for coercing strikers at home and keeping foreign rivals off their
+ grass abroad. And the absurd part of it is that when the State has thus arranged for
+ our capitalists to exploit certain parts of Persia, and for their sakes to protect
+ the parliamentary liber<span class="pagenum"><a name="page46"
+ id="page46"></a>{46}</span>ties of the part left to Russia, they discovered that,
+ after all, the most profitable game was to lend Russia the money to exploit with, and
+ to facilitate the operation by allowing her to destroy the Persian parliament in the
+ face of our own exhortation to it to keep the flag flying, which we accordingly did
+ without a blush. The French capitalists had dragged France into an alliance with
+ Russia long before this; but the French Republic had the excuse of the German peril
+ and the need for an anti-German ally. Her natural ally for that purpose was England;
+ but as there was no market in England for her money, her plutocrats drove her into
+ the alliance with Russia as well; and it is that alliance and not the alliance with
+ England that has terrified Germany into flying at her throat and plunging Europe into
+ a frightful war. The natural alliance with England twice averted war: in the Moroccan
+ crises of Algeciras and Agadir, when Sir Edward Grey said boldly that we should
+ defend France, and took the first steps towards a joint military and naval control of
+ the French and English forces. Why he shrank from that firm position last July and
+ thereby led Germany to count so fatally on our neutrality I do not pretend to know;
+ it suffices for my argument that we were able to hold the balance between France and
+ Germany, but failed to hold it between Germany and Russia, and that it was the
+ placing of Russian loans in France and England that brought Russia into our western
+ affairs. It would have paid us ten times over to have made Russia a present of all we
+ and France have lent her (indemnifying, of course, the holders of the stock through
+ an addition to the income tax) rather than pay the price of a European war. But what
+ is the use of crying for spilt milk? I am merely explaining why, when French money
+ went to Russia, the French papers discovered that the Russians were a most
+ interesting people and their Government&mdash;properly understood&mdash;a
+ surprisingly Liberal Government; and why, when English money went to Russia, the
+ English press suddenly developed leanings towards the Greek Church, and deplored the
+ unofficial execution of Stolypin as deeply as it had rejoiced in the like fate of
+ Bobrikoff. The upshot of it all is that western civilization is at present busy
+ committing suicide by machinery, and importing hordes of Asiatics and Africans to
+ help in the throat cutting, not for the benefit of the silly capitalists, who are
+ being ruined wholesale, but to break up the Austrian Empire for the benefit of Russia
+ and the Slavs of eastern Europe, which may be a very desirable thing, but which could
+ and should be done by the eastern Powers among themselves, without tearing Belgium
+ and Germany and France and England to pieces in the process.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Red Flag and the Black.</b></p>
+ <p>Will you now at last believe, O stupid British, German, and French patriots, what
+ the Socialists have been telling you for so many years: that your Union Jacks and
+ tricolours and Imperial Eagles ("where the carcase is, there will the eagles be
+ gathered") are only toys to keep you amused, and that there are only two real flags
+ in the world henceforth: the red flag of Democratic Socialism and the black flag of
+ Capitalism, the flag of God and the flag of Mammon? What earthly or heavenly good is
+ done when Tom Fool shoots Hans Narr? The plain fact is that if we leave our capital
+ to be dealt with according to the selfishness of the private man he will send it
+ where wages are low and workers enslaved and docile: that is, as many thousand miles
+ as possible from the Trade Unions and Trade Union rates and parliamentary Labour
+ Parties of civilization; and Germany, at his sordid behest, will plunge the world
+ into war for the sake of disgracing herself with a few rubber plantations, poetically
+ described by her orators and journalists as "a place in the sun." When you do what
+ the Socialists tell you by keeping your capital jealously under national control and
+ reserving your shrapnel for the wasters who not only shirk their share of the
+ industrial service of their country, but intend that their <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page47" id="page47"></a>{47}</span>children and children's children shall be
+ idle wasters like themselves, you will find that not a farthing of our capital will
+ go abroad as long as there is a British slum to be cleared and rebuilt, or a hungry,
+ ragged, and ignorant British child to be fed, clothed, and educated.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A League of Peace</b>.</p>
+ <p>But in the west I see no insuperable obstacle to a Treaty of Peace in the largest
+ sense. This war has smoothed the way to it, if I may use the word smoothing to
+ describe a process conduced with so little courtesy and so much shrapnel. Germany has
+ now learned&mdash;and the lesson was apparently needed, obvious as it would have been
+ to a sanely governed nation&mdash;that when it comes to shoving and shooting, Germany
+ instantly loses all the advantages of her high civilization, because France and
+ England, cultured or uncultured, can shove and shoot as well or beter than she,
+ whilst as to slashing and stabbing, their half barbarous Turco and Ghoorka slaves can
+ cut the Prussian Guard to bits, in spite of the unquestionable superiority of
+ Wagner's music to theirs. Then take France. She does not dream that she could fight
+ Germany and England single-handed. And England could not fight France and Germany
+ without a sacrifice as ruinous as it would be senseless. We therefore have the
+ necessary primary conditions for a League of Peace between the three countries; for
+ if one of them break it, the other two can make her sorry, under which circumstances
+ she will probably not break it. The present war, if it end in the reconquest of
+ Alsace and Lorraine by the French, will make such a League much more stable; not that
+ France can acquire by mere conquest any right to hold either province against its
+ will (which could be ascertained by plebiscite), but because the honors of war as
+ between France and Germany would then be easy, France having regained her laurels and
+ taught Germany to respect her, without obliterating the record of Germany's triumph
+ in 1870. And if the war should further result in the political reconstruction of the
+ German Empire as a democratic Commonwealth, and the conquest by the English people of
+ democratic control of English foreign policy, the combination would be immensely
+ eased and strengthened, besides being brought into harmony with American public
+ feeling, which is important to the security and prestige of the League.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Case of the Smaller States.</b></p>
+ <p>Already the war has greatly added to the value of one of the factors upon which
+ the League of Peace will depend. The smaller States: Holland, Belgium, Switzerland,
+ and the Scandinavian Powers, would have joined it any time these 40 years, had it
+ existed, for the sake of its protection, and thereby made the Protestant north of Mr.
+ Houston Chamberlain's dream as much a reality as any such dream is ever likely to be.
+ But after the fight put up by Belgium the other day, the small States will be able to
+ come in with the certainty of being treated with considerable respect as military
+ factors; for Belgium can now claim to have saved Europe single-handed. Germany has
+ been very unpleasantly reminded of the fact that though a big man may be able to beat
+ a little one, yet if the little one fights for all he is worth he may leave the
+ victor very sorry he broke the peace. Even as between the big Powers, victory has
+ not, as far as the fighting has yet gone, been always with the biggest battalions.
+ With a couple of millions less men, the Kaiser might have taken more care of them and
+ made a better job of it.</p>
+ <p>At the same time I hold no brief for small States as such, and most vehemently
+ deny that we are in any way bound to knight errantry on their behalf as against big
+ ones. They are mostly either incorrigibly bellicose themselves, like Montenegro, or
+ standing temptations to the big Powers, like Bosnia and Herzegovina. They multiply
+ frontiers, which are nuisances, and languages, which have made confusion since the
+ building of Babel. The striking contrast between the United States of North America
+ and the disunited States of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page48"
+ id="page48"></a>{48}</span>South America in this respect is, from the Pacifist point
+ of view, very much in favor of the northern unity. The only objection to large
+ political units is that they make extremely dangerous autocracies. But as groups of
+ federated democracies they are the best neighbours in the world. A federal democratic
+ Russia would be as safe a colleague as America: a federal democratic Germany would be
+ as pleasant company as Switzerland. Let us, I beg, hear no more of little States as
+ British Dulcineas.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Claims of Belgium.</b></p>
+ <p>As to the special case of Belgium, its claims in the settlement are simple and
+ indeed single. If we conclude a peace without clearing the Germans completely out of
+ Belgium, we shall be either beaten or dishonoured. And such indemnity as a money
+ payment can effect for Belgium is due not only by Germany, but by Britain, France,
+ and Russia as well. Belgium has been crushed between the Alliance and the Entente: it
+ was these two menaces to the peace of Europe that produced Armageddon; and as
+ Belgium's heroic resistance served the Entente against the Alliance, the obligation
+ to make good the remediable damage is even more binding on the Entente.</p>
+ <p>But there is another and more pressing matter arising out of the conquest of
+ Belgium.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Belgian Refugees and the Problem of Unemployment.</b></p>
+ <p>As I write these lines the descent on our shores of an army of refugees from
+ captured Antwerp and threatened Ostend has forced the President of the Local
+ Government Board to make a desperate appeal to all and sundry to form representative
+ committees to deal with the prevention and relief of distress: in other words to save
+ the refugees from starving to death. Now the Board of Trade has already drawn
+ attention to a memorandum of the Local Government Board as to the propriety of
+ providing employment for refugees. And instantly and inevitably the condition had to
+ be laid down that if the Committees find employment for anyone, they shall refer the
+ case to the local Labour Exchange in order that "any steps taken to assist refugees
+ to find employment shall not be such as to endanger the employment of British
+ workpeople." In other words, the starving Belgians have fled from the Germans only to
+ compete for crust with starving Englishmen. As long as there is an unemployed
+ Englishman in the country&mdash;and there are a good many, especially in the cotton
+ industry&mdash;how is it possible to give a job to a Belgian without depriving an
+ Englishman of it? Why, instead of making impossible conditions, and helplessly asking
+ private citizens to do something for pity's sake, will not the Government face the
+ fact that the refugee question is simply an intensification of the normal unemployed
+ question, the only difference being that we are accustomed to leave our own people to
+ starve when they are common persons with whom the governing classes do not associate,
+ whereas the Belgians have rendered us such a tremendous service in the war, and our
+ statesmen have so loudly protested that the integrity of Belgium is dearer to England
+ than her own heart's blood, that we cannot with any decency treat the destitute
+ Belgians as if they were mere British riffraff. Yet when we attempt to provide for
+ the Belgians by finding work for them the Board of Trade has to point out that by
+ doing so we are taking the bread out of the mouths of our own people. Hence we arrive
+ at the remarkable situation of starving Britons and Belgians looking hungrily through
+ barbed wire fences at flourishing communities of jolly and well fed German prisoners
+ of war (whose friendly hat wavings to me and my fellow passengers as I rush through
+ Newbury Racecourse Station in the Great Western Express I hereby acknowledge publicly
+ with all possible good feeling). I therefore for the present strongly recommend all
+ Belgians who have made up their minds to flee to England, to pick up German uniforms
+ on the battle fields and surrender to the British in the character of Uhlans. Their
+ subsistence will then be secure until the war is over, as <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page49" id="page49"></a>{49}</span>we dare not illtreat our prisoners lest the
+ Germans should retaliate upon the British soldiers in their hands, even if we were
+ all spiteful enough to desire to do it, as some of our baser sort have not been
+ ashamed to propose.</p>
+ <p>But the women and children, and the too young and the too old, cannot resort to
+ this expedient. And though theoretically our own unemployed could be dressed in
+ British uniforms and sent abroad with instructions to take refuge in neutral
+ territory and be "interned" or to surrender to the first Uhlan patrol they met, yet
+ it would be difficult to reduce this theory to practice, though the possibility is
+ worth mentioning as a reduction to absurdity of the situation. As a matter of common
+ sense "we should at once place all destitute Belgian refugees on the footing of
+ prisoners of war, except that we need not post sentries to shoot them if they try to
+ escape, nor surround them with barbed wire. Indeed these precautions are necessary in
+ the case of the Germans rather to save their sense of honour whilst remaining here
+ than to defeat any very strong longing on their part to return to the trenches.</p>
+ <p>In a reasonable state of society there would be another difference. The Belgians
+ would offer to work so as not to be a burden to us; whilst the German prisoner would
+ say&mdash;as he actually does, by the way&mdash;"No: I am not here by my own will: if
+ you open the door I shall go home and take myself off your hands; so I am in no way
+ bound to work for you." As it is, our Trade Unions are up in arms at the slightest
+ hint of either Belgian or German labour being employed when there is no shortage of
+ English labour!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Minority Report</b>.</p>
+ <p>All this exasperating anomaly and deadlock and breakdown would disappear if we had
+ a proper system of provision for our own unemployed civilians (there are no
+ unemployed soldiers: we do not discharge them between the battles). The Belgians
+ would have found an organization of unemployment ready for them, and would have been
+ provided for with our own unemployed, not as refugees, but simply as unemployed. How
+ to do that need not be explained here. The problem was worked out by one of the
+ hardest bits of thinking yet done in the Socialist movement, and set forth in the
+ Minority Report of the Royal Commission on the Poor Laws and the Relief of Distress,
+ 1909. Our helplessness in the present emergency shews how very unwise we were to
+ shelve that report. Unluckily, what with the wounded vanity of the majority of the
+ Commission, who had been played off the stage by Mrs. Sidney Webb; the folly of the
+ younger journalists of the advanced guard, who had just then rediscovered Herbert
+ Spencer's mare's nest of "the servile State," and revolted with all the petulant
+ anarchism of the literary profession against the ideal Interfering Female as typified
+ in their heated imaginations by poor Mrs. Sidney Webb, who became the Aunt Sally of
+ our young artists in stale anti-bureaucratic invective; and, above all, the mulishly
+ silent refusal of our governing classes to see why the unemployed should not be
+ simply left to starve, as they had always been (the Poor Law being worse than useless
+ for so large a purpose), nothing was done; and there is consequently no machinery
+ ready for dealing with the refugees. That is why we must treat them for the moment
+ simply as unguarded prisoners of war.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The General Strike Against War.</b></p>
+ <p>But if the problem of unemployment among our own people becomes acute, we shall
+ have to fall back on the Minority Report proposals or else run the risk of a revolt
+ against the war. We have already counted on the chances of that revolt hampering
+ Germany, just as Germany counted on the chances of its hampering Russia, The notion
+ that the working classes can stop a war by a general international strike is never
+ mentioned during the first rally to the national flag at the outbreak of a war; but
+ it is there all the time, ready to break out again if the supplies of food and glory
+ run short. Its gravity lies in its impracticability. If it were practicable, every
+ sane man <span class="pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>{50}</span>would
+ advocate it. As it is, it might easily mean that British troops would be coercing
+ British strikers at home when they should be fighting Potsdam abroad, thus producing
+ a disastrous and detestable division of popular feeling in the face of the enemy.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Disarmament Delusion.</b></p>
+ <p>Objections to the Western Pacifist settlement will come from several quarters,
+ including the Pacifist quarters. Some of the best disposed parties will stumble over
+ the old delusion of disarmament. They think it is the gun that matters. They are
+ wrong: the gun matters very much when war breaks out; but what makes both war and the
+ gun is the man behind them. And if that man really means the peace of the world to be
+ kept, he will take care to have a gun to keep it with. The League of Peace must have
+ a first-rate armament, or the League of War will very soon make mincemeat of it. The
+ notion that the men of evil intent are to have all the weapons will not work.
+ Theoretically, all our armaments should be pooled. But as we, the British Empire,
+ will most certainly not pool our defenses with anyone, and as we have not the very
+ smallest intention of disarming, and will go on building gun for gun and ship for
+ ship in step with even our dearest friends if we see the least risk of our being left
+ in a position of inferiority, we cannot with any countenance demand that other Powers
+ shall do what we will not do ourselves. Our business is not to disable ourselves or
+ anyone else, but to organize a balance of military power against war, whether made by
+ ourselves or any other Power; and this can be done only by a combination of armed and
+ fanatical Pacifists of all nations, not by a crowd of non-combatants wielding
+ deprecations, remonstrances, and Christmas cards.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>America's Example: War at a Year's Notice.</b></p>
+ <p>How far it will be possible to take these national armaments out of national
+ control remains to be seen. Already America, who is as deeply demoralized by
+ Capitalism as we are, though much less tainted with Militarism now that Colonel
+ Roosevelt has lost his front seat, has pledged herself to several European States not
+ to go to war with them until the matter under dispute has been in the hands of an
+ international tribunal for a year. Now there is no military force on earth, nor
+ likely to be, strong enough to prevent America from treating these agreements as
+ Germany has just treated the 1839 Treaty guaranteeing the neutrality of Belgium.
+ Therefore the Militarists declare that the agreements are not worth the scraps of
+ paper they are written on. They always will footle in this way. They might as well
+ say that because there are crimes which men can commit with legal impunity in spite
+ of our haphazard criminal codes, men always do commit them. No doubt nations will do
+ what it is to their interest to do. But because there is in every nation a set of
+ noisy moral imbeciles who cannot see that nations have an overwhelming interest in
+ creating and maintaining a tradition of international good faith, and honouring their
+ promissory notes as scrupulously as the moral imbeciles pay their silly gambling
+ debts and fight their foolish duels, we are not, I presume, going to discard every
+ international guarantee except the howitzer. Why, the very Prussian Militarists
+ themselves are reviling us for doing what their own Militarist preachers assumed as a
+ matter of course that we should do: that is, attack Prussia without regard to the
+ interests of European civilization when we caught her at a disadvantage between
+ France and Russia. But we should have been ashamed to do that if she had not, by
+ assuming that there was no such thing as shame (<i>alias</i> conscience), terrified
+ herself into attacking France and Belgium, when, of course, we were immediately
+ ashamed not to defend them. This idiotic ignoring of the highest energies of the
+ human soul, without the strenuous pressure of which the fabric of
+ civilization&mdash;German civilization perhaps most of all&mdash;could not hold
+ together for a single day, should really be treated in the asylums of Europe, not on
+ battlefields.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page51" id="page51"></a>{51}</span>I conclude that
+ we might all very well make a beginning by pledging ourselves as America has done to
+ The Hague tribunal not to take up arms in any cause that has been less than a year
+ under arbitration, and to treat any western Power refusing this pledge as an
+ unpopular and suspicious member of the European club. To break such a pledge would be
+ an act of brigandage; and the need for suppressing brigandage cannot be regarded as
+ an open question.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Security Will o' the Wisp.</b></p>
+ <p>It will be observed that I propose no guarantee of absolute security. Not being a
+ sufferer from <i>delirium tremens</i> I can live without it. Security is no doubt the
+ Militarists' most seductive bait to catch the coward's vote. But their method makes
+ security impossible, They undertook to secure the English in Egypt from an imaginary
+ Islam rising by the Denshawai Horror, as a result of which nobody has ventured to
+ suggest that we should trust the Egyptian army in this conflict, though India, having
+ learnt from Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay Macdonald that there are really
+ anti-Militarists in England who regard Indians as fellow creatures, is actually
+ rallying to us against the Prussian Junkers, who are, in Indian eyes,
+ indistinguishable from the Anglo-Indians who call Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay
+ Macdonald traitors, and whose panicstricken denial of even a decent pretence of
+ justice in the sedition trials is particularly unfortunate just now. We must always
+ take risks; and we should never trade on the terror of death, nor forget that this
+ wretchedest of all the trades is none the less craven because it can so easily be
+ gilt with romance and heroism and solemn national duty and patriotism and the like by
+ persons whose superficial literary and oratorical talent covers an abyss of
+ Godforsaken folly.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Only Real World Danger.</b></p>
+ <p>The one danger before us that nothing can avert but a general raising of human
+ character through the deliberate cultivation and endowment of democratic virtue
+ without consideration of property and class, is the danger created by inventing
+ weapons capable of destroying civilization faster than we produce men who can be
+ trusted to use them wisely. At present we are handling them like children. Now
+ children are very pretty, very lovable, very affectionate creatures (sometimes); and
+ a child can make nitroglycerine or chloride of nitrogen as well as a man if it is
+ taught to do so. We have sense enough not to teach it; but we do teach the grown-up
+ children. We actually accompany that dangerous technical training with solemn moral
+ lessons in which the most destructive use of these forces at the command of kings and
+ capitalists is inculcated as heroism, patriotism, glory and all the rest of it. It is
+ all very well to fire cannons at the Kaiser for doing this; but we do it ourselves.
+ It is therefore undeniably possible that a diabolical rhythm may be set up in which
+ civilization will rise periodically to the point at which explosives powerful enough
+ to destroy it are discovered, and will then be shattered and thrown back to a fresh
+ start with a few starving and ruined survivors. H.G. Wells and Anatole France have
+ pre-figured that result in fiction; and I cannot deny the strength of its
+ probability; for if England and Germany can find no better way of celebrating their
+ arrival at the highest point of civilization yet attained than setting out to blow
+ one another to fragments with fulminates, it would seem that the peace of the neutral
+ States is the result, not of their being more civilized, but less heavily armed. And
+ when we see that the effect of the enterprise is not to redouble civil vigilance and
+ stimulate the most alert and jealous political criticism, but on the contrary to
+ produce an assumption that every constitutional safeguard must be suspended until the
+ war is over, and that every silly tyrannical expedient such as censorship of the
+ press, martial law, and the like, will begin to work good instead of evil the moment
+ men take to murdering one another, it must be admitted that the prospect is not too
+ hopeful. Our only consolation is that civilization has survived very destructive wars
+ before, mostly because they have produced ef<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52"
+ id="page52"></a>{52}</span>fects not only unintended but violently objected to by the
+ people who made them. In 1870, for instance, Napoleon III. can hardly have intended
+ his own overthrow and return to exile in England; nor did Bismarck aim at the
+ restoration of French Republicanism and the formation of an Anglo-Franco-Russian
+ alliance against Prussia. Several good things may come out of the present war if it
+ leaves anybody alive to enjoy them.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Church and the War.</b></p>
+ <p>And now, where in our society is the organ whose function it should be to keep us
+ constantly in mind that, as Lassalle said, "the sword is never right," and to shudder
+ with him at the fact that "the Lie is a European Power"? In no previous war have we
+ struck that top note of keen irony, the closing of the Stock Exchange and not of the
+ Church. The pagans were more logical: they closed the Temple of Peace when they drew
+ the sword. We turn our Temples of Peace promptly into temples of war, and exhibit our
+ parsons as the most pugnacious characters in the community. I venture to affirm that
+ the sense of scandal given by this is far deeper and more general than the Church
+ thinks, especially among the working classes, who are apt either to take religion
+ seriously or else to repudiate it and criticize it closely. When a bishop at the
+ first shot abandons the worship of Christ and rallies his flock around the altar of
+ Mars, he may be acting patriotically, necessarily, manfully, rightly; but that does
+ not justify him in pretending that there has been no change, and that Christ is, in
+ effect, Mars. The straightforward course, and the one that would serve the Church
+ best in the long run, would be to close our professedly Christian Churches the moment
+ war is declared by us, and reopen them only on the signing of the treaty of peace. No
+ doubt to many of us the privation thus imposed would be far worse than the privation
+ of small change, of horses and motor cars, of express trains, and all the other
+ prosaic inconveniences of war. But would it be worse than the privation of faith, and
+ the horror of the soul, wrought by the spectacle of nations praying to their common
+ Father to assist them in sabring and bayonetting and blowing one another to pieces
+ with explosives that are also corrosives, and of the Church organizing this monstrous
+ paradox instead of protesting against it? Would it make less atheists or more?
+ Atheism is not a simple homogeneous phenomenon. There is the youthful atheism with
+ which every able modern mind begins: an atheism that clears the soul of superstitions
+ and terrors and servilities and base compliances and hypocrisies, and lets in the
+ light of heaven. And there is the atheism of despair and pessimism: the sullen cry
+ with which so many of us at this moment, looking on blinded deafened maimed wrecks
+ that were once able-bodied admirable lovable men, and on priests blessing war, and
+ newspapers and statesmen and exempt old men hounding young men on to it, are saying
+ "I know now there is no God." What has the Church in its present attitude to set
+ against this crushed acceptance of darkness except the quaint but awful fact that
+ there are cruder people on whom horrifying calamities have just the opposite effect,
+ because they seem the work of some power so overwhelming in its malignity that it
+ must be worshipped because it is mighty? Let the Church beware how it plays to that
+ gallery. If all the Churches of Europe closed their doors until the drums ceased
+ rolling they would act as a most powerful reminder that though the glory of war is a
+ famous and ancient glory, it is not the final glory of God.</p>
+ <p>But as I know quite well that the Churches are not going to do anything of the
+ kind, I must not close on a note which might to some readers imply that I hope, as
+ some highly respected friends of mine do, to build a pacific civilization on the
+ ruins of the vast ecclesiastical organizations which have never yet been able to
+ utter the truth, because they have had to speak to the poor according to their
+ ignorance and credulity, and to the rich according to their power. When I read <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>{53}</span>that the icon of the
+ Russian peasant is a religious force that will prevail over the materialism of
+ Helmholtz and Haeckel, I have to contain myself as best I can in the face of an
+ assumption by a modern educated European which implies that the Irish peasants who
+ tied scraps of rag to the trees over their holy wells and paid for masses to shorten
+ the stay of their dead relatives in purgatory, were more enlightened than their
+ countryman Tyndall, the Lucretian materialist, and to ask whether the Russian peasant
+ may not find his religious opinions somewhat neutralized by his alliance with the
+ countries of Paul Bert and Combes, of Darwin and Almroth Wright. If we are to keep up
+ any decent show of talking sense on this point we must begin by recognizing that the
+ lines of battle in this war cut right across all the political and sectarian lines in
+ Europe, except the line between our Socialist future and our Commercialist past.
+ Materialist France, metaphysical Germany, muddle-headed English, Byzantine Russia may
+ form what military combinations they please: the one thing they cannot form is a
+ Crusade; and all attempts to represent this war as anything higher or more
+ significant philosophically or politically or religiously for our Junkers and our
+ Tommies than a quite simple primitive contest of the pugnacity that bullies and the
+ pugnacity that will not be bullied are foredoomed to the derision of history. However
+ far-reaching the consequences of the war may be, we in England are fighting to shew
+ the Prussians that they shall not trample on us nor on our neighbors if we can help
+ it, and that if they are fools enough to make their fighting efficiency the test of
+ civilization, we can play that game as destructively as they. That is simple, and the
+ truth, and by far the jolliest and most inspiring ground to recruit on. It stirs the
+ blood and stiffens the back as effectively and quickly as hypocrisy and cant and
+ humbug sour and trouble and discourage. But it will not carry us farther than the end
+ of the fight. We cannot go on fighting forever, or even for very long, whatever Lord
+ Kitchener may think; and win, lose, or tie, the parties, when the fight is over, must
+ fall back on their civil wisdom and political foresight for a settlement of the terms
+ on which we are to live happily together ever after. The practicable conditions of a
+ stable comity of nations cannot be established by the bayonet, which settles nothing
+ but the hash of those who rely on it. They are to found, as I have already explained,
+ in the substitution for our present Militarist kingdoms of a system of democratic
+ units delimited by community of language, religion, and habit; grouped in federations
+ of united States when their extent makes them politically unwieldy; and held against
+ war by the bond of international Socialism, the only ground upon which the identity
+ of interest between all workers never becomes obscured.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Death of Jaures.</b></p>
+ <p>By far the greatest calamity wrought by the war has been the death of
+ Jaur&egrave;s, who was worth more to France and to Europe than ten army corps and a
+ hundred Archdukes. I once proposed a press law that might have saved him. It was that
+ every article printed in a newspaper should bear not only the name and address of the
+ writer, but the sum paid him for the contribution. If the wretched dupe who
+ assassinated Jaur&egrave;s had known that the trashy articles on the Three Years Law
+ he had been reading were not the voice of France in peril, but the ignorant
+ scribbling of some poor devil at his wits' end to earn three francs, he would hardly
+ have thrown away his own life to take that of the greatest statesman his country has
+ produced since Mirabeau. It is hardly too much to say that this ghastly murder and
+ the appalling war that almost eclipsed its horror, is the revenge of the sweated
+ journalist on a society so silly that though it will not allow a man to stuff its
+ teeth without ascertained qualifications for the task, it allows anyone, no matter
+ how poor, how ignorant, how untrained, how imbecile, to stuff its brains without even
+ taking the trouble <span class="pagenum"><a name="page54"
+ id="page54"></a>{54}</span>to ask his name. When we interfere with him and his
+ sweaters at all, we interfere by way of appointing a censorship to prevent him from
+ telling, not lies, however mischievous and dangerous to our own people abroad, but
+ the truth. To be a liar and a brewer of bad blood is to be a privileged person under
+ our censorship, which, so far, has proceeded by no discoverable rule except that of
+ concealing from us everything that the Germans must know lest the Germans should find
+ it out.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Socialism Alone Keeps Its Head.</b></p>
+ <p>Socialism has lost its leader on the Continent; but it is solid and representative
+ on the main point; it loathes war; and it sees clearly that war is always waged by
+ working men who have no quarrel, but on the contrary a supreme common interest. It
+ steadily resists the dangerous export of capital by pressing the need for
+ uncommercial employment of capital at home: the only practicable alternative. It
+ knows that war, on its romantic side, is "the sport of kings": and it concludes that
+ we had better get rid of kings unless they can kill their tedium with more democratic
+ amusements. It notes the fact that though the newspapers shout at us that these
+ battles on fronts a hundred miles long, where the slain outnumber the total forces
+ engaged in older campaigns, are the greatest battles known to history, such
+ machine-carnages bore us so horribly that we are ashamed of our ingratitude to our
+ soldiers in not being able to feel about them as about comparatively trumpery scraps
+ like Waterloo or even Inkerman and Balaclava. It never forgets that as long as higher
+ education, culture, foreign travel, knowledge of the world: in short, the
+ qualification for comprehension of foreign affairs and intelligent voting, is
+ confined to one small class, leaving the masses in poverty, narrowness, and
+ ignorance, and being itself artificially cut off at their expense from the salutary
+ pressure of the common burden which alone keeps men unspoilt and sane, so long will
+ that small class be forced to obtain the support of the masses for its wars by
+ flattering proclamations of the national virtues and indignant denunciations of the
+ villanies of the enemy, with, if necessary, a stiffening of deliberate falsehood and
+ a strenuous persecution of any attempt at inconvenient truthtelling. Here there is no
+ question of the Junker being a monster. You must rule ignoramuses according to their
+ ignorance. The priest must work bogus miracles for them; the man of science must
+ offer them magical cures and prophylactics; the barrister must win their verdict by
+ sophistries, false pathos, and appeals to their prejudices; the army and navy must
+ dazzle them with pageants and bands and thundering salvos and romantic tales; the
+ king must cut himself off from humanity and become an idol. There is no escape whilst
+ such classes exist. Mahomet, the boldest prophet that ever threw down the gage of the
+ singleness and supremacy of God to a fierce tribe of warriors who worshipped stones
+ as devotedly as we worship dukes and millionaires, could not govern them by religious
+ truth, and was forced to fall back on revolting descriptions of hell and the day of
+ judgment, invented by him for the purpose. What else could he do if his people were
+ not to be abandoned to their own destruction? If it is an axiom of diplomacy that the
+ people must not be told the truth, that is not in the least because, for example, Sir
+ Edward Grey has a personal taste for mendacity; it is a necessity imposed by the fact
+ that the people are incapable of the truth. In the end, lying becomes a reflex action
+ with diplomatists; and we cannot even issue a penny bluebook without beginning it
+ with the quite unprovoked statement that "no crime has ever aroused deeper or more
+ general horror throughout Europe" than the assassination of the Archduke. The real
+ tragedy was that the violent death of a fellow creature should have aroused so
+ little.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Divided Against Ourselves</b>.</p>
+ <p>This state of things would be bad enough if the governing classes really sought
+ the welfare of the governed, and were deceiving them for their own good. <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>{55}</span>But they are doing
+ nothing of the sort. They are using their power secondarily, no doubt, to uphold the
+ country in which they have so powerful and comfortable a position; but primarily
+ their object is to maintain that position by the organized legal robbery of the poor;
+ and to that end they would join hands with the German Junkers as against the working
+ class in Germany and England as readily as Bismarck joined hands with Thiers to
+ suppress the Commune of Paris. And even if this were not so, nothing would persuade
+ the working classes that those who sweat them ruthlessly in commercial enterprise are
+ any more considerate in public affairs, especially when there is any question of war,
+ by which much money can be made for rich people who deal in the things most wanted
+ and most highly paid for in war time: to wit, armaments and money. The direct
+ interest of our military caste in war accounts for a good deal; but at least it
+ involves personal risk and hardship and bereavement to the members of that caste. But
+ the capitalist who has shares in explosives and cannons and soldiers' boots runs no
+ risk and suffers no hardship; whilst as to the investor pure and simple, all that
+ happens to him is that he finds the unearned income obtainable on Government security
+ larger than ever. Victory to the capitalists of Europe means that they can not only
+ impose on the enemy a huge indemnity, but lend him the money to pay it with whilst
+ the working classes produce and pay both principal and interest.</p>
+ <p>As long as we have that state of things, we shall have wars and secret and
+ mendacious diplomacy. And this is one of many overwhelming reasons for building the
+ State on equality of income, because without it equality of status and general
+ culture is impossible. Democracy without equality is a delusion more dangerous than
+ frank oligarchy and autocracy. And without Democracy there is no hope of peace, no
+ chance of persuading ourselves that the sacredness of civilization will protect it
+ any more than the sacredness of the cathedral of Rheims has protected it, not against
+ Huns and Vandals, but against educated German gentlemen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Rheims.</b></p>
+ <p>Commercial wage-slaves can never reproduce that wonderful company of sculptured
+ figures that made Rheims unlike any other place in the world; and if they are now
+ destroyed, or shortly about to be, it does not console me that we still
+ have&mdash;perhaps for a few days longer only&mdash;the magical stained glass of
+ Chartres and the choir of Beauvais. We tell ourselves that the poor French people
+ must feel as we should feel if we had lost Westminster Abbey. Rheims was worth ten
+ Westminster Abbeys; and where it has gone the others may just as easily go too. Let
+ us not sneer at the German pretension to culture: let us face the fact that the
+ Germans are just as cultured as we are (to say the least) and that war has
+ nevertheless driven them to do these things as irresistibly as it will drive us to do
+ similar things tomorrow if we find ourselves attacking a town in which the highest
+ point from which our positions can be spotted by an observer with a field glass in
+ one hand and a telephone in the other is the towering roof of the cathedral. Also let
+ us be careful how we boast of our love of medieval art to people who well know, from
+ the protests of Ruskin and Morris, that in times of peace we have done things no less
+ mischievous and irreparable for no better reason than that the Mayor's brother or the
+ Dean's uncle-in-law was a builder in search of a "restoration" job. If Rheims
+ cathedral were taken from the Church to-morrow and given to an English or French
+ joint stock company, everything transportable in it would presently be sold to
+ American collectors, and the site cleared and let out in building sites. That is the
+ way to make it "pay" commercially.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Fate of The Glory Drunkard.</b></p>
+ <p>But our problem is how to make Commercialism itself bankrupt. We must beat
+ Germany, not because the Militarist hallucination and our irresolution forced Germany
+ to make this war, so desperate for her, at a moment so unfavourable to herself, but
+ because she has made her<span class="pagenum"><a name="page56"
+ id="page56"></a>{56}</span>self the exponent and champion in the modern world of the
+ doctrine that military force is the basis and foundation of national greatness, and
+ military conquest the method by which the nation of the highest culture can impose
+ that culture on its neighbors. Now the reason I have permitted myself to call General
+ Von Bernhardi a madman is that he lays down quite accurately the conditions of this
+ military supremacy without perceiving that what he is achieving is a <i>reductio ad
+ absurdum</i>. For he declares as a theorist what Napoleon found in practice, that you
+ can maintain the Militarist hold over the imaginations of the people only by feeding
+ them with continual glory. You must go from success to success; the moment you fail
+ you are lost; for you have staked everything on your power to conquer, for the sake
+ of which the people have submitted to your tyranny and endured the sufferings and
+ paid the cost your military operations entailed. Napoleon conquered and conquered and
+ conquered; and yet, when he had won more battles than the maddest Prussian can ever
+ hope for, he had to go on fighting just as if he had never won anything at all. After
+ exhausting the possible he had to attempt the impossible and go to Moscow. He failed;
+ and from that moment he had better have been a Philadelphia Quaker than a victor of
+ Marengo, Austerlitz, Jena and Wagrarn. Within a short breathing time after that
+ morning when he stood outside Leipsic, whistling <i>Malbrook s'en va-t-en guerre</i>
+ whilst his flying army gasped its last in the river or fled under a hail of bullets
+ from enemies commanded by generals without a tenth of his ability or prestige, we
+ find him disguised as a postillion, cowering abjectly behind the door of a carriage
+ whilst the French people whom he had crammed with glory for a quarter of a century
+ were seeking to tear him limb from limb. His success had made him the enemy of every
+ country except France: his failure made him the enemy of the human race. And that was
+ why Europe rose up finally and smashed him, although the English Government which
+ profited by that operation oppressed the English people for thirty years afterwards
+ more sordidly than Napoleon would have oppressed them, and its Allies replaced him on
+ the throne of France by an effete tyrant not worthy to unlace his shoe latchet.
+ Nothing can finally redeem Militarism. When even genius itself takes that path its
+ end is still destruction. When mere uppishness takes it the end is not changed,
+ though it may be reached more precipitately and disastrously.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Kaiser.</b></p>
+ <p>Prussia has talked of that path for many years as the one down which its destiny
+ leads it. Its ruler, with the kid gloves he called mailed fists and the high class
+ tailoring he called shining armour, did much of the talking, though he is in practice
+ a most peaceful teetotaller, as many men with their imaginations full of the romance
+ of war are. He had a hereditary craze for playing at soldiers; and he was and is a
+ na&iuml;ve suburban snob, as the son of The Englishwoman would naturally be, talking
+ about "the Hohenzollerns" exactly as my father's people in Dublin used to talk about
+ "the Shaws." His stage walk, familiar through the cinematograph, is the delight of
+ romantic boys, and betrays his own boyish love of the <i>Paradeschritt</i>. It is
+ frightful to think of the powers which Europe, in its own snobbery, left in the hands
+ of this Peter Pan; and appalling as the results of that criminal levity have been,
+ yet, being by no means free from his romantic follies myself, I do not feel harshly
+ toward Peter, who, after all, kept the peace for over twenty-six years. In the end
+ his talk and his games of soldiers in preparation for a toy conquest of the world
+ frightened his neighbours into a league against him; and that league has now caught
+ him in just such a trap as his strategists were laying for his neighbours. We please
+ ourselves by pretending that he did not try to extricate himself, and forced the war
+ on us; but that is not true. When he realized his peril he tried hard enough; but
+ when he saw that it was no use he accepted the situation and dashed at his enemies
+ with <span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>{57}</span>an infatuate
+ courage not unworthy of the Hohenzollern tradition. Blinded as he was by the false
+ ideals of his class, it was the best he could do; for there is always a chance for a
+ brave and resolute warrior, even when his back is not to the wall but to the
+ Russians.</p>
+ <p>That means that we have to conquer him and not to revile him and strike moral
+ attitudes. His victory over British and French Democracy would be a victory of
+ Militarism over civilization; it would literally shut the gates of mercy on mankind.
+ Leave it to our official fools and governesses to lecture the Kaiser, and to let
+ loose Turcos and Ghoorkas on him: a dangerous precedent. Let Thomas Atkins, Patrick
+ Murphy, Sandy McAlister, and Pitou Dupont fight him under what leadership they can
+ get, until honour is satisfied, simply because if St. George does not slay the dragon
+ the world will be, as a friend of mine said of Europe the other day, "no place for a
+ gentleman."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Recapitulation.</b></p>
+ <p>1. The war should be pushed vigorously, not with a view to a final crushing of the
+ German army between the Anglo-French combination and the Russian millions, but to the
+ establishment of a decisive military superiority by the Anglo-French combination
+ alone. A victory unattainable without Russian aid would be a defeat for Western
+ European Liberalism; Germany would be beaten not by us, but by a Militarist autocracy
+ worse than her own. By sacrificing Prussian Poland and the Slav portions of the
+ Austrian Empire Germany and Austria could satisfy Russia, and merge Austria and
+ Germany into a single German State, which would then dominate France and England,
+ having ascertained that they could not conquer her without Russia's aid. We may
+ fairly allow Russia to conquer Austria if she can; that is her natural part of the
+ job. But if we two cannot without Russian help beat Potsdam, or at least hold her up
+ in such a stalemate as will make it clear that it is impossible for her to subjugate
+ us, then we shall simply have to "give Germany best" and depend on an alliance with
+ America for our place in the sun.</p>
+ <p>2. We cannot smash or disable Germany, however completely we may defeat her,
+ because we can do that only by killing her women; and it is trifling to pretend that
+ we are capable of any such villainy. Even to embarrass her financially by looting her
+ would recoil on ourselves, as she is one of our commercial customers and one of our
+ most frequently visited neighbors. We must, if we can, drive her from Belgium without
+ compromise. France may drive her from Alsace and Lorraine. Russia may drive her from
+ Poland. She knew when she opened fire that these were the stakes in the game; and we
+ are bound to support France and Russia until they are won or lost, unless a stalemate
+ reduces the whole method of warfare to absurdity. Austria, too, knew that the Slav
+ part of her empire was at stake. By winning these stakes the Allies will wake the
+ Kaiser from his dream of a Holy Teuton Empire with Prussia as the Head of its Church,
+ and teach him to respect us; but that once done, we must not allow our camp followers
+ to undo it all again by spiteful humiliations and exactions which could not seriously
+ cripple Germany, and would make bad blood between us for a whole generation, to our
+ own great inconvenience, unhappiness, disgrace, and loss. We and France have to live
+ with Germany after the war; and the sooner we make up our mind to do it generously,
+ the better. The word after the fight must be <i>sans rancune</i>; for without peace
+ between France, Germany, and England, there can be no peace in the world.</p>
+ <p>3. War, as a school of character and a nurse of virtue, must be formally shut up
+ and discharged by all the belligerents when this war is over. It is quite true that
+ ill-bred and swinish nations can be roused to a serious consideration of their
+ position and their destiny only by earthquakes, pestilences, famines, comets' tails,
+ Titanic shipwrecks, and devastating wars, just as it is true that African chiefs
+ cannot make themselves respected unless they bury virgins alive beneath <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id="page58"></a>{58}</span>the doorposts of their
+ hut-palaces, and Tartar Khans find that the exhibition of a pyramid of chopped-off
+ heads is a short way to impress their subjects with a convenient conception of their
+ divine right to rule. Ivan the Terrible did undoubtedly make his subjects feel very
+ serious indeed; and stupid people are apt to believe that this sort of
+ terror-stiffened seriousness is virtue. It is not. Any person who should set-to
+ deliberately to contrive artificial earthquakes, scuttle liners, and start epidemics
+ with a view to the moral elevation of his countrymen, would very soon find himself in
+ the dock. Those who plan wars with the same object should be removed with equal
+ firmness to Hanwell or Bethlehem Hospital. A nation so degraded as to be capable of
+ responding to no higher stimulus than that of horror had better be exterminated, by
+ Prussian war lords or anyone else foolish enough to waste powder on them instead of
+ leaving them to perish of their own worthlessness.</p>
+ <p>4. Neither England nor Germany must claim any moral superiority in the
+ negotiations. Both were engaged for years in a race for armaments. Both indulged and
+ still indulge in literary and oratorical provocation. Both claimed to be "an Imperial
+ race" ruling other races by divine right. Both shewed high social and political
+ consideration to parties and individuals who openly said that the war had to come.
+ Both formed alliances to reinforce them for that war. The case against Germany for
+ violating the neutrality of Belgium is of no moral value to England because
+ (<i>a</i>) England has allowed the violation of the Treaty of Paris by Russia
+ (violation of the neutrality of the Black Sea and closing of the free port of
+ Batoum), and the high-handed and scandalous violation of the Treaty of Berlin by
+ Austria (seizure of Bosnia and Herzegovina), without resorting to arms or remedying
+ the aggression in any other way; (<i>b</i>) because we have fully admitted that we
+ should have gone to war in defence of France in any case, whether the Germans came
+ through Belgium or not, and refused to give the German Ambassador any assurance that
+ we should remain neutral if the Germans sacrificed the military advantage of
+ attacking through Belgium for the sake of avoiding a war with us; (<i>c</i>) that the
+ apparent moral superiority of the pledge given by France and England to respect
+ Belgian neutrality is illusory in face of the facts that France and England stood to
+ gain enormously, and the Germans to lose correspondingly, by confining the attack on
+ France to the heavily fortified Franco-German frontier, and that as France and
+ England knew they would be invited by the Belgians to enter Belgium if the Germans
+ invaded it, the neutrality of Belgium had, as far as they were concerned, no real
+ existence; (<i>d</i>) that as all treaties are valid only <i>rebus sic stantibus</i>,
+ and the state of things which existed at the date of the Treaty of London (1839) had
+ changed so much since then (Belgium is no longer menaced by France, at whom the
+ treaty was aimed, and has acquired important colonies, for instance) that in 1870
+ Gladstone could not depend on it, and resorted to a special temporary treaty not now
+ in force, the technical validity of the 1839 treaty is extremely doubtful; (<i>e</i>)
+ that even if it be valid its breach is not a <i>casus belli</i> unless the parties
+ for reasons of their own choose to make it so; and (<i>f</i>) that the German
+ national peril pleaded by the Imperial Chancellor in his Peer Gynt speech (the
+ <i>durchhauen</i> one), when he rashly but frankly threw away the strong technical
+ case just stated and admitted a breach of international law, was so great according
+ to received Militarist ideas in view of the Russian mobilization, that it is
+ impossible for us or any other Militarist-ridden Power to feel sure ourselves, much
+ less to convince others, that we should have been any more scrupulous in the like
+ extremity. It must be added that nothing can extenuate the enormity of the broad fact
+ that an innocent country has been horribly devastated because her guilty neighbors
+ formed two huge explosive combinations against one another instead of establishing
+ the peace of Eu<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59"
+ id="page59"></a>{59}</span>rope, but that is an offence against a higher law than any
+ recorded on diplomatic scraps of paper, and when it comes to judgment the outraged
+ conscience of humanity will not have much patience with the naughty child's plea of
+ "he began it."</p>
+ <p>5. Militarism must not be treated as a disease peculiar to Prussia. It is rampant
+ in England; and in France it has led to the assassination of her greatest statesman.
+ If the upshot of the war is to be regarded and acted upon simply as a defeat of
+ German Militarism by Anglo-French Militarism, then the war will not only have wrought
+ its own immediate evils of destruction and demoralization, but will extinguish the
+ last hope that we have risen above the "dragons of the prime that tare each other in
+ their slime." We have all been equally guilty in the past. It has been steadily
+ assumed for years that the Militarist party is the gentlemanly party. Its opponents
+ have been ridiculed and prosecuted in England; hanged, flogged or exiled in Russia;
+ and imprisoned in France: they have been called traitors, cads, cranks, and so forth:
+ they have been imprisoned for "bad taste" and for sedition whilst the most virulent
+ sedition against Democracy and the most mutinous military escapades in the
+ commissioned ranks have been tolerated obsequiously, until finally the practical
+ shelving of Liberal Constitutionalism has provoked both in France and England a
+ popular agitation of serious volume for the supersession of parliament by some sort
+ of direct action by the people, called Syndicalism. In short Militarism, which is
+ nothing but State Anarchism, has been carried to such a pitch that it has been
+ imitated and countered by a movement of popular Anarchism, and has exploded in a
+ European war because the Commercialist Governments of Europe had no faith in the
+ effective guidance of any modern State by higher considerations than Lord Roberts's
+ "will to conquer," the weight of the Kaiser's mailed fist, and the interest of the
+ Bourses and Stock Exchanges. Unless we are all prepared to fight Militarism at home
+ as well as abroad, the cessation of hostilities will last only until the belligerents
+ have recovered from their exhaustion.</p>
+ <p>6. It had better be admitted on our side that as to the conduct of the war there
+ is no trustworthy evidence that the Germans have committed any worse or other
+ atrocities than those which are admitted to be inevitable in war or accepted as part
+ of military usage by the Allies. By "making examples" of towns, and seizing
+ irresponsible citizens as hostages and shooting them for the acts of armed civilians
+ over whom they could exert no possible control, the Germans have certainly pushed
+ these usages to a point of Terrorism which is hardly distinguishable from the
+ deliberate murder of non-combatants; but as the Allies have not renounced such
+ usages, nor ceased to employ them ruthlessly in their dealings with the hill tribes
+ and fellaheen and Arabs with whom they themselves have to deal (to say nothing of the
+ notorious domestic Terrorism of the Russian Government), they cannot claim superior
+ humanity. It is therefore waste of time for the pot to call the kettle black. Our
+ outcry against the Germans for sowing the North Sea with mines was followed too
+ closely by the laying of a mine field there by ourselves to be revived without
+ flagrant Pharisaism. The case of Rheims cathedral also fell to the ground as
+ completely as a good deal of the building itself when it was stated that the French
+ had placed a post of observation on the roof. Whether they did or not, all military
+ experts were aware that an officer neglecting to avail himself of the cathedral roof
+ in this way, or an opposing officer hestitating to fire on the cathedral so used,
+ would have been court-martialed in any of the armies engaged. The injury to the
+ cathedral must therefore be suffered as a strong hint from Providence that though we
+ can have glorious wars or glorious cathedrals we cannot have both.</p>
+ <p>7. To sum up, we must remember that if this war does not make an end of war in the
+ west, our allies of to-day may be our enemies of to-morrow, as they are of yesterday,
+ and our enemies of to-day our allies of to-morrow as they are of <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>{60}</span>yesterday; so that if we
+ aim merely at a fresh balance of military power, we are as likely as not to negotiate
+ our own destruction. We must use the war to give the <i>coup de grace</i> to medieval
+ diplomacy, medieval autocracy, and anarchic export of capital, and make its
+ conclusion convince the world that Democracy is invincible, and Militarism a rusty
+ sword that breaks in the hand. We must free our soldiers, and give them homes worth
+ fighting for. And we must, as the old phrase goes, discard the filthy rags of our
+ righteousness, and fight like men with everything, even a good name, to win,
+ inspiring and encouraging ourselves with definite noble purposes (abstract nobility
+ butters no parsnips) to face whatever may be the price of proving that war cannot
+ conquer us, and that he who dares not appeal to our conscience has nothing to hope
+ from our terrors.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>"Shaw's Nonsense About Belgium"</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Arnold Bennett.</h3>
+ <h3>Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Mr. Bernard Shaw's "Common Sense About the War" is the talk of the town, and it
+ deserves to be. One of its greatest values is its courage, for in it Shaw says many
+ things no one else would have dared to say. It therefore, by breaking the unearthly
+ silence on certain aspects of the situation, perhaps inaugurates a new and healthier
+ period of discussion and criticism on such subjects as recruiting, treatment of
+ soldiers and sailors' dependents, secret diplomacy, militarism, Junkerism, churches,
+ Russia, peace terms, and disarmament. It contains the most magnificent, brilliant,
+ and convincing common sense that could possibly be uttered. No citizen, I think,
+ could rise from the perusal of this tract with a mind unilluminated or opinions
+ unmodified. Hence everybody ought to read it, though everybody will not be capable of
+ appreciating the profoundest parts of it.</p>
+ <p>Mixed up with the tremendous common sense, however, is a considerable and unusual
+ percentage of that perverseness, waywardness, and arlequinading which are apparently
+ an essential element of Mr. Shaw's best work. This is a disastrous pity, having
+ regard to the immense influence and vogue of Shaw, not only in Germany, but in
+ America, and the pity is more tragic as Shaw has been most absurd about the very
+ matter which most Englishmen regard as most important, namely, Great Britain's actual
+ justification for going to war.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Shaw's Admitted Prejudice.</b></p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw begins by conceiving the possibility of his being blinded by prejudice or
+ perversity, and admits his capacity for criticising England with a certain slight
+ malicious taste for taking the conceit out of her. Seemingly he belongs to that
+ numerous class who think that to admit a fault is to excuse it. As a highwayman might
+ say before taking your purse, "Now, I admit, I have a certain slight taste for
+ thieving," and expect you to smile forgiveness of his depredation, Shaw's bias is
+ evident wherever he discusses the action and qualities of Great Britain. Thus he
+ contrasts Bernhardi's brilliant with our own very dull militarists' facts, the result
+ being that the intense mediocrity of Bernhardi leaps to the eye on every page, and
+ that events have thoroughly discredited all his political and many of his military
+ ideas, whereas we possess militarists of first-class quality.</p>
+ <p>Naturally, Shaw calls England muddle-headed. Yet of late nothing has been less
+ apparent than muddle-headednes. Of British policy, Shaw says that since <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>{61}</span>the Continent generally
+ regards us as hypocritical, we must be hypocritical. He omits to say that the
+ Continent generally, and Germany in particular, regards our policy and our diplomacy
+ as extremely able and clear-sighted. The unscrupulous cleverness of Britain is one of
+ Germany's main themes.</p>
+ <p>These are minor samples of Mr. Shaw's caprices. In discussing the origin of the
+ war Mr. Shaw's aim is to prove that all the great powers are equally to blame. He
+ goes far back and accuses Great Britain of producing the first page of Bernhardian
+ literature in the anonymous pamphlet "The Battle of Dorking." He admits in another
+ passage that the note of this pamphlet was mainly defensive. He is constantly thus
+ making intrenchments for himself in case of forced retirement, and there is in his
+ article almost nothing unjust against Great Britain that is not ingeniously
+ contradicted or mitigated elsewhere.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Great Britain's War Literature.</b></p>
+ <p>Beginning with "The Battle of Dorking" and ending with H.G. Well's "War in the
+ Air," one of the most disturbing and effective warnings against militarism ever
+ written, he sees simply that Great Britain has produced threatening and provocative
+ militarist literature comparable to Germany's. No grounds exist for such a
+ contention. There are militarists in all countries, but there are infinitely more in
+ Germany than in any other country. The fact is notorious. The fact is also notorious
+ that the most powerful, not the most numerous, party in Germany wanted the war. It
+ would be as futile to try to prove that Ireland did not want home rule as that
+ Germany did not want war. As for a war literature, bibliographical statistics show, I
+ believe, that in the last ten years Germany has published seven thousand books or
+ pamphlets about war. No one but a German or a Shaw, in a particularly mischievous
+ mood, would seek to show that Great Britain is responsible for the war fever. It
+ simply is not so.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw urges that we all armed together. Of course we did. When one nation
+ publicly turns bellicose the rest must copy her preparations. If Great Britain could
+ live this century over again she would do over again what she actually did, because
+ common sense would not permit her to do otherwise. The admitted fact that some
+ Britons are militarists does not in the slightest degree impair the rightness or
+ sagacity of our policy. If one member of a family happens to go to the bad and turn
+ burglar, therein is no reason why the family mansion should not be insured against
+ burglary.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw proceeds to what he calls the diplomatic history of the war. His notion
+ of historical veracity may be judged from his description of the Austrian ultimatum
+ to Servia as an escapade of a dotard. He puts the whole blame of it on Franz Josef,
+ and yet he must know quite well that Germany has admitted even to her own subjects
+ that Austria asked Germany's opinion about her policy and obtained Germany's approval
+ before delivering the ultimatum. [Official German pamphlet "Reasons for the War with
+ Russia," August, 1914.] There is no word in Mr. Shaw's diplomatic history of the
+ repeated efforts toward peace made by Great Britain and scotched by Germany. On the
+ contrary, with astounding audacity and disingenuousness, he tries to make it appear
+ that suggestions for peace were offered by Germany and rejected by Great Britain.
+ Once more it simply was not so.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Defense of Sir Edward Grey.</b></p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's paraphrase of Document 17 in the British diplomatic dispatches is a
+ staggering travesty. So far as I can see it bears no relation to the original.
+ Further, he not only deplores that a liberal government should have an imperialist
+ Foreign Secretary, but he accuses Sir Edward Grey of sacrificing his country's
+ welfare to the interests of his party and committing a political crime in order not
+ to incur the wrath of The Daily News and The Manchester Guardian. This is totally
+ inexcusable. Let me not be misunderstood. I am not a liberal. I am an out-and-out
+ radical. I foresee a cleavage in the Liberal Party, and when that cleavage comes I
+ shall be on the extreme left wing. I entirely <span class="pagenum"><a name="page62"
+ id="page62"></a>{62}</span>agree with Mr. Shaw's denunciation of secret diplomacy and
+ undemocratic control of foreign policy. By every social tradition I should be in
+ opposition to Sir Edward Grey, but I think Grey was the best Foreign Secretary that
+ the Liberal Party could have chosen and that he worked well on the only possible
+ plane, the plane of practicality. I am quite sure he is an honest man, and I strongly
+ resent, as Englishmen of all opinions will resent, any imputation to the
+ contrary.</p>
+ <p>As for the undemocratic control of foreign policy, a strong point about our policy
+ on the eve of the war is that it was dictated by public opinion. [See Grey's dispatch
+ to the British Ambassador at Berlin, No. 123.] Germany could have preserved peace by
+ a single gesture addressed to Franz Josef. She did not want peace. Mr. Shaw said Sir
+ Edward Grey ought to have shouted out at the start that if Germany fought we should
+ fight. Sir Edward Grey had no authority to do so, and it would have been foolish to
+ do so. Mr. Shaw also says Germany ought to have turned her whole army against Russia
+ and left the western frontier to the care of the world's public opinion in spite of
+ the military alliance by which France was bound to Russia. We have here an example of
+ his aptitude for practical politics.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Was Belgium a Mere Excuse?</b></p>
+ <p>Let us now come to Belgium. Mr. Shaw protests needlessly that he holds no brief
+ for small States as such, and he most vehemently denies that we are bound to knight
+ errantry on their behalf. His objection to small States is that they are either
+ incorrigibly bellicose or standing temptations to big powers. Outside the Balkans no
+ small State is bellicose. All are eminently pacific. That they are a standing
+ temptation to thieves is surely no reason for their destruction. If it is a reason
+ Mr. Shaw ought to throw his watch down the drain.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw states that Belgium was a mere excuse for our going to war. That there
+ was a vast deal more in the pre-war diplomacy than appears in the printed dispatches,
+ or in any dispatches, I am as convinced as Mr. Shaw is, but I am equally convinced
+ that so far as we are concerned there was nothing in diplomacy, however secret, to
+ contradict our public attitude. The chief item not superficially apparent is that the
+ diplomats knew all along that Germany wanted war and was doing all she could to
+ obtain war on terms most favorable to herself. That our own interest coincided with
+ our duty to Belgium did not by any means render our duty a mere excuse for action. If
+ a burglar is making his way upward in the house where Mr. Shaw lives and Mr. Shaw
+ comes down and collars him in the flat of a defenseless invalid below and hands him
+ over to the police Mr. Shaw would not expect the police to say, "You are a hypocrite;
+ you only seized the burglar because you feared he would come to you next." I stick to
+ the burglar simile, because a burglar is just what Germany is.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The "Infamous Proposal" Phrase.</b></p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw characterizes Mr. Asquith's phrase, "Germany's infamous proposal," as the
+ "obvious barrister's claptrap." Once more this is totally inexcusable. I do not
+ always see eye to eye with Mr. Asquith, I agree with Mr. Shaw that he has more than
+ once sinned against democratic principles, but what has that to do with the point? My
+ general impression of Mr. Asquith and general impression of this country is that Mr.
+ Asquith, in addition to being a pretty good Liberal, is an honest man. His memorable
+ speech containing the "infamous proposal" phrase was most positively a genuine
+ emotional expression of his conviction and of the conviction of the whole country,
+ and Mr. Shaw, a finished master of barrister's claptrap when he likes, has been
+ merely scurrilous about it. Germany's proposal was infamous. Supposing that we had
+ taken the Belgium point at Mr. Shaw's valuation of it, the "nonsense about Belgium,"
+ as he calls it, and refrained from war, what would have been the result? The result
+ would have been that today we could not have looked one another in the face as we
+ passed down the street.</p>
+ <p>But Mr. Shaw is not content with ar<span class="pagenum"><a name="page63"
+ id="page63"></a>{63}</span>guing that the Belgium point was a mere excuse for us. He
+ goes further and continually implies that there was no Belgium point. Every time he
+ mentions the original treaty that established Belgian neutrality he puts after it in
+ brackets, [date 1839,] an obvious barrister's device, sarcastically to discredit the
+ treaty because of its age. He omits to say that the chief clause in the treaty
+ contains the word "perpetually." What is worse, he infers that by the mere process of
+ years, as Belgium gradually made herself, civilized herself, enriched herself, and
+ increased her stake in the world, her moral right to independence and freedom instead
+ of being strengthened was somehow mysteriously weakened. The theory is monstrous, but
+ if he does not mean that he means nothing.</p>
+ <p>Further, he says that in 1870 Gladstone could not depend on the treaty of 1839 and
+ resorted to a special temporary treaty not now in force, and that, therefore,
+ technically the validity of the 1839 treaty is extremely doubtful. This twisting of
+ facts throws a really sinister light upon the later developments of Mr. Shaw as a
+ controversialist. The treaty of 1870 was, indeed, temporary, except in so far as it
+ confirmed the treaty of 1839. Article 3 of the treaty of 1870 says it shall be
+ binding on the contracting parties during the continuance of the war and for twelve
+ months after, and then proceeds "and on the expiration of that time the independence
+ and neutrality of Belgium will, so far as the high contracting parties are
+ respectively concerned, continue to rest as heretofore on the quintuple treaty of
+ 1839," (textual.)</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's manifesto is lengthy and it will no doubt be reprinted in book form. I
+ repeat what I said in my first paragraph as to the major part of it, but I assert
+ that the objectionable part of the manifesto is so objectionable in its flippancy, in
+ its perversity, in its injustice, and in its downright inexactitude as to amount to a
+ scandal. Mr. Shaw has failed to realize either his own importance or the importance
+ and very grave solemnity of the occasion. The present is no hour for that
+ disingenuous, dialectical bravura which might excusably relieve a domestic
+ altercation. Before reprinting Mr. Shaw should, I suggest; seriously reconsider his
+ position and rewrite.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2>"Bennett States the German Case"</h2>
+ <h3>By George Bernard Shaw.</h3>
+ <h4>Letter to The Daily News of London.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To The Daily News, Sir:</i></p>
+ <p>In justice to the enemy I am bound to admit that Mr. Bennett's case, which is the
+ German case, is a very strong one and that his ironic comment on the case against
+ Germany, "We have here an example of Mr. Shaw's aptitude for practical politics," is
+ a comment that the Kaiser will probably make and that the average "practical man"
+ will make, too.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Bennett, in saying that I am a simpleton to doubt that, if Germany had not
+ attacked France, France would have attacked her, shows a much greater courage than he
+ credits me with. That is Germany's contention, and if valid is her justification for
+ dashing at any enemy who, as Mr. Bennett believes, was lying in wait to spring on her
+ back when Russia had her by the throat. If Mr. Bennett is right, and I am a
+ simpleton, there is nothing more to be said. The Imperial Chancellor's plea of "a
+ state of necessity" is proved up to the hilt.</p>
+ <p>I did not omit to say that Germany regards our policy and our diplomacy as
+ extremely able and clear-sighted. I expressly and elaborately pointed that out. <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id="page64"></a>{64}</span>Mr. Bennett, being an
+ Englishman, is so flattered by the apparent compliment from those clever Germans that
+ he insists it is deserved. I, being an Irishman and, therefore, untouched by
+ flattery, see clearly that what the Germans mean by able and clear-sighted is crafty,
+ ruthless, unscrupulous, and directed to the deliberate and intentional destruction of
+ Germany by a masterly diplomatic combination of Russia, France and Great Britain
+ against her, and I defend the English and Sir Edward Grey in particular on the
+ ground, first, that the British nation at large was wholly innocent of the
+ combination, and, second, that even among diplomatists, guilty as most of them
+ unquestionably were and openly as our Junkers&mdash;like the German
+ ones&mdash;clamored for war with Germany, there was more muddle than Machiavelli
+ about them, and that Sir Edward never completely grasped the situation or found out
+ what he really was doing and even had a democratic horror of war.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Shaw's Excuses Scorned.</b></p>
+ <p>But Mr. Bennett will not have any of my excuses for his unhappy country. He will
+ have it that the Germans are right in admiring Sir Edward as a modern Caesar Bogia,
+ and that our militarist writers are "of first class quality," as contrasted with the
+ "intense mediocrity" of poor Gen. Bernhardi.</p>
+ <p>If Mr. Bennett had stopped there the Kaiser would send him the Iron Cross, but of
+ course, like a true born Englishman, he goes on to deny indignantly that England has
+ produced a militarist literature comparable to Germany and to affirm hotly that Mr.
+ Asquith is an honest man whose bad arguments are "a genuine emotional expression of
+ his convictions and that of the whole country," and that Sir Edward Grey is an honest
+ man, and that he (Mr. Bennett) "strongly resents as Englishmen of all opinions will
+ resent any imputation to the contrary"&mdash;just what I said he would say and that
+ he entirely agrees with my denunciation of secret diplomacy and undemocratic control
+ of foreign policy and that I am a perverse and wayward harlequin, mischievous,
+ unveracious, scurrilous, monstrous, disingenuous, flippant, unjust, inexact,
+ scandalous, and objectionable, and that on all points to which he takes exception and
+ a good many more I am so magnificent, brilliant, and convincing that no citizen could
+ rise from perusing me without being illuminated.</p>
+ <p>That is just a little what I meant by saying that Englishmen are muddle-headed,
+ because they never have been forced by political adversity to mistrust their tempers
+ and depend on a carefully stated case as Irishmen have been.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Showed Germany the Way.</b></p>
+ <p>I did with great pains what nobody else had done. I showed what Germany should
+ have done, knowing that I had no right to reproach her for doing what she did until I
+ was prepared to show that a better way had been open to her.</p>
+ <p>Bennett says, in effect, that nobody but a fool could suppose that my way was
+ practicable and proceeds to call Germany a burglar. That does not get us much
+ further. In fact, to me it seems a step backward. At all events it is now up to Mr.
+ Bennett to show us what practical alternative Germany had except the one I described.
+ If he cannot do that, can he not, at least, fight for his side? We, who are
+ mouthpieces of many inarticulate citizens, who are fighting at home against the
+ general tumult of scare and rancor and silly cinematograph heroics for a sane facing
+ of facts and a stable settlement, are very few. We have to bring the whole continent
+ of war-struck lunatics to reason if we can.</p>
+ <p>What chance is there of our succeeding if we begin by attacking one another
+ because we do not like one another's style or confine ourselves to one another's pet
+ points? I invite Mr. Bennett to pay me some more nice compliments and to reserve his
+ fine old Staffordshire loathing for my intellectual nimbleness until the war is
+ over.&mdash;G. BERNARD SHAW.</p>
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/chesterton.jpg"><img src='images/chesterton_thumb.jpg' width='252'
+ height='400' alt='G.K. CHESTERTON. See Page 108' title='G.K. CHESTERTON.' /></a> <a
+ href="images/conandoyle.jpg"><img src='images/conandoyle_thumb.jpg' width='251'
+ height='400' alt='SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE. (Photo by Arnold Genthe) See Page 132'
+ title='SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>G.K. CHESTERTON. See <a href="#page108">Page 108</a></i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE. (Photo by Arnold Genthe) See <a href="#page132">Page
+ 132</a></i><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>{65}</span>Flaws in Shaw's
+ Logic</h2>
+ <h3>By Cunninghame Graham.</h3>
+ <h4>Letter to The Daily News of London.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The Daily News:</i></p>
+ <p>The controversy between men of peace as to the merits, demerits, causes, and
+ possible results of the great war is becoming almost as dangerous and little less
+ noisy than the real conflict now being waged in and around Ypres. The only difference
+ between the two conflicts is that the combatants in Flanders only strive to kill the
+ body. Those who fire paper bullets aim at the annihilation of the soul.</p>
+ <p>Literature is a nice thing in its way. It both passes and gives us many weary
+ hours. It has its place. But I submit that at present it is mere dancing on a tight
+ rope. Whether the war could have been avoided or not is without interest today. In
+ fact, there is no controversy possible after Maximilian Harden's pronouncement. In it
+ he throws away the scabbard and says boldly that Germany from the first was set on
+ war. Hence it becomes a work of supererogation to find excuses for her, and hence, my
+ old friend, Bernard Shaw, penned his long indictment of his hereditary enemy,
+ England, all in vain.</p>
+ <p>We are a dull-witted race. Although the Continent has dubbed us "Perfidious
+ Albion," it is hard for us to take in general ideas, and no man clearly sees the
+ possibilities of the development of the original sin that lies dormant in him. Thus
+ it becomes hard for us to understand the reason why, if Germany tore up a treaty
+ three months ago we are certain to tear up another in three years' time.</p>
+ <p>All crystal gazing appeals but little to the average man on this side of the St.
+ George's channel. It may be that we shall tear up many treaties, but the broad fact
+ remains that hitherto we have torn up none.</p>
+ <p>The particular treaty that Germany tore up was signed by five powers in 1839,
+ ratified again in 1870 by a special clause respected by King Frederick William in his
+ war against the French, was often referred to in Parliament by Gladstone and by other
+ Ministers, and was considered binding on its signatories. Germany tore it up for her
+ own ends, thus showing that she was a stupid though learned people, for she at once
+ at the same time prejudiced her case to the whole world and made a military
+ mistake.</p>
+ <p>No human motives are without alloy, but at the same time honesty in our case has
+ proved the better policy. Germany, no doubt, would have granted us almost anything
+ for our assent to her march through Belgium. We refused her offers, no doubt from
+ mixed motives, for every Englishman is not an orphan archangel, stupid, or dull or
+ muddle-headed, or what not. The balance of the world is with us, not, perhaps,
+ because they love us greatly, but because they see that we, perhaps by accident, have
+ been forced into the right course and that all smaller nationalities such as
+ Montenegro, Ireland, Poland, and the rest would disappear on our defeat.</p>
+ <p>CUNNINGHAME GRAHAM.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page66" id="page66"></a>{66}</span><b>Editorial
+ Comment on Shaw</b></h2>
+ <h4>From THE NEW YORK TIMES, Nov. 5, 1914.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Mr. G. Bernard Shaw thinks that "the time has now come to pluck up courage and
+ begin to talk and write soberly about the war." Our readers will find in THE TIMES
+ Sunday Magazine this morning some of the fruits of this auto-suggestion. They are
+ very remarkable. While Mr. Shaw can hardly be called a representative of any
+ considerable class, the fact that one prominent writer, always much read, can assume
+ Mr. Shaw's attitude and make public Mr. Shaw's comments throws a strong light on the
+ spirit of British society. It is true that he intimates that he ran the risk of
+ "prompt lynching" at one time, but that was probably the suggestion of a certain
+ timidity and vanity to which he pleads guilty. His safe and prosperous existence is
+ really a striking evidence, on the one hand, of British good nature, and, on the
+ other, of the indifferent estimate the British put on his influence.</p>
+ <p>Like Iago, Mr. Shaw is nothing if not critical, and in this crisis his criticism
+ is for the most part bitter, extreme, and in purpose destructive. He particularly
+ dislikes Sir Edward Grey and the Government of which he is a leading spirit, and the
+ class which the Government represents. He singles out Sir Edward as the chief
+ "Junker" and among the chief "militarists" who brought about this war. Mr. Shaw's
+ attacks on the Foreign Secretary are savage, and, as often happens with savage
+ attacks&mdash;they are far from consistent. For example, Mr. Shaw paraphrases at some
+ length the interview between Sir Edward and the German Ambassador, in which the
+ latter made four different propositions to secure the neutrality of Great Britain if
+ Germany waged war on France, all of which Sir Edward refused. Mr. Shaw sees in this
+ only evidence of determination to take arms against Germany in any case, carrying out
+ a long-cherished plan formed by the Government of which Sir Edward Grey was, for this
+ matter, the responsible member. He does not see&mdash;- though it is so plain that a
+ wayfaring man though a professional satirist should not err therein&mdash;that what
+ the Secretary intended to do&mdash;what, in fact, he did do&mdash;was to refuse to
+ put a price on British perfidy, to accept any "bargain" offered to that end.</p>
+ <p>On the other hand, Mr. Shaw paraphrases at still greater length the report of the
+ interview in which the Russian Foreign Minister and the French Ambassador at St.
+ Petersburg tried to induce the British Government to commit itself in advance to war
+ against Germany. Mr. Shaw thinks that thus the German "bluff" would have been called
+ and war would have been prevented, and he is confident that Mr. Winston Churchill
+ would have taken the Bismarck tone and dictated the result. He cannot see&mdash;what
+ is really the essential fact in both cases&mdash;that Sir Edward Grey was striving in
+ every honorable way to preserve peace, that his Government refused to stand idle and
+ see France crushed in the same spirit that it refused to menace Germany until a
+ definite and undeniable cause of war arose.</p>
+ <p>That cause came with Germany's violation of its pledge to observe the neutrality
+ of Belgium, and England's response excites Mr. Shaw's most furious contempt. He
+ adopts with zest the judgment of the German Chancellor. The pledge for all who signed
+ it was but a scrap of paper, of no more binding force than others that had gone their
+ way to dusty death in the diplomatic waste baskets. To observe the obligation it
+ imposed was hypocrisy. To fight in order to compel Germany to observe it was crass
+ militarism. Plainly, Mr. Shaw is a little difficult. <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page67" id="page67"></a>{67}</span>The Government under which he lives is
+ either too bellicose or not bellicose enough; too ready to help France if France is
+ attacked or not ready enough to bully Germany, and especially it is all wrong about
+ Belgium and its treaty, since treaties have several times been broken, and so on
+ through a bewildering circle of contradictory statements and notions.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw finds little to choose between the groups of combatants. He distinctly
+ prides himself on his impartiality, not to say indifference. On account of his Irish
+ birth he claims something of the detachment of a foreigner, but admits a touch of
+ Irish malice in taking the conceit out of the English. Add to this his professed
+ many-sidedness as a dramatist and playwright and we get as good an explanation as can
+ be given of this noted writer's attitude toward the tremendous struggle now waging.
+ But Mr. Shaw's assumption of even-handed scorn for every one concerned, of "six of
+ one and a half dozen of the other," does not hold out. He feels profoundly that such
+ fighting as Germany does, for such a purpose as inspires Germany, must be met by
+ force, and that England could not in the long run, no matter by whom guided or
+ governed, have shirked the task laid upon her. That being the case, one wonders a
+ little why it was worth while to cover every one with ridicule and to present a
+ picture of Great Britain so essentially grotesque and distorted.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Bernard Shaw on the End of the War.</b></p>
+ <p><i>From The New York Sun, Nov</i>. 15, 1914.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>In the midst of a good deal of untimely gibing, George Bernard Shaw, as reported
+ in a London dispatch to The Sun of yesterday, says one or two very wise and
+ appropriate things about the end of the war and the times to come after it. His
+ warnings are a useful check to the current loose talk of the fire-eaters and
+ preachers of the gospel of vengeance.</p>
+ <p>"We and France have to live with Germany after the war," Mr. Shaw points out. Even
+ to embarrass her financially would be a blow to England herself, Germany being one of
+ England's best customers and one of her most frequently visited neighbors. The truth
+ of this is unanswerable. The great object must be to effect a peace with as little
+ rancor as possible.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw does not say it, but there are going to be overwhelming political reasons
+ why the pride of Germany and Austria and still more why their military power shall
+ not be too much impaired in case of their defeat.</p>
+ <p>Perhaps in the final settlement the Western Allies may be found to have more in
+ common with Berlin than with St. Petersburg. Germany has pointed this out with much
+ force.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's position is not admirable when he chooses their days of tribulation for
+ sticking pins into his own people, even though some of the things he says may be
+ unpleasantly true. But it cannot be denied that he has some sane views on the
+ situation. The pity is that he must always impair the force of the useful things he
+ has to say by flippancies, impertinences, and out-of-place girdings at those whose
+ courage he should help to maintain. He reminds one of a man who insists on wrangling
+ over the mistaken construction of a chimney while the house is burning down.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Bernard Shaw as a Patriot.</b></p>
+ <p><i>From The New York World, Nov. 17, 1914.</i></p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Bernard Shaw has written for our neighbor THE TIMES an elaborate three-page thesis
+ to maintain:</p>
+ <p>1. That Great Britain was abundantly justified in making war with Germany.</p>
+ <p>2. That the explanation given by the British Government for making war against
+ Germany was stupid, hypocritical, mendacious, and disgraceful.</p>
+ <p>3. That he alone is capable of interpreting the moral purpose of the British
+ people in undertaking this necessary work of civilization.</p>
+ <p>4. That the reason the British Government's justification of the war is so
+ inadequate is because no British Government is ever so clever as Bernard Shaw.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>{68}</span>5. That even in
+ the midst of the most horrible calamity known to human history it pays to
+ advertise.</p>
+ <p>Various patriots have various ways of serving their country. Some go to the firing
+ line to be shot and others stay at home to be a source of innocent merriment to the
+ survivors.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>"Shaw Empty of Good Sense"</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <h3>By Christabel Pankhurst.</h3>
+ <h4>Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>His reputation for perversity and contrariety is fully maintained by George
+ Bernard Shaw in the ineptly-named article, "Common Sense About the War." At home in
+ Britain we all know that it is Mr. Shaw's habit to oppose where he might be expected
+ to support, and vice versa. For example, should he speak at a prohibition meeting he
+ would most likely extol strong drink, or if asked to defend the sale of liquor
+ declare dramatically for prohibition.</p>
+ <p>He sees himself as the critic of everything and everybody&mdash;the one and only
+ man who knows what to do and how to do it.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw charges his compatriots with intellectual laziness, but they are not so
+ lazy as to leave him to do their thinking for them. That he sometimes&mdash;and
+ oftener in the past than now&mdash;says illuminating things is true, but firm
+ reliance cannot be placed upon his freakish mental processes, exemplified in his
+ writings about the war. He has played with effect the part of jester to the British
+ public, but when, as now, his jests are empty of the kernel of good sense, the matter
+ gets beyond a joke.</p>
+ <p>The truth is that in face of this great and tragic reality of war the men of mere
+ words, the literary theorists, are in danger of missing their way. Certainly women of
+ deeds are more likely to see things aright than are men of words, and it is as a
+ woman of deeds that I, a suffragette, make answer to my irresponsible compatriot, Mr.
+ Bernard Shaw. And yet not a compatriot, for Mr. Shaw disclaims those feelings of
+ loyalty and enthusiasm for the national cause that fill the mass of us who live under
+ the British flag!</p>
+ <p>"Until Home Rule emerges from its present suspended animation," says Mr. Shaw, "I
+ shall retain my Irish capacity for criticising England with something of the
+ detachment of a foreigner." Now, these words are not a little surprising, because Mr.
+ Shaw's interest in the Home Rule cause has hitherto been of a most restrained and
+ well-nigh secret character, and any one who imagines that Mr. Shaw is a strenuous
+ campaigner for Home Rule is greatly mistaken. If in the years preceding the war the
+ Horne Rule cause had depended upon Mr. Shaw's activities, it would have been in a bad
+ way. It is now, when a foreign enemy menaces our nation as a whole, that Mr. Shaw
+ manifests this enhanced interest in Home Rule.</p>
+ <p>The suffragettes, who have fought and suffered for their cause as no living man
+ reformer in the British Isles has fought and suffered for his, have during the
+ present crisis subordinated their claim to the urgent claims of national honor and
+ safety. So Mr. Shaw, whose campaigning is done generally in the armchair, and never
+ in any place more dangerous than the rostrum, ought surely to refrain from his
+ frivolous, inconsistent, destructive, and unprofitable criticism of our country.</p>
+ <p>As for the question of lynching, Mr. Shaw is, the American public may be assured,
+ in no danger whatever of being lynched. He is in far more danger of having the Iron
+ Cross conferred upon <span class="pagenum"><a name="page69"
+ id="page69"></a>{69}</span>him by the Kaiser in recognition of his attempt to
+ supplement the activities of the official German Press Bureau. But if he were a
+ German subject, writing on certain points of German policy as he does upon certain
+ points of British policy, his fate can well be imagined. The only retribution that
+ will come upon this man, who exploits the freedom of speech and pen that England
+ gives him, is that his words lose now and henceforth the weight they used to have.
+ Oh, the conceit of the man, who in this dark hour, when the English are dying on the
+ battlefield, writes of "taking the conceit out of England" by a stroke of his
+ inconsequent pen!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Admits England's Cause Is Just.</b></p>
+ <p>But with all his will to "take the conceit" out of this England, so fiercely
+ menaced, her sons killed, her daughters widowed&mdash;yet needing, so he thinks, his
+ castigation into the bargain&mdash;the critic is constrained to admit that our
+ country is playing the part of "the responsible policeman of the West" and that "for
+ England to have refrained from hurling herself into the fray, horse, foot, and
+ artillery, was impossible from every point of view." Then why preface these
+ statements by a series of attacks upon the country which is admitted to be justly
+ fighting in a just cause?</p>
+ <p>The sole importance of Mr. Shaw's criticism comes from this. He unwarrantably
+ indorses statements made by Germany in her attempt to put the Allies in the wrong.
+ Because he is known to the German people by his dramatic work, extracts from his
+ article will be circulated among them as an expression of the views of a
+ representative British citizen. And how are the Germans to know that this is false,
+ deprived as they are of news of what is happening in the outside world and ignorant
+ as they must be of Mr. Shaw's real lack of influence at this serious time?</p>
+ <p>That their traffic in mere words disables some literary men from comprehending
+ facts is shown by Mr. Shaw's play upon the word "Junkerism." He points to the
+ dictionary definition of the word instead of to the fact it represents, and by this
+ verbal juggling tries to convince his readers that the military autocracy that
+ dominates and misdirects Germany has its counterpart and equal in Great Britain.
+ Whereas, the conditions in the two countries are wholly different, and it is this
+ very difference that Germany has regarded as one of the signs of British
+ inferiority.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's suggestion that the British are posing as "Injured Innocence" and as
+ "Mild Gazelles" is neither funny nor true. We are simply a people defending
+ ourselves, resisting conquest and military despotism, and fighting for the ideal of
+ freedom and self-government. When our country is no longer in danger we suffragettes,
+ if it be still necessary, are prepared to fight on and wage our civil war that we may
+ win freedom and self-government for women as well as men. But, in the meantime, we
+ support the men&mdash;yes, and even the Government do we in a sense support&mdash;in
+ fighting the common enemy who menaces the freedom of men and women alike. Although
+ the Government in the past have erred gravely in their dealing with the woman
+ question, they are for the purpose of this war the instrument of the nation.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Facts Belie Him.</b></p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw would seem to hold Britain responsible for German militarism, but the
+ facts he cites are against him there. "I am old enough," says he, "to remember the
+ beginnings of the anti-German phase of military propaganda in England. The
+ Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left England very much taken aback. Up to that date
+ nobody was much afraid that Prussia&mdash;suddenly Prussia beat France right down in
+ the dust." Precisely! It was this war on France, deliberately engineered by Bismarck,
+ and it was the defeat and despoilment of France that fed Germany's militarism and
+ encouraged Germany to make those plans of military aggression which, after long and
+ deliberate preparation, are being carried into effect in the present war. Germany's
+ plans of military aggression have compelled other countries to prepare, <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id="page70"></a>{70}</span>however inadequately, to
+ defend themselves.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw gives support to the Germans' contention that they are not the aggressors
+ but are menaced by Russia. Yet he does not explain why, if that is so, Germany took
+ French gold and territory in 1870 and has since continued to alienate France; nor why
+ Germany has chosen Britain as her enemy of enemies to be supplanted and surpassed in
+ power.</p>
+ <p>If Germany is simply on the defensive against Russia and has no desire to attack
+ and cripple France and Britain, then why has she antagonized these countries and
+ driven one after the other into a Russian alliance?</p>
+ <p>When he affects to criticise Germany for not having "entrusted the security of her
+ western frontier to the public opinion of Western Europe and to America and fought
+ Russia, if attacked, with her rear not otherwise defended," Mr. Shaw burkes the fact
+ that Germany's object is to seize Belgium and to make it part of the German Empire,
+ also to seize at least the northern coast of France and to make this seizure the
+ means of dominating Britain.</p>
+ <p>Indeed, the point at which German ambition for conquest ceases would be hard to
+ fix. And yet Mr. Shaw pictures for us an injured-innocent, mild-gazelle Germany on
+ the defensive! Quite in this picture is his assertion that "the ultimatum to Servia
+ was the escapade of a dotard," whereas, everybody knows that the ultimatum was
+ dictated at Berlin. It is plain as a pikestaff that in order to bring on the Great
+ War of conquest for which her rulers thought The Day had arrived. Germany dictated
+ the issue and terms of the ultimatum to Servia and then urged Austria to refuse any
+ compromise and arbitration which might have averted war.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw has assumed the impossible task of trying to blind the American public to
+ these and other facts that prove Germany to be the aggressor in this war, but he will
+ fail in his attempt at white-washing German policy because it is one of the
+ characteristics of the American people that they have a strong feeling for reality
+ and that no twisting and combining of words can prevent them from getting at the
+ facts beneath.</p>
+ <p>Bernhardi's writings are generally believed to be an inspiration, and in part a
+ statement of German policy. But Mr. Shaw differs. In trying to prove that Bernhardism
+ has nothing to do with the case, he maintains that Germany has neglected the
+ Bernhardi programme, and says:</p>
+ <p>"He warned Germany to make an alliance with Italy, Austria, Turkey, and America
+ before undertaking the subjugation of France, then of England."</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw then asserts that Germany disregarded this advice and allowed herself to
+ be caught between Russia and a Franco-British combination with no ally save Austria.
+ But here again facts are against him. For Germany has followed with marvelous
+ precision the line drawn by Bernhardi.</p>
+ <p>She is actually fighting in partnership with Austria. She allied herself with
+ Italy&mdash;though Italy has refused to fight with her in this present war of
+ aggression. Germany has also bent Turkey to her purpose, and has dragged the Turks
+ into the war. An alliance with America! Well, to have gained the help of America in
+ crushing France and crippling England, and ravaging and conquering Belgium was quite
+ beyond the power of German diplomacy and intrigue! Still Germany's attempts to win at
+ least America's moral support in this war are vigorous, if unsuccessful.</p>
+ <p>And with what quotable matter Mr. Shaw provides the German rulers for the further
+ deluding of their subjects when he writes of the German people being "stirred to
+ their depths by the apparent treachery and duplicity of the attack made upon them in
+ their extrernest peril from France and Russia," when he writes of the Kaiser doing
+ "all a Kaiser could do without unbearable ignominy to induce the British not to fight
+ him and give him fair play with Russia," and when he writes of "taking the Kaiser at
+ a disadvantage." As though we ought meekly to have agreed to the Kaiser's plan of
+ defeating France <span class="pagenum"><a name="page71"
+ id="page71"></a>{71}</span>and using her defeat as a bridge to England and a means of
+ conquering England! Uncommon nonsense about the war&mdash;so we must rename Mr.
+ Shaw's production!</p>
+ <p>And what is all this that flows from the pen of Mr. Shaw about Belgium and
+ "obsolete treaties," "rights of way," "necessities that know no international law,"
+ "circumstances that alter treaties"? Made in Germany such statements are, and yet
+ even the Imperial German Chancellor is not so contemptuous as Bernard Shaw is of
+ Belgium's charter of existence, the treaty now violated by Germany.</p>
+ <p>That is a treaty that cannot become obsolete until the powers who made it release
+ Belgium from the restrictions and obligations which the treaty imposes. Germany
+ pleads guilty in this matter of the violation of Belgian neutrality, though Mr. Shaw
+ attempts to show her innocent, for the German Chancellor has said: "This is an
+ infraction of international law&mdash;we are compelled to overrule the legitimate
+ protests of the Luxemburg and Belgian Governments. We shall repair the wrong we are
+ doing as soon as our military aims have been achieved." And again the Chancellor said
+ the invasion of Belgium "is contrary to the law of nature." To Mr. Bernard Shaw's
+ peculiar sense of international morality such dealing is not, however, repugnant.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>No "Right of Way" in Belgium.</b></p>
+ <p>In his letter to President Wilson Mr. Shaw, either willfully or ignorantly, seeks
+ to confuse the neutrality of a neutralized State such as Belgium and the neutrality
+ of an ordinary State such as Italy, and he pretends that violation of the first sort
+ of neutrality creates a situation in no way different from that created by the
+ violation of the second and normal sort of neutrality. I would refer Mr. Shaw to "The
+ Case for Belgium" issued by the Belgian delegates to the United States wherein they
+ point out that "the peculiarity about Belgian neutrality is that it has been imposed
+ upon her by the powers as the one condition upon which they recognized her national
+ existence."</p>
+ <p>The consequence of this is that whereas Italy and the United States and other
+ powers having a similar status can, subject to the risk of attack from an affronted
+ belligerent, please themselves whether or not they condone a violation of their
+ neutrality, Belgium and the other neutralized States cannot condone such violation,
+ but must either resist all breaches of their neutrality or surrender their right to
+ existence. And further a neutralized State, putting faith in the treaty that
+ guarantees its existence and its neutrality, refrains naturally from that preparation
+ for war which would be deemed necessary in the absence of such a treaty.</p>
+ <p>There is no such thing as the "right of way" through neutralized Belgium which Mr.
+ Shaw claims on behalf of belligerent Germany. Far from exercising a right of way
+ Germany has violently committed a trespass, offering a German promise, a mere "scrap
+ of paper," as reparation. "A right of way," argues Bernard Shaw, "is not a right of
+ conquest"; but the truth is that in passing through Belgium Germany assumed dominion
+ over Belgium, which dominion she has since formally asserted and is seeking forcibly
+ to maintain.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A New Shavian Theory.</b></p>
+ <p>No comprehension does Mr. Shaw display of the hurt to the Belgians' sense of honor
+ involved in Germany's use of their territory for purposes hostile to their friendly
+ neighbor, France. To be forced into injuring a friend is an outrage, indeed, and Mr.
+ Shaw surely knows too much of matters military to be unaware that to permit a right
+ of way to one combatant amounts to making an attack upon the other, and that Germany,
+ by the very fact of crossing Belgium soil, was forcing Belgium to be the enemy of
+ France. Only by their great heroism were the Belgians able to escape this infamy that
+ had been planned for them.</p>
+ <p>To be conquered does not really matter! There we have another Shavian <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72"></a>{72}</span>theory. How grateful
+ would the would-be world-ruling Kaiser feel to Mr. Shaw were he to succeed in
+ inoculating the peoples of Europe and of America with that theory! So would the task
+ of putting the peoples under the German yoke (otherwise known as German culture) be
+ made easier&mdash;and cheaper. But the spirit of national freedom, which is as
+ precious to humanity as is the spirit of individual freedom, cannot be driven out by
+ words any more than it can be driven out by blows. The most unlettered Belgian
+ soldier, fighting for a truth that is at the very heart and depth of all things true,
+ puts the mere wordmonger to shame.</p>
+ <p>That Great Britain does not fight only for Belgium is certainly a fact, though
+ Belgium's plight alone would have been enough to bring us into the conflict. We fight
+ also for France, because she is wrongfully attacked, and because she is by her
+ civilization and culture one of the world's treasures. We fight for the
+ all-sufficient reason of self-defense.</p>
+ <p>There is the case for Britain, and despite his special pleading for Germany, Mr.
+ Shaw can show no flaw in it. He does say, however, that the British Government,
+ instead of first seeking a mild way of preserving peace, ought to have said point
+ blank to Germany: "If you attack France we shall attack you." I also think that such
+ a declaration would have been the right one. To me and to many others the thought
+ that our country might stand by and watch inactively an attack upon France was
+ intolerable. Great was our relief when this apprehension was removed by the British
+ Government's declaration of war. Why did not the British Government say to Germany
+ before the war cloud burst that Britain would fight to defend France, and why did the
+ Government delay so long in declaring war? Mr. Shaw does not give the reason, but I
+ will give it.</p>
+ <p>It was that the Government feared opposition to our entering into the war would
+ come from a Radico-Socialist literary clique in London, from a section of the Liberal
+ press, and from certain Liberal and Labor politicians who had been deceived by German
+ professors and other missionaries of the Kaiser into thinking the German peril did
+ not exist. When Belgium was invaded most of these misguided ones were unable to cling
+ any longer to their "keep out of it" policy, and then the Government felt free to
+ act. Yet the Government need not have waited, because with the facts before them the
+ people as a whole would perfectly have understood the necessity of fighting even had
+ Belgium not been invaded.</p>
+ <p>Henceforward the general public must be kept informed of what is happening in the
+ international world. Foreign politics must be conducted with greater publicity.
+ There, at least, Bernard Shaw is right, but this is a reform which he and his
+ fellow-men have failed to effect, whereas women, had they been voters, would have
+ demanded and secured it long ago.</p>
+ <p>Now, although undue diplomatic secrecy, always wrong, will be especially wrong
+ when the terms of peace come to be made, sentimentality will certainly be more
+ mischievous still. It is difficult to resist the conclusion that Bernard Shaw's
+ writings on the war are intended as an appeal to sentimentality&mdash;an appeal that
+ Germany at the close of the war shall have treatment which, by being more than just
+ to her, would be less than just to the countries whom she has attacked, and would
+ mean a recurrence of this appalling war in after years.</p>
+ <p>Before the war specious words were used to cloak the German policy of aggression
+ which has plunged the world in horror and is martyrizing peoples. In view of the
+ coming victory of the Allies, the same tactics will be adopted by the German
+ militarists, and it behooves Bernard Shaw to beware lest even without intent he serve
+ as their tool. Men such as he who believe that while they can never be in the wrong,
+ their country can never be in the right, are just the men who are in danger of
+ stumbling at this time.</p>
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/pankhurst.jpg"><img src='images/pankhurst_thumb.jpg' width='256'
+ height='400'
+ alt='CHRISTABEL PANKHURST. Photo (C) by Underwood &amp; Underwood. See Page 68'
+ title='CHRISTABEL PANKHURST' /></a> <a href="images/barrie.jpg"><img
+ src='images/barrie_thumb.jpg' width='252' height='400'
+ alt='JAMES M. BARRIE. See Page 100' title='JAMES M. BARRIE' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>CHRISTABEL PANKHURST. Photo (C) by Underwood &amp; Underwood. See <a
+ href="#page68">Page 68</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>JAMES M. BARRIE. See <a href="#page100">Page 100</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73"></a>{73}</span><b>Comment by
+ Readers of Shaw</b></h2>
+ <p><b>Shaw Has Made Minister von Jagow's Remark on a "Scrap of Paper"
+ Understandable.</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Most hearty thanks for that masterly "common-sense" article of Bernard Shaw. How
+ clearly he expresses the much that many of us have felt way down inside and have not
+ been able to formulate even to ourselves!</p>
+ <p>He has made at least one woman&mdash;and one of German parentage at
+ that&mdash;understand what reams of public and private communications from all over
+ the Fatherland could not make clear: just why the blunt, impetuous, shocked, and
+ astounded Kaiser dared give utterance to that disgraceful "scrap of paper"
+ remark&mdash;inexcusable but also very understandable in the light of his knowledge
+ of and confidence in a more astute miscreant; why France and Germany have always
+ considered England more or less of a Tartuffe and a "Scheinheilige" (one who seems
+ holy); and why every German&mdash;man, woman and child&mdash;so execrates Sir Edward
+ Grey and colleagues.</p>
+ <p>Nothing in all the sickening present conditions, the future long-lasting woe and
+ misery, the barbarous neutrality violations has so made me blush for my mother's
+ country as the "scrap of paper" incident; and it has been most bitter to listen to
+ the extravagant, fantastic eulogies on England, with which we've been so favored
+ without feeling honestly able to make any excuses whatever for Germany.</p>
+ <p>But now&mdash;thanks to that article&mdash;I can understand what I may not
+ condone, and, though abhorring the Kaiser and my mother's compatriots for their share
+ in that horror going on abroad, I can also pity the hot-headed, imperfect mere man
+ going to war under a carefully incited and fostered misapprehension, and need no
+ longer glorify the cool-headed, sapient policy which so cleverly duped ruler and
+ people.</p>
+ <p>Not since the war began have I felt so undepressed, so free to sympathize where I
+ so love, so free from having to commend those for whom I feel no love whatever. For
+ all of which accept the warmest thanks of</p>
+ <p>KATE HUDSON.</p>
+ <p>New York, Nov. 17.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p><b>Shaw Article Work of "Farceur."</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>"Common sense and Shaw!" Shaw begins his article by saying, "I am giving my views
+ for what they are worth, with a malicious bias." Later on he says: "I am writing
+ history." Toward the end, after having obscured with words many things which had
+ hitherto been clear to most people, he says: "Now that we begin to see where we
+ really are, &amp;c." How Shavian!</p>
+ <p>There are at least two sides to all questions, and so long as they are reasonably
+ presented one is glad to hear them even if they fail to convince, but when a farceur
+ is allowed to occupy three whole pages usually filled by serious and interesting
+ writers it seems time to protest. The subject itself is not one for easy paradox or
+ false and flippant epigram.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw says he does not hold his tongue easily. He certainly does not, and when
+ it wags it wags foolishly, and, as he admits, maliciously, albeit sometimes
+ amusingly, and with superficial brilliance. He says the Irish do not consider England
+ their country yet. Of course they do not. Why should the Irish consider themselves
+ English? Neither do the Scots, nor the Welsh, nor the Canadians, nor will they ever
+ so think. But they are all British, and so, despite all Mr. Shaw says to the
+ contrary, Kitchener was right.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page74" id="page74"></a>{74}</span>Mr. Shaw falls
+ into a common and regrettable error when he continually writes England when he really
+ means the British Empire. It is the British Empire that is at war, for which, though
+ a citizen, Mr. Shaw has no authority to speak or to be considered a representative,
+ for, as he unnecessarily admits, he is not a "British patriot"; neither is he a
+ "Junker," for I have looked through all his definitions of the word, and none applies
+ to him.</p>
+ <p>In what way is the "Battle of Dorking" like Bernhardi? The one he says had as a
+ moral: "To arms! or the Germans will besiege London!" The other said: "To arms! so
+ that the Germans may besiege London, or any other country that does not want
+ compulsory culture!" The one was defensive, the other offensive.</p>
+ <p>He says of the war: "We" began it. Since he says he is not English, and that it is
+ an English war, whom does he mean by "We"? If he means the British, then, should a
+ policeman see a small boy being ill-treated by a large man and go to the help of that
+ boy, he, the policeman, must be said to have begun the fight which would probably
+ ensue between him and said man, notwithstanding that the policeman is only fulfilling
+ what he has sworn to do.</p>
+ <p>Monaco, he says, "seems to be, on the whole, the most prosperous and comfortable
+ State in Europe." If this is buffoonery it is singularly out of place. But even
+ Monaco has an "army," has had recently a small revolution, and the Monegasques do not
+ consider themselves ideally comfortable, and they have many "injustices." Does he
+ hold the principality up as a model administration and the source of its prosperity
+ as above reproach?</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw represents no one but himself, and, like all small men, he reviles others
+ greater than he, such as Sir Edward Grey and Mr. Asquith, but it does not become him,
+ looking at his own life's history, to cast cheap sneers at anonymous journalists in
+ cheap newspapers, who, though they may lack his literary style, possess, at least,
+ one virtue which he boasts that he has not&mdash;patriotism! Yours very truly,</p>
+ <p>LAWRENCE GRANT.</p>
+ <p>New York, Nov. 18.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p><b>Antidote to "Long Infliction of Dreary Stuff."</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Hail to Bernard Shaw! Could anything be more refreshing? After the long infliction
+ upon us of the flood of dreary stuff from London and Paris, and all the talk of
+ German militarism, and what is to become of it at the hands of such immaculately
+ unmilitary apostles of peace and international righteousness and treaty observances
+ as Russia, France, and England, and all the maudlin denunciations of the German
+ Nietzsche and Bernhardi, and the terrible Kaiser, could anything be more refreshing
+ than Shaw's advent in the field of current war history?</p>
+ <p>Though an Anglo-Saxon of American birth and long descent, and no believer in
+ militarism of any sort of itself, yet I see in that no reason to distort ancient
+ history by an attempt to make it appear that German militarism is at all the chief
+ sinner, or, for that matter, not a very necessary and desirable thing in order that
+ Germany may have her rightful place in the world, or any place at all.</p>
+ <p>V.A.W. Warwick, N.Y., Nov. 16.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p><b>False Assumptions Basis of Shaw's Attack.</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>The article on the European war by Mr. G.B. Shaw in THE TIMES of Sunday appeals to
+ me as a noteworthy specimen of what an artful literary genius can do in the way of
+ argumentative cantankerousness. His chief grievance is British diplomacy as
+ represented by Sir Edward Grey, upon whose devoted head he empties the vials of his
+ splenetic humor.</p>
+ <p>Underlying his argument are two glaringly false assumptions, and on these the
+ whole fabric rests. The first is that a certain undefined but presumably mul<span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75"></a>{75}</span>titudinous body, which he
+ designates as "Socialist," "Democratic," and "Social Democratic," is better qualified
+ to determine the policy and conduct the correspondence of the Foreign Office than
+ trained and experienced statesmen.</p>
+ <p>The second is that Sir Edward Grey should have followed the suggestion of Sazonof
+ and threatened Germany with war at a certain stage of the correspondence. This can
+ now be only a matter of opinion, but it may be confidently affirmed that of all
+ nations the Germany of this day would be the last to back down in face of a threat.
+ It may be also said generally that an open threat is about the surest way to bring on
+ a war. Austria threatened Servia and war ensued. Germany threatened Russia and war
+ ensued. Germany threatened Belgium&mdash;in the form of a notification that she
+ intended to invade her territory&mdash;and war ensued.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw's contentions are grotesque.</p>
+ <p>Flushing, Nov. 16. SAM TEST.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p><b>"Junkers" Controlled Old World Ages Before Shaw.</b></p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The New York Times:</i></p>
+ <p>With regard to the article by Mr. Bernard Shaw, the gist of the matter can be
+ compressed in fewer words. The ideas expressed are not the exclusive property of Mr.
+ Shaw. The Old World for indefinite ages has been controlled and directed by what he
+ calls the "Junker" class, the rich and idle aristocrats who want for nothing, and,
+ being born to rule, do not find it worth while to exert themselves mentally, and for
+ whom there is no suitable profession but the army and diplomacy.</p>
+ <p>The mass of the people are to them the great unwashed, and those a little higher
+ in the scale "cads and bounders," or the German equivalent, in fact the canaille of
+ the French who at the time of the Revolution took things into their own hands to the
+ great surprise of everybody. This substratum is not considered in the scheme of the
+ "Junker's" existence, though the lower orders alone are the workers and producers and
+ make ease and luxury possible.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Shaw. I believe, intends to intimate that there might be a use for the
+ intellectual class, the thinkers and writers with the imagination that can put them
+ mentally in the place of the individuals who make up the masses, think the thoughts
+ and live the lives vicariously of the people who are the nation, and if the "Junker"
+ class of England and Germany and kindred nations who govern and dictate its policies
+ were leavened with the brains and broad-mindedness of the thinkers there might be
+ found a better use for men than killing each other and a brighter outlook for the
+ world which is now filled with widows and orphans.</p>
+ <p>Mrs. F.B. WILLIAMSON.</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth, N.J., Nov, 16.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id="page76"></a>{76}</span><b>Open Letter
+ to President Wilson</b><a id="FNanchor_1" name='FNanchor_1'></a><a
+ href='#Footnote_1'><sup>[1]</sup></a></h2>
+ <h3>By George Bernard Shaw.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Sir: I petition you to invite the neutral powers to confer with the United States
+ of America for the purpose of requesting Britain, France, and Germany to withdraw
+ from the soil of Belgium and fight out their quarrel on their own territories.
+ However the sympathies of the neutral States may be divided, and whatever points now
+ at issue between the belligerent powers may be doubtful, there is one point on which
+ there can be neither division nor doubt, and that is that the belligerent armies have
+ no right to be in Belgium, much less to fight in Belgium, and involve the innocent
+ inhabitants of that country in their reciprocal slaughter. You will not question my
+ right to address this petition to you. You are the official head of the nation that
+ is beyond all question or comparison the chief of the neutral powers, marked out from
+ all the rest by commanding magnitude, by modern democratic constitution, and by
+ freedom from the complication of monarchy and its traditions, which have led Europe
+ into the quaint absurdity of a war waged formally between the German Kaiser, the
+ German Czar, the German King of the Belgians, the German King of England, the German
+ Emperor of Austria, and a gentleman who shares with you the distinction of not being
+ related to any of them, and is therefore describable monarchically as one
+ Poincar&eacute;, a Frenchman.</p>
+ <p>I make this petition on its merits, without claiming any representative character
+ except such as attaches to me as a human being. Nobody here has asked me to do it.
+ Except among the large class of constitutional beggars, the normal English feeling is
+ that it is no use asking for a thing if you feel certain that it will be refused, and
+ are not in a position to enforce compliance. Also, that the party whose request is
+ refused<span class="pagenum"><a name="page77" id="page77"></a>{77}</span> and not
+ enforced looks ridiculous. Many Englishmen will say that a request to the
+ belligerents to evacuate Belgium forthwith would be refused; could not be enforced;
+ and would make the asker ridiculous. We are, in short, not a prayerful nation. But to
+ you it will be clear that even the strongest power, or even allied group of powers,
+ can have its position completely changed by an expression of the public opinion of
+ the rest of the world. In your clear western atmosphere and in your peculiarly
+ responsible position as the head centre of western democracy, you, when the European
+ situation became threatening three months ago, must have been acutely aware of the
+ fact to which Europe was so fatally blinded&mdash;namely, that the simple solution of
+ the difficulty in which the menace of the Franco-Russo-British Entente placed Germany
+ was for the German Emperor to leave his western frontier under the safeguard of the
+ neighborliness and good faith of American, British, and French democracy, and then
+ await quite calmly any action that Russia might take against his country on the east.
+ Had he done so, we could not have attacked him from behind; and had France made such
+ an attack&mdash;and it is in the extremest degree improbable that French public
+ opinion would have permitted such a hazardous and unjustifiable adventure&mdash;he
+ would at worst have confronted it with the fullest sympathy of Britain and the United
+ States, and at best with their active assistance. Unhappily, German Kings do not
+ allow democracy to interfere in their foreign policy; do not believe in
+ neighborliness; and do believe in cannon and cannon fodder. The Kaiser never dreamed
+ of confiding his frontier to you and to the humanity of his neighbors. And the
+ diplomatists of Europe never thought of that easy and right policy, and could not
+ suggest any substitute for it, with the hideous result which is before you.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The State of Belgium.</b></p>
+ <p>Now that this mischief has been done, and the two European thunderclouds have met
+ and are discharging their lightnings, it is not for me to meddle with the question
+ whether the United States should take a side in their warfare as far as it concerns
+ themselves alone. But I may plead for a perfectly innocent neutral State, the State
+ of Belgium, which is being ravaged in a horrible manner by the belligerents. Her
+ surviving population is flying into all the neighboring countries to escape from the
+ incessant hail of shrapnel and howitzer shells from British cannon, French cannon,
+ German cannon, and, most tragic of all, Belgian cannon; for the Belgian Army is being
+ forced to devastate its own country in its own defense.</p>
+ <p>For this there can be no excuse; and at such a horror the rest of the world cannot
+ look on in silence without incurring the guilt of the bystander who witnesses a crime
+ without even giving the alarm. I grant that Belgium, in her extreme peril, made one
+ mistake. She called to her aid the powers of the Entente alone instead of calling on
+ the whole world of kindly men. She should have called on America, too; and it is hard
+ to see how you could in honor have disregarded that call. But if Belgium says
+ nothing, but only turns her eyes dumbly toward you while you look at the red ruin in
+ which her villages, her heaps of slain, her monuments and treasures are being hurled
+ by her friends and enemies alike, are you any the less bound to speak out than if
+ Belgium had asked you to send her a million soldiers?</p>
+ <p>Not for a moment do I suggest that your intervention should be an intervention on
+ behalf of either the Allies or the Entente. If you consider both sides equally
+ guilty, we know that you can find reasons for that verdict. But Belgium is innocent;
+ and it is on behalf of Belgium that so much of the world as is still at peace is
+ waiting for a lead from you. No other question need be prejudged. If Germany
+ maintains her claim to a right of way through Belgium on a matter which she believed
+ (however erroneously) to be one of life and death to her as a nation, nobody, not
+ even China, now pretends that such rights of way have not their place among those
+ common human rights which are su<span class="pagenum"><a name="page78"
+ id="page78"></a>{78}</span>perior to the more artificial rights of nationality. I
+ think, for example, that if Russia made a descent on your continent under
+ circumstances which made it essential to the maintenance of your national freedom
+ that you should move an army through Canada, you would ask our leave to do so, and
+ take it by force if we did not grant it. You may reasonably suspect, even if all our
+ statesmen raise a shriek of denial, that we should take a similar liberty under
+ similar circumstances in the teeth of all the scraps of paper in our Foreign Office
+ dustbin. You see, I am frank with you, and fair, I hope, to Germany. But a right of
+ way is not a right of conquest; and even the right of way was not, as the Imperial
+ Chancellor imagined, a matter of life and death at all, but a militarist
+ hallucination, and one that has turned out, so far, a military mistake. In short,
+ there was no such case of overwhelming necessity as would have made the denial of a
+ right of way to the German Army equivalent to a refusal to save German independence
+ from destruction, and therefore to an act of war against her, justifying a German
+ conquest of Belgium. You can therefore leave the abstract question of international
+ rights of way quite unprejudiced by your action. You can leave every question between
+ the belligerents fully open, and yet, in the common interest of the world, ask
+ Germany to clear out of Belgium, into France or across the Channel, if she can, back
+ home if she can force no other passage, but at all events out of Belgium. A like
+ request would, of course, be addressed to Britain and to France at the same time. The
+ technical correctness of our diplomatic position as to Belgium may be unimpeachable;
+ but as the effect of our shells on Belgium is precisely the same as that of the
+ German shells, and as by fighting on Belgian soil we are doing her exactly the same
+ injury that we should have done her if the violation of her neutrality had been
+ initiated by us instead of by Germany, we could not decently refuse to fall in with a
+ general evacuation.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Certain Result of Intervention.</b></p>
+ <p>At all events, your intervention could not fail to produce at least the result
+ that even if the belligerents refused to comply, your request would leave them in an
+ entirely new and very unpleasant relation to public opinion. No matter how powerful a
+ State is, it is not above feeling the vast difference between doing something that
+ nobody condemns and something that everybody condemns except the interested
+ parties.</p>
+ <p>That difference alone would be well worth your pains. But it is by no means a
+ foregone conclusion that a blank refusal would be persisted in. Germany must be aware
+ that the honor of England is now so bound up with the complete redemption of Belgium
+ from the German occupation that to keep Antwerp and Brussels she must take Portsmouth
+ and London. France is no less deeply engaged. You can judge better than I what chance
+ Germany now has, or can persuade herself she has, of exhausting or overwhelming her
+ western enemies without ruining herself in the attempt. Whatever else the war and its
+ horrors may have done or not done, you will agree with me that it has made an end of
+ the dreams of military and naval steam-rollering in which the whole wretched business
+ began. At a cost which the conquest of a whole continent would hardly justify, these
+ terrible armaments and the heroic hosts which wield them push one another a few miles
+ back and forward in a month, and take and retake some miserable village three times
+ over in less than a week. Can you doubt that though we have lost all fear of being
+ beaten, (our darkened towns, and the panics of our papers, with their endless scares
+ and silly inventions, are mere metropolitan hysteria,) we are getting very tired of a
+ war in which, having now re-established our old military reputation, and taught the
+ Germans that there is no future for their empire without our friendship and that of
+ France, we have nothing more to gain? In London and Paris and Berlin nobody at
+ present dares say "Sirs, ye are brethren; why do ye wrong one to an<span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page79" id="page79"></a>{79}</span>other?"; for the
+ slightest disposition toward a Christian view of things is regarded as a shooting
+ matter in these capitals; but Washington is still privileged to talk common humanity
+ to the nations.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>An Advantage of Aloofness.</b></p>
+ <p>Finally, I may remind you of another advantage which your aloofness from the
+ conflict gives you. Here, in England and in France, men are going to the front every
+ day; their women and children are all within earshot; and no man is hard-hearted
+ enough to say the worst that might be said of what is going on in Belgium now. We
+ talk to you of Louvain and Rheims in the hope of enlisting you on our side or
+ prejudicing you against the Germans, forgetting how sorely you must be tempted to say
+ as you look on at what we are doing, "Well, if European literature, as represented by
+ the library of Louvain, and European religion, as represented by the Cathedral of
+ Rheims, have not got us beyond this, in God's name let them perish." I am thinking of
+ other things&mdash;of the honest Belgians, whom I have seen nursing their wounds, and
+ whom I recognize at a glance as plain men, innocent of all warlike intentions,
+ trusting to the wisdom and honesty of the rulers and diplomatists who have betrayed
+ them, taken from their farms and their businesses to destroy and be destroyed for no
+ good purpose that might not have been achieved better and sooner by neighborly means.
+ I am thinking of the authentic news that no papers dare publish, not of the lies that
+ they all publish to divert attention from the truth. In America these things can be
+ said without driving American mothers and wives mad; here, we have to set our teeth
+ and go forward. We cannot be just; we cannot see beyond the range of our guns. The
+ roar of the shrapnel deafens us; the black smoke of the howitzer blinds us; and what
+ these do to our bodily senses our passions do to our imaginations. For justice, we
+ must do as the mediaeval cities did&mdash;call in a stranger. You are not altogether
+ that to us; but you can look at all of us impartially. And you are the spokesman of
+ Western democracy. That is why I appeal to you.</p>
+ <p>G. BERNARD SHAW.</p>
+ <p><b>Note:</b></p>
+ <div class='note'>
+ <a id="Footnote_1" name='Footnote_1'></a> <a href='#FNanchor_1'>[1]</a> The English
+ newspaper, The Nation, in which Mr. Shaw's letter to the President of the United
+ States appeared on Nov. 7, made the following comment thereon:<br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p>We are glad to publish Mr. Shaw's brilliant appeal to the President of the
+ United States, because we believe that when the time for settlement arrives, the
+ influence of America will be a powerful, perhaps a decisive, factor in obtaining
+ it. We agree, too, with him that while she is not likely to respond to an appeal to
+ intervene on the side of the Entente or the Alliance, the case of Belgium, the
+ innocent victim of the war, is bound to find her in a very different mood. The
+ States are already Belgium's almoner; it is only a step further for them to come in
+ as her savior. But on a vital point we disagree with Mr. Shaw. His Irish mind puts
+ the case with an indifference to which we cannot pretend. We have got to save
+ Western Europe from a victory of Prussian militarism, as well as to avenge Belgium
+ and set her on her feet again. We regard the temper and policy revealed in
+ Germany's violation of Belgium soil and her brutalization of the Belgian people as
+ essential to our judgment of this war and its end. And we dare not concede an inch
+ to Mr. Shaw's "right of way" theory. His distinction between "right of way" and a
+ "right of conquest" has no practical effect other than to extinguish the rights of
+ small nationalities as against great ones, who alone have the power to take a
+ "right of way" when it is refused, and afterward to turn it into a right of
+ conquest. Germany's action was not only a breach of her own treaty (only revealed
+ within a few hours of its execution), but of Article I. of The Hague Convention on
+ the rights of neutral powers:</p>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"THE TERRITORY OF NEUTRAL POWERS IS INVIOLABLE."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>It is not therefore a small thing that Germany has ripped clean through the
+ whole fabric of The Hague Conventions of 1907. Could the American Government, aware
+ of that fact, address herself to intervention on the Belgian question without
+ regard to the breaches of international law which were perpetrated, first, through
+ the orignal German invasion of Belgium, and then in the conduct of the campaign in
+ that country?</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>{80}</span><b>A German
+ Letter to G. Bernard Shaw</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Herbert Eulenberg.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>The following letter from the noted German playwright Eulenberg, whose plays
+ of a decided modern tendency have been presented extensively in Germany and in
+ Vienna, was made public by the German Press Bureau of New York in October</i>,
+ 1914.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Bernard Shaw: You have addressed us Germans several times of late without
+ receiving a reply from us. The reason for this was probably the momentary bitterness
+ against your country of our people's intellectual representatives. Indeed, our best
+ scholars and artists, Ernst Haeckel at 81 years, leading the rest, stripped
+ themselves during these past weeks of all the honors which England had apportioned
+ them. Permit me as one who had the opportunity to do much for the propagation of your
+ dramatic works, especially of your finest drama, "Candida," in Western Germany and in
+ Holland, to present as quiet and as moderate a retort as is possible.</p>
+ <p>Your appeal to intellectual Germany we reciprocate with a question to intellectual
+ England. It is as follows: How is it possible for you to witness your country's
+ present unheard of policy (so opposed to culture) without rising as one man against
+ it? Do you believe that we thinking Germans would ever, without saying or doing
+ anything, observe an alliance of our Government, whose goal was the strengthening of
+ imperialism and the subjugation and destruction of a cultured power, such as France
+ or England? Never! Among your people only a very small number of brave scholars
+ protested against this criminal alliance of your Government at the beginning of the
+ war. You others, you poets, painters, and musicians of present-day England were
+ silent and permitted Sir Edward Grey to continue to sin against a people related to
+ you by blood and intellect. You raised your voice a little, Bernard Shaw! But what
+ did you propose to us: "Refrain from your militarism, my dear Germans, and become
+ again the congenial, complacent poets and thinkers, the people of Goethe and
+ Beethoven, whom no one hated! Then we will surely help you against the bad
+ Russians!"</p>
+ <p>Is not this proposal a bit too na&iuml;ve for you, Bernard Shaw? We are situated
+ in the midst of Russians and Frenchmen, who have formed an open alliance against us
+ for more than twenty years. Our neighbors in the East denounce nothing more than us,
+ and our neighbors in the West denounce us and plan against us, who have for nearly
+ half a century evinced nothing but friendliness toward them. When such enemies
+ surround us, does not your friendly counsel, Bernard Shaw, seem as if you said to us:
+ "Just let yourself be massacred, Germans! Afterward your British cousins will
+ vouchsafe you their protection."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germany Not Isolated.</b></p>
+ <p>Do you think that we would carry on our militarism and our expensive drilling if
+ we lived on an island as you do? We would not think of it. We would speedily dispatch
+ a blood-thirsty butcher, like your Lord Kitchener, from our island to our most
+ unhealthy colony. We could not even reconcile our worthy Dr. Karl Peters, who had
+ dealt a little unscrupulously with a few negro women, with our conceptions of
+ culture, and had to pass him over to you! But the thought shall not come to me or to
+ us, as it does to your Prime Ministers, to pose as angels of light, a fact about
+ which you have yourself told your compatriots the bitter truth to our great joy. We
+ admit having injured Belgium's neutrality, but we have only done it because of dire
+ necessity, because we could not otherwise reach France and take up the fight against
+ two sides forced upon us. Belgium's independence and freedom, which is suddenly of
+ the utmost importance to your King and your Ministers, we have not touched. Even
+ after the expeditious capture of Li&eacute;ge we asked Belgium for the second time:
+ "Let us pass quickly through your country. We will make good every damage, and will
+ not take away a square foot of your country! Do destroyers of liberty and Huns and
+ vandals, or whatever other defamatory names your English papers now heap upon us, who
+ at the time of Beethoven and Schopenhauer formed the Areopagus of culture, conduct
+ themselves in such a way? Does not one of your living spirits in England cry aloud at
+ the reprehensible alliance which your Government has made over your heads with Russia
+ and Japan? On the most shameful day in English history, on the day when Mongolian
+ Japan gave the German people her ultimatum at the instigation of your politicians, on
+ this, I repeat it, most shameful day in the entire English history, I believed that
+ the great dead in Westminster Abbey would rise from their graves horrified at the
+ shameful deed which their grandsons and great-grandsons imposed upon old England.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Land of Shakespeare.</b></p>
+ <p>We Germans venerated the old England almost as a fatherland. We have recognized,
+ understood, and studied Shakespeare, whom you, Bernard Shaw, so dislike, more than
+ any other people, even more than the English nation itself. Lord Byron received more
+ benefits from Goethe alone than from all of England put together. Newton, Darwin, and
+ Adam Smith found in Germany their best supporters and interpreters. The dramatic
+ writers of latter-day England, most worthy of mention, from Oscar Wilde to you,
+ Galsworthy and Knoblauch, are recognized by us and their plays performed numberless
+ times. We have always endeavored to understand the English character. "Nowhere did we
+ feel so much at home as in Germany," all your compatriots will tell you who have been
+ guests here.</p>
+ <p>In "gratitude" for this our merchants were persecuted for years by your merchants,
+ because of a wild hatred for Germans, which, by the way, had a most disagreeable
+ effect upon the races of other colors. In "gratitude," with but few exceptions which
+ we will not forget, we are now abused and belittled by your press before all of
+ Europe and America as if we were assassins, vagabonds, enemies of culture and
+ murderers, far worse than the Russians. As thanks for that you have entered upon a
+ war against us, for which even Sir Edward Grey could not at first give a good reason
+ until the injury of Belgium neutrality luckily came to his assistance.</p>
+ <p>Our people are, therefore, now rightly embittered against England because through
+ your groundless participation you have made more difficult the war against Russia and
+ France, for which one alone, the Czar of Russia, bears the blame. But despite this
+ great bitterness they would never approve the demolition of your country and your
+ nation, because of their respect for your great past and your share in the
+ development of culture in Europe. You, however, joined an alliance as a third great
+ power, whose only purpose is our dissolution and destruction. Merely for reasons of
+ justice and of moral courage a Pitt, a Burke, a Disraeli would have withdrawn their
+ participation in such an alliance, which&mdash;Oh, heroic deed&mdash;falls upon the
+ Germans by threes, no, by fours or fives. Your present-day statesmen, wholly unworthy
+ of representing a people with your past and your inheritance, incite the Mongolians
+ and blacks against us, your brother nation. They steal and permit our small and
+ insufficiently protected colonies to be stolen and no not care a jot for all
+ considerations of Europeans' culture and morals.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>An Unnatural Russian Alliance.</b></p>
+ <p>England, once the home and the refuge for all free spirits from the days of the
+ Inquisition, from Rousseau until Freiligrath and Karl Marx, England has allied
+ herself with Russia&mdash;the prison and the horror of all friends of liberty! Hear
+ ye, hear ye illustrious dead, who lived and struggled for the freedom and the
+ greatest possible joy of mankind, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page82"
+ id="page82"></a>{82}</span>shake in your tombs with disgust and with horror! But you
+ living ones, and you, Bernard Shaw, the foremost of all English artists, do
+ everything in your power to break this terrible alliance and make it powerless for
+ England. Much more lies in the balance for her than is understood by your present
+ nearsighted politicians, who have in mind only the momentary advantages. The
+ destruction of the German power is not the only thing in question here; no, it
+ concerns a great part of civilized Europe in regard to the suspension of their
+ hard-won political liberty; and England, the people of the Magna Charta, the first
+ free Constitution, can never be a party to that. That is why we call to you, Bernard
+ Shaw, in the name of Europe, and ask you for your voice in the struggle.</p>
+ <p>It is a splendid thing that this serious time has also aroused the poets, the
+ thinkers and artists as political and diplomatic advisers, and we should not let
+ ourselves be crowded out of this profession, for which, thanks to our minds, we are
+ not less fitted than the high-brow Lords and Counts. Men of our guild from Thucydides
+ and Herodotus to Petrarch and Rubens, and our Humboldt and your Beaconsfield have
+ ever shown themselves to be good intermediaries and peace advocates. And that,
+ believe me, Bernard Shaw, is of more importance to our people, as well as to our
+ Kaiser, who for over twenty-five years has avoided war like a poison, than all other
+ bloody laurels. Here's to a decent, honorable and "eternal" peace.</p>
+ <p>HERBERT EULENBERG.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>British Authors Defend England's War</b></h2>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>One of the most interesting documents brought forth about the war was issued
+ Sept. 17 in London. It was signed by fifty-three of the leading British writers.
+ Herewith are presented the text of their defense of England and their autograph
+ signatures in facsimile.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The undersigned writers, comprising among them men of the most divergent political
+ and social views, some of them having been for years ardent champions of good-will
+ toward Germany, and many of them extreme advocates of peace, are nevertheless agreed
+ that Great Britain could not without dishonor have refused to take part in the
+ present war. No one can read the full diplomatic correspondence published in the
+ "White Paper" without seeing that the British representatives were throughout
+ laboring whole-heartedly to preserve the peace of Europe, and that their conciliatory
+ efforts were cordially received by both France and Russia.</p>
+ <p>When these efforts failed Great Britain had still no direct quarrel with any
+ power. She was eventually compelled to take up arms because, together with France,
+ Germany, and Austria, she had solemnly pledged herself to maintain the neutrality of
+ Belgium. As soon as danger to that neutrality arose she questioned both France and
+ Germany as to their intentions. France immediately renewed her pledge not to violate
+ Belgian neutrality; Germany refused to answer, and soon made all answer needless by
+ her actions. Without even the pretense of a grievance against Belgium she made war on
+ the weak and unoffending country she had undertaken to protect, and has since carried
+ out her invasion with a calculated and ingenious ferocity which has raised questions
+ other and no less grave than that of the willful disregard of treaties.</p>
+ <p>When Belgium in her dire need appealed to Great Britain to carry out her pledge,
+ that country's course was clear. She had either to break faith, letting the <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83"></a>{83}</span>sanctity of treaties and
+ the rights of small nations count for nothing before the threat of naked force, or
+ she had to fight. She did not hesitate, and we trust she will not lay down arms till
+ Belgium's integrity is restored and her wrongs redressed.</p>
+ <p>The treaty with Belgium made our duty clear, but many of us feel that, even if
+ Belgium had not been involved, it would have been impossible for Great Britain to
+ stand aside while France was dragged into war and destroyed. To permit the ruin of
+ France would be a crime against liberty and civilization. Even those of us who
+ question the wisdom of a policy of Continental ententes or alliances refuse to see
+ France struck down by a foul blow dealt in violation of a treaty.</p>
+ <p>We observe that various German apologists, official and semi-official, admit that
+ their country had been false to its pledged word, and dwell almost with pride on the
+ "frightfulness" of the examples by which it has sought to spread terror in Belgium,
+ but they excuse all these proceedings by a strange and novel plea. German culture and
+ civilization are so superior to those of other nations that all steps taken to assert
+ them are more than justified, and the destiny of Germany to be the dominating force
+ in Europe and the world is so manifest that ordinary rules of morality do not hold in
+ her case, but actions are good or bad simply as they help or hinder the
+ accomplishment of that destiny.</p>
+ <p>These views, inculcated upon the present generation of Germans by many celebrated
+ historians and teachers, seem to us both dangerous and insane. Many of us have dear
+ friends in Germany, many of us regard German culture with the highest respect and
+ gratitude; but we cannot admit that any nation has the right by brute force to impose
+ its culture upon other nations, nor that the iron military bureaucracy of Prussia
+ represents a higher form of human society than the free Constitutions of Western
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p>Whatever the world destiny of Germany may be, we in Great Britain are ourselves
+ conscious of a destiny and a duty. That destiny and duty, alike for us and for all
+ the English-speaking race, call upon us to uphold the rule of common justice between
+ civilized peoples, to defend the rights of small nations, and to maintain the free
+ and law-abiding ideals of Western Europe against the rule of "Blood and Iron" and the
+ domination of the whole Continent by a military caste.</p>
+ <p>For these reasons and others the undersigned feel bound to support the cause of
+ the Allies with all their strength, with a full conviction of its righteousness, and
+ with a deep sense of its vital import to the future of the world.</p>
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/signatures1.jpg"><img src='images/signatures1_thumb.jpg'
+ width='362' alt='Signatures' title='Signatures' /><br />
+ </a><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>{84} <a href="images/signatures2.jpg"><img
+ src='images/signatures2_thumb.jpg' width='362' height='400' alt='Signatures'
+ title='Signatures' /></a><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>{85}</span><b>WHO'S WHO
+ AMONG THE SIGNERS.</b></h2>
+ <p>WILLIAM ARCHER, dramatic critic and editor of Ibsen's works, author of "Life of
+ Macready," "Real Conversations," "The Great Analysis," and (with Granville Barker) "A
+ National Theatre."</p>
+ <p>H. GRANVILLE BARKER, actor, dramatist, and manager, shares with his wife
+ management of the Kingsway Theatre, London; author of "The Voysey Inheritance," and
+ (with Laurence Housman) "Prunella."</p>
+ <p>SIR JAMES MATTHEW BARRIE, creator of "Sentimental Tommy" and "Peter Pan," famous
+ for his sympathetic studies of Scotch life and his fantastic comedies.</p>
+ <p>HILAIRE BELLOC, best known as a writer on history, politics, and economics; a
+ recognized authority on the French Revolution.</p>
+ <p>ARNOLD BENNETT, author of many popular realistic studies of English provincial
+ life, including "Clayhanger" and "Hilda Lessways."</p>
+ <p>ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER BENSON, chiefly known for "From a College Window," "Beside
+ Still Waters," and other volumes of essays.</p>
+ <p>EDWARD FREDERIC BENSON, brother of the preceding, author of many novels of modern
+ life, including "Dodo."</p>
+ <p>VERY REV. MONSIGNOR ROBERT HUGH BENSON, the youngest of the three famous Benson
+ brothers. Besides numerous devotional and theological works, Monsignor Benson has
+ written several widely appreciated historical novels.</p>
+ <p>LAWRENCE BINYON, author of many lyrics and poetic dramas, Assistant Keeper in the
+ British Museum, in charge of Oriental Prints and Drawings.</p>
+ <p>ANDREW CECIL BRADLEY, critic, sometime Professor of Poetry at Oxford University,
+ author of a standard work on Shakespeare.</p>
+ <p>ROBERT BRIDGES, Poet-Laureate. Prominent as a physician before his poetry brought
+ him the high honor he now enjoys.</p>
+ <p>HALL CAINE, one of the most popular of contemporary novelists.</p>
+ <p>R.C. CARTON, dramatist, author of "Lord and Lady Algy" and "A White Elephant."</p>
+ <p>CHARLES HADDON CHAMBERS, dramatist, author of "John a Dreams," part author of "The
+ Fatal Card."</p>
+ <p>GILBERT K. CHESTERTON, essayist, novelist, poet; defender of orthodox thought by
+ unorthodox methods.</p>
+ <p>HUBERT HENRY DAVIES, dramatist, author of "The Mollusc" and "A Single Man."</p>
+ <p>SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE, creator of "Sherlock Holmes."</p>
+ <p>HERBERT ALBERT LAURENS FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University, author of
+ "The Mediaeval Empire," "Napoleon Bonaparte," and other historical works.</p>
+ <p>JOHN GALSWORTHY, a novelist and dramatist who has come into great prominence
+ during the last five years, his plays, "Strife" and "Justice," and his novel, "The
+ Dark Flower," being widely known.</p>
+ <p>ANSTEY GUTHRIE, (F. ANSTEY,) author of "The Brass Bottle," "The Talking Horse,"
+ and other fantastic and humorous tales.</p>
+ <p>SIR HENRY RIDER HAGGARD, author of many widely read romances, among them being
+ "She."</p>
+ <p>THOMAS HARDY, generally considered to be the greatest living English novelist.</p>
+ <p>JANE ELLEN HARRISON, sometime Fellow and Lecturer at Newnham College, Cambridge
+ University; writer of many standard works on classical religion, literature, and
+ life.</p>
+ <p>ANTHONY HOPE HAWKINS, (ANTHONY HOPE,) author of popular historical romance and
+ sketches of modern society, including "The Prisoner of Zenda."</p>
+ <p>MAURICE HEWLETT, poet and romantic novelist, author of "Earthworks Out of Tuscany"
+ and other mediaeval tales.</p>
+ <p>ROBERT HICHENS, novelist, author of "The Garden of Allah," "Bella Donna," and
+ other stories.</p>
+ <p>JEROME K. JEROME, humorist, famous for "Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow" and the
+ "Three Men" series, and for his play "The Passing of the Third Floor Back."</p>
+ <p>HENRY ARTHUR JONES, dramatist, author of "The Silver King," "The Hypocrites," and
+ other plays.</p>
+ <p>RUDYARD KIPLING needs no introduction to people who read the English language.</p>
+ <p>WILLIAM J. LOCKE, author of "The Morals of Marcus," "Septimus," and "The Beloved
+ Vagabond," which have been made into successful plays.</p>
+ <p>EDWARD VERRAL LUCAS, associate editor of Punch and editor of several popular
+ anthologies, author of "A Wanderer in Holland."</p>
+ <p>JOHN WILLIAM MACKAIL, Professor of Poetry at Oxford University, author and editor
+ of many volumes dealing with ancient Greek and Roman literature.</p>
+ <p>JOHN MASEFIELD, known chiefly for his long poems of life among the British
+ poor.</p>
+ <p>ALFRED EDWARD WOODLEY MASON, writer of romantic novels, of which "The Four
+ Feathers" and "The Turnstile" are perhaps the best known, and of several popular
+ dramas.</p>
+ <p>GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek at Oxford University since 1908, editor
+ and translator of Greek classics, perhaps the greatest Greek scholar now living.</p>
+ <p>HENRY NEWBOLT, "laureate of the British Navy," author of "Drake's Drum" and many
+ other songs.</p>
+ <p>BARRY PAIN, author of "Eliza" and other novels and short stories of adventure, of
+ many well-known parodies and poems.</p>
+ <p>SIR GILBERT PARKER, of Canadian birth, poet and author of romantic novels,
+ including "The Judgment House," and "The Right of Way."</p>
+ <p>EDEN PHILLPOTTS, realistic novelist, noted for his exact portraits of the English
+ rustic, author of "Down Dartmoor Way."</p>
+ <p>SIR ARTHUR WING PINERO, one of the most popular of living dramatists. His plays
+ include "Sweet Lavender" and "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray."</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86"></a>{86}</span>SIR ARTHUR
+ QUILLER-COUCH, Professor of English Literature at Cambridge University, poet,
+ novelist, and writer of short stories.</p>
+ <p>SIR OWEN SEAMAN, since 1906 editor of Punch, writer of parodies and light
+ verse.</p>
+ <p>GEORGE R. SIMS, journalist, poet, and author of many popular dramas, including
+ "The Lights of London," "Two Little Vagabonds," and "Harbour Lights."</p>
+ <p>MAY SINCLAIR, writer of novels dealing with modern moral problems, "The Divine
+ Fire" and "The Combined Maze" being best known.</p>
+ <p>FLORA ANNIE STEEL, author of "Tales from the Punjab," "On the Face of the Waters,"
+ "A Prince of Dreamers," and other novels and short stories, most of which deal with
+ life in India.</p>
+ <p>ALFRED SUTRO, dramatist, author of "The Walls of Jericho," "The Barrier," and
+ other plays of modern society."</p>
+ <p>GEORGE MACAULAY TREVELYAN, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge; author of
+ "England Under the Stuarts," and other historical and biographical works.</p>
+ <p>RT. HON. GEORGE OTTO TREVELYAN, historian, biographer of Macaulay, and author of a
+ four-volume work on the American Revolution.</p>
+ <p>HUMPHRY WARD, journalist and author, sometime Fellow of Brasenose College, editor
+ of several biographical and historical works.</p>
+ <p>MARY A. WARD, (Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD,) best known of contemporary women novelists; her
+ first success was "Robert Elsmere."</p>
+ <p>H.G. WELLS, novelist, author of "Tono Bungay" and "Ann Veronica."</p>
+ <p>MARGARET L. WOODS, poet; her "Wild Justice" and "The Invader" have placed her in
+ the front rank.</p>
+ <p>ISRAEL ZANGWILL, novelist, poet, dramatist, interpreter of the modern Jewish
+ spirit.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>{87}</span><b>The Fourth
+ of August&mdash;Europe at War</b></h2>
+ <h3>By H.G. Wells.</h3>
+ <h4><i>Copyright</i>, 1914, <i>by The New York Times Company</i>.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Europe is at war!</p>
+ <p>The monstrous vanity that was begotten by the easy victories of '70 and '71 has
+ challenged the world, and Germany prepares to reap the harvest Bismarck sowed. That
+ trampling, drilling foolery in the heart of Europe, that has arrested civilization
+ and darkened the hopes of mankind for forty years. German imperialism, German
+ militarism, has struck its inevitable blow. The victory of Germany will mean the
+ permanent enthronement of the War God over all human affairs. The defeat of Germany
+ may open the way to disarmament and peace throughout the earth.</p>
+ <p>To those who love peace there can be no other hope in the present conflict than
+ the defeat, the utter discrediting of the German legend, the ending for good and all
+ of the blood and iron superstition, of Krupp, flag-wagging Teutonic Kiplingism, and
+ all that criminal, sham efficiency that centres in Berlin. Never was war so righteous
+ as war against Germany now. Never has any State in the world so clamored for
+ punishment.</p>
+ <p>But be it remembered that Europe's quarrel is with the German State, not with the
+ German people; with a system, and not with a race. The older tradition of Germany is
+ a pacific and civilizing tradition. The temperament of the mass of German people is
+ kindly, sane, and amiable. Disaster to the German Army, if it is unaccompanied by any
+ such memorable wrong as dismemberment or intolerable indignity, will mean the
+ restoration of the greatest people in Europe to the fellowship of Western nations.
+ The role of England in this huge struggle is plain as daylight. We have to fight. If
+ only on account of the Luxemburg outrage, we have to fight. If we do not fight,
+ England will cease to be a country to be proud of; it will be a dirt-bath to escape
+ from. But it is inconceivable that we should not fight. And having fought, then in
+ the hour of victory it will be for us to save the liberated Germans from vindictive
+ treatment, to secure for this great people their right, as one united German-speaking
+ State, to a place in the sun.</p>
+ <p>First we have to save ourselves and Europe, and then we have to stand between
+ German on the one hand and the Cossack and revenge on the other.</p>
+ <p>For my own part, I do not doubt that Germany and Austria are doomed to defeat in
+ this war. It may not be catastrophic defeat, though even that is possible, but it is
+ defeat. There is no destiny in the stars and every sign is false if this is not
+ so.</p>
+ <p>They have provoked an overwhelming combination of enemies. They have underrated
+ France. They are hampered by a bad social and military tradition. The German is not
+ naturally a good soldier; he is orderly and obedient, but he is not nimble nor
+ quick-witted; since his sole considerable military achievement, his not very lengthy
+ march to Paris in '70 and '71, the conditions of modern warfare have been almost
+ completely revolutionized and in a direction that subordinates the massed fighting of
+ unintelligent men to the rapid initiative of individualized soldiers. And, on the
+ other hand, since those years of disaster, the Frenchman has learned the lesson of
+ humility; he is prepared now sombrely for a sombre struggle; his is the gravity that
+ precedes astonishing victories. In the air, in the open field, with guns and
+ machines, it is doubtful if any one fully realizes the superiority of his <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>{88}</span>quality to the German.
+ This sudden attack may take him aback for a week or so, though I doubt even that, but
+ in the end I think he will hold his own; even without us he will hold his own, and
+ with us then I venture to prophesy that within three months from now his tricolor
+ will be over the Rhine. And even suppose his line gets broken by the first rush. Even
+ then I do not see how the Germans are to get to Paris or anywhere near Paris. I do
+ not see how against the strength of the modern defensive and the stinging power of an
+ intelligent enemy in retreat, of which we had a little foretaste in South Africa, the
+ exploit of Sedan can be repeated. A retiring German army, on the other hand, will be
+ far less formidable than a retiring French army, because it has less "devil" in it,
+ because it is made up of men taught to obey in masses, because its intelligence is
+ concentrated in its aristocratic officers, because it is dismayed when it breaks
+ ranks. The German Army is everything the conscriptionists dreamed of making our
+ people; it is, in fact, an army about twenty years behind the requirements of
+ contemporary conditions.</p>
+ <p>On the eastern frontier the issue is more doubtful because of the uncertainty of
+ Russian things. The peculiar military strength of Russia, a strength it was not able
+ to display in Manchuria, lies in its vast resources of mounted men. A set invasion of
+ Prussia may be a matter of many weeks, but the raiding possibilities in Eastern
+ Germany are enormous. It is difficult to guess how far the Russian attack will be
+ guided by intelligence, and how far Russia will blunder, but Russia will have to
+ blunder very disastrously indeed before she can be put upon the defensive. A Russian
+ raid is far more likely to threaten Berlin than a German to reach Paris.</p>
+ <p>Meanwhile there is the struggle on the sea. In that I am prepared for some rude
+ shocks. The Germans have devoted an amount of energy to the creation of an aggressive
+ navy that would have been spent more wisely in consolidating their European position.
+ It is probably a thoroughly good navy and ship for ship the equal of our own. But the
+ same lack of invention, the same relative uncreativeness that has kept the German
+ behind the Frenchman in things aerial has made him, regardless of his shallow seas,
+ follow our lead in naval matters, and if we have erred, and I believe we have erred,
+ in overrating the importance of the big battleship, the German has at least very
+ obligingly fallen in with our error. The safest, most effective place for the German
+ fleet at the present time is the Baltic Sea. On this side of the Kiel Canal, unless I
+ overrate the powers of the waterplane, there is no safe harbor for it. If it goes
+ into port anywhere that port can be ruined, and the bottled-up ships can be destroyed
+ at leisure by aerial bombs. So that if they are on this side of the Kiel Canal they
+ must keep the sea and fight, if we let them, before their coal runs short. Battle in
+ the open sea in this case is their only chance. They will fight against odds, and
+ with every prospect of a smashing, albeit we shall certainly have to pay for that
+ victory in ships and men. In the Baltic we shall not be able to get at them without
+ the participation of Denmark, and they may have a considerable use against Russia.
+ But in the end even there mine and aeroplane and destroyer should do their work.</p>
+ <p>So I reckon that Germany will be held east and west, and that she will get her
+ fleet practically destroyed. We ought also to be able to sweep her shipping off the
+ seas, and lower her flag forever in Africa and Asia and the Pacific. All the
+ probabilities, it seems to me, point to that. There is no reason why Italy should not
+ stick to her present neutrality, and there is considerable inducement close at hand
+ for both Denmark and Japan to join in, directly they are convinced of the failure of
+ the first big rush on the part of Germany. All these issues will be more or less
+ definitely decided within the next two or three months. By that time I believe German
+ imperialism will be shattered, and it may be possible to anticipate the <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>{89}</span>end of the armaments
+ phase of European history. France, Italy, England, and all the smaller powers of
+ Europe are now pacific countries; Russia, after this huge war, will be too exhausted
+ for further adventure; a shattered Germany will be a revolutionary Germany, as sick
+ of uniforms and the imperialist idea as France was in 1871, as disillusioned about
+ predominance as Bulgaria is today. The way will be open at last for all these western
+ powers to organize peace. That is why I, with my declared horror of war, have not
+ signed any of these "stop-the-war" appeals and declarations that have appeared in the
+ last few days. Every sword that is drawn against Germany now is a sword drawn for
+ peace.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>If the Germans Raid England</b></h2>
+ <h3>By H.G. Wells.</h3>
+ <h4>From The Times of London, Oct. 31, 1914.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The [London] Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: At the outset of the war I made a suggestion in your columns for the
+ enrollment of all that surplus of manhood and patriotic feeling which remains after
+ every man available for systematic military operations has been taken. My idea was
+ that comparatively undrilled boys and older men, not sound enough for campaigning,
+ armed with rifles, able to shoot straight with them, and using local means of
+ transport, bicycles, cars, and so forth, would be a quite effective check upon an
+ enemy's scouting, a danger to his supplies, and even a force capable of holding up a
+ raiding advance&mdash;more particularly if that advance was poor in horses and
+ artillery, as an overseas raid was likely to be. I suggested, too, that the mere
+ enrollment and arming of the population would have a powerful educational effect in
+ steadying and unifying the spirit of our people. My proposals were received with what
+ seemed even a forced amusement by the "experts." I was told that I knew nothing about
+ warfare, and that the Germans would not permit us to do anything of the sort. The
+ Germans, it seems, are the authorities in these matters, a point I had overlooked.
+ They would refuse to recognize men with only improvised uniforms, they would shoot
+ their prisoners&mdash;not that I had proposed that my irregulars should become
+ prisoners&mdash;and burn the adjacent villages. This seemed to be an entirely
+ adequate reply from the point of view of the expert mind, and I gathered that the
+ proper r&ocirc;le for such an able-bodied civilian as myself was to keep indoors
+ while the invader was about and supply him as haughtily as possible with light
+ refreshments and anything else he chose to requisition. I was also reminded that if
+ only men like myself had obeyed their expert advice and worked in the past for
+ national service and the general submission of everything to expert military
+ direction, these troubles would not have arisen. There would have been no surplus of
+ manhood and everything would have gone as smoothly and as well for England
+ as&mdash;the Press Censorship.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>An Improbable Invasion.</b></p>
+ <p>For a time I was silenced. Under war conditions it is always a difficult question
+ to determine how far it is better to obey poor, or even bad, directions or to
+ criticise them in the hope of getting better. But the course of the war since <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page90" id="page90"></a>{90}</span>that correspondence and
+ the revival of the idea of a raid by your military correspondent provoke me to return
+ to this discussion. Frankly, I do not believe in that raid, and I think we play the
+ German game in letting our minds dwell upon it. I am supposed to be a person of
+ feverish imagination, but even by lashing my imagination to its ruddiest I cannot, in
+ these days of wireless telegraphy, see a properly equipped German force, not even so
+ trivial a handful as 20,000 of them, getting itself with guns, motors, ammunition,
+ and provisions upon British soil. I cannot even see a mere landing of infantrymen. I
+ believe in that raid even less than I do in the suggested raid of navigables that has
+ darkened London. I admit the risk of a few aeroplane bombs in London, but I do not
+ see why people should be subjected to danger, darkness, and inconvenience on account
+ of that one-in-a-million risk. Still, as the trained mind does insist upon treating
+ all unenlisted civilians as panicstricken imbeciles and upon frightening old ladies
+ and influential people with these remote possibilities, and as it is likely that
+ these alarms may even lead to the retention of troops in England when their point of
+ maximum effectiveness is manifestly in France, it becomes necessary to insist upon
+ the ability of our civilian population, if only the authorities will permit the small
+ amount of organization and preparation needed, to deal quite successfully with any
+ raid that in an extremity of German "boldness" may be attempted.</p>
+ <p>And, in the first place, let the expert have no illusions as to what we ordinary
+ people are going to do if we find German soldiers in England one morning. We are
+ going to fight. If we cannot fight with rifles, we shall fight with shotguns, and if
+ we cannot fight according to rules of war apparently made by Germans for the
+ restraint of British military experts, we will fight according to our inner light.
+ Many men, and not a few women, will turn out to shoot Germans. There will be no
+ preventing them after the Belgian stories. If the experts attempt any pedantic
+ interference, we will shoot the experts. I know that in this matter I speak for so
+ sufficient a number of people that it will be quite useless and hopelessly dangerous
+ and foolish for any expert-instructed minority to remain "tame." They will get shot,
+ and their houses will be burned according to the established German rules and methods
+ on our account, so they may just as well turn out in the first place, and get some
+ shooting as a consolation in advance for their inevitable troubles. And if the
+ raiders, cut off by the sea from their supports, ill-equipped as they will certainly
+ be, and against odds, are so badly advised as to try terror-striking reprisals on the
+ Belgian pattern, we irregulars will, of course, massacre every German straggler we
+ can put a gun to. Naturally. Such a procedure may be sanguinary, but it is just the
+ common sense of the situation. We shall hang the officers and shoot the men. A German
+ raid to England will in fact not be fought&mdash;it will be lynched. War is war, and
+ reprisals and striking terror are games that two can play at. This is the latent
+ temper of the British countryside, and the sooner the authorities take it in hand and
+ regularize it the better will be the outlook in the remote event of that hypothetical
+ raid getting home to us. Levity is a national characteristic, but submissiveness is
+ not. Under sufficient provocation the English are capable of very dangerous bad
+ temper, and the expert is dreaming who thinks of a German expedition moving through
+ an apathetic Essex, for example, resisted only by the official forces trained and in
+ training.</p>
+ <p>And whatever one may think of the possibility of raids, I venture to suggest that
+ the time has come when the present exclusive specialization of our combatant energy
+ upon the production of regulation armies should cease. The gathering of these will go
+ on anyhow; there are unlimited men ready for intelligent direction. Now that the
+ shortage of supplies and accommodation has been remedied the enlistment sluices need
+ only be opened again. The rank and file of this country is its strength; there is no
+ need, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>{91}</span>and there
+ never has been any need, for press hysterics about recruiting. But there is wanted a
+ far more vigorous stimulation of the manufacture of material&mdash;if only experts
+ and rich people would turn their minds to that. It is the trading and manufacturing
+ class that needs goading at the present time. It is very satisfactory to send troops
+ to France, but in France there are still great numbers of able-bodied, trained
+ Frenchmen not fully equipped. It is our national duty and privilege to be the
+ storehouse and arsenal of the Allies. Our factories for clothing and material of all
+ sorts should be working day and night. There is the point to which enthusiasm should
+ be turned. It is just as heroic and just as useful to the country to kill yourself
+ making belts and boots as it is to die in a trench. But our organization for the
+ enrollment and utilization of people not in the firing line is still amazingly
+ unsatisfactory. The one convenient alternative to enlistment as a combatant at
+ present is hospital work. But it is really far more urgent to direct enthusiasm and
+ energy now to the production of war material. If this war does not end, as all the
+ civilized world hopes it will end, in the complete victory of the Allies, our failure
+ will not be through any shortage of men, but through a shortage of gear and
+ organizing ability. It will not be through a default of the people, but through the
+ slackness of the governing class.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Arms and Equipment Needed.</b></p>
+ <p>Now so far as the enrollment of us goes, of the surplus people who are willing to
+ be armed and to be used for quasi-military work at home, but who are not of an age or
+ not of a physique or who are already in shop or office serving some quite useful
+ purpose at home, we want certain very simple things from the authorities. We want the
+ military status that is conferred by a specific enrollment and some sort of uniform.
+ We want accessible arms. They need not be modern service weapons; the rifles of ten
+ years ago are quite good enough for the possible need we shall have for them. And we
+ want to be sure that in the possible event of an invasion the Government will have
+ the decision to give every man in the country a military status by at once resorting
+ to the lev&eacute;e en masse. Given a recognized local organization and some
+ advice&mdash;it would not take a week of Gen. Baden-Powell's time, for example, to
+ produce a special training book for us&mdash;we could set to work upon our own local
+ drill, rifle practice, and exercises, in such hours and ways as best suited our
+ locality. We could also organize the local transport, list local supplies, and
+ arrange for their removal or destruction if threatened. Finally, we could set to work
+ to convert a number of ordinary cars into fighting cars by reconstructing and
+ armoring them and exercising crews. And having developed a discipline and
+ self-respect as a fighting force, we should be available not only for fighting work
+ at home, in the extremely improbable event of a raid, but also for all kinds of
+ supplementary purposes, as a reserve of motor drivers, as a supply of physically
+ exercised and half-trained recruits in the events of an extended standard, and as a
+ guarantee of national discipline under any unexpected stress. Above all, we should be
+ relieving the real fighting forces of the country for the decisive area, which is in
+ France and Belgium now and will, I hope, be in Westphalia before the Spring.</p>
+ <p>At present we non-army people are doing only a fraction of what we would like to
+ do for our country. We are not being used. We are made to feel out of it, and we
+ watch the not always very able proceedings of the military authorities and the
+ international mischief-making of the Censorship with a bitter resentment that is
+ restrained only by the supreme gravity of the crisis. For my own part I entertain
+ three Belgians and make a young officer possible by supplementing his expenses, and
+ my wife knits things. A neighbor, an able-bodied man of 42 and an excellent shot, is
+ occasionally permitted to carry a recruit to Chelmsford. If I try to use my pen on
+ behalf of my country abroad, where I have a few friends and readers, what I <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92"></a>{92}</span>write is exposed to the
+ clumsy editing and delays of anonymous and apparently irresponsible officials. So
+ practically I am doing nothing, and a great number of people are doing very little
+ more. The authorities are concentrated upon the creation of an army numerically vast,
+ and for the rest they seem to think that the chief function of government is
+ inhibition. Their available energy and ability is taxed to the utmost in maintaining
+ the fighting line, and it is sheer greed for direction that has led to their
+ systematic thwarting of civilian co-operation. Let me warn them of the boredom and
+ irritation they are causing. This is a people's war, a war against militarism; it is
+ not a war for the greater glory of British diplomatists, officials, and people in
+ uniforms. It is our war, not their war, and the last thing we intend to result from
+ it is a permanently increased importance for the military caste.</p>
+ <p>Yours very sincerely,</p>
+ <p>H.G. WELLS.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Sir Oliver Lodge's Comment</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The [London] Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: In a strikingly vigorous letter Mr. H.G. Wells claims that a nation of which
+ every individual prefers death to submission is unconquerable and cannot be
+ successfully invaded. Ways of hampering an army are too numerous, if people are
+ willing to run every risk, not only for themselves but for those dependent on
+ them.</p>
+ <p>This may be admitted. And we may also agree that the British race would be likely
+ to risk everything if the consequences of carefully engendered hate were loosed upon
+ us. But here comes a point worthy of consideration. An invasion of England is, to say
+ the least, unlikely; an invasion of Germany may soon have to be undertaken. May it
+ not add to the difficulties of our troops if a policy of "arming every woman, child,
+ and cat and dog" is favorably regarded by us? Is not such a policy a sort of
+ left-handed outcome of the Prussian contention that even their own unarmed civilian
+ populace is contemptible and may be slaughtered without mercy if military procedure
+ is resisted, or even if supplies are not forthcoming?</p>
+ <p>It will be difficult, and I hope impossible, for the Allies to act in accordance
+ with this latter view; though the German peasantry may have been so fed with lies
+ that it will be unable to believe that our soldiers can be trusted to behave like
+ civilized beings when the time has come for a forward march. It is clear that riotous
+ license is subversive of discipline, and conduces to defeat&mdash;as it probably has
+ in recent Continental experience. For, although ancient warriors used to ravage a
+ country, and although women have occasionally intervened in order to stop a battle,
+ surely never before in the history of the world have women and children been forced
+ forward in defense of a fighting line! Yet undoubtedly war can be so conducted that
+ foes mutually respect each other; indeed, save for the cowardly abomination of
+ floating mines, this present war has been so conducted at sea. I suggest that the
+ fair procedure in case of invasion is for each civilian to choose whether to be a
+ combatant or not, and to incur the danger of an affirmative choice in a sufficiently
+ conspicuous and permanent manner. I am, Sir, faithfully yours,</p>
+ <p><b>OLIVER LODGE,</b> The University, Birmingham, Oct. 31.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>{93}</span><b>What the
+ German Conscript Thinks</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Arnold Bennett.</h3>
+ <h4><i>Copyright</i>, 1914, <i>by The New York Times Company</i>.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Some hold that this is a war of Prussian militarism, and not a war of the German
+ people. This view has the merits of kindliness and convenience. Others warn us not to
+ be misled by such sentimentalists, and assert that the heart of the German people is
+ in the war. The point is of importance to us, because the work of the conscript in
+ the field must be influenced by his private feelings. Notwithstanding all drill and
+ sergeantry, the German Army remains a collection of human beings&mdash;and human
+ beings more learned, if not better educated, than our own race! It is not a mere
+ fighting machine, despite the efforts of its leaders to make it into one.</p>
+ <p>Among those who assert that the heart of the German people is in the war are
+ impartial and experienced observers who have carefully studied Germany for many
+ years. For myself, I give little value to their evidence. To come at the truth by
+ observation about a foreign country is immensely, overpoweringly difficult. I am a
+ professional observer: I have lived in Paris and in the French provinces for nine
+ years; I am fairly familiar with French literature and very familiar with the French
+ language&mdash;and I honestly would not trust myself to write even a shilling
+ handbook about French character and life. Nearly all newspapers are conservative;
+ nearly all foreign correspondents adopt the official or conventional point of view;
+ and the pictures of foreign life which get into the press are, as a rule&mdash;shall
+ I say incomplete?</p>
+ <p>Even when the honest observer says, "These things I saw with my own eyes and will
+ vouch for," I am not convinced that he saw enough. An intelligent foreigner with
+ first-class introductions might go through England and see with his own eyes that
+ England was longing for protection, the death of home rule, and the repeal of the
+ Insurance act. The unfortunate Prince Lichnowsky, after an exhaustive inquiry and
+ access to the most secret sources of exclusive information telegraphed to the Kaiser
+ less than a month ago that civil war was an immediate certainty throughout Ireland.
+ Astounding fatuity? Not at all. English observers of England have made, and
+ constantly do make, mistakes equally prodigious. See Hansard every month. So that
+ when I read demonstrations of the thesis that the heart of the German people is in
+ the war, I am not greatly affected by them.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>German Heart Is In the War.</b></p>
+ <p>Still, I do myself believe that the heart of the German people is in the war, and
+ that that heart is governed by two motives&mdash;the motive of self-defense against
+ Russia and the motive of overbearing self-aggrandizement. I do not base my opinion on
+ phenomena which I have observed. Beyond an automobile journey through
+ Schleswig-Holstein, which was formidably tedious, and a yacht journey through the
+ Kiel Canal and Kiel Bay, which was somewhat impressive, I have never traveled in
+ Germany at all. I base my opinion on general principles. In a highly educated and
+ civilized country such as Germany (the word "civilized" must soon take on a new
+ significance!) it is impossible that an autocracy, even a military autocracy, could
+ exist unrooted in the people. "Prussian militarism" may annoy many Germans, but it
+ pleases more than it annoys, and there can be few Germans who are not flattered by
+ it. That the lower classes have an even more tremendous grievance against the upper
+ classes in Germany than in England or France is a certitude. But the existence and
+ power of the army are their reward, their sole reward, for all that they have
+ suffered in hardship and humiliation at the hands of the autocracy. It is the
+ autocracy's bribe and sweetmeat to them.</p>
+ <p>The Germans are a great nation; they have admirable qualities, but they have also
+ defects, and among their defects is a clumsy arrogance, which may be noticed in any
+ international hotel frequented by Germans. It is a racial defect, and to try to limit
+ it to the military autocracy is absurd. An educated and civilized nation has roughly
+ the Government that it wants and deserves. And it has in the end ways of imposing
+ itself on its apparent rulers that are more effective than the ballot box or the
+ barricade, and just as sure. No election was needed to prove to the Italian
+ Government that Italy did not want to fight for the Triple Alliance, and would not
+ fight for it. The fact was known; it was immanent in the air, beyond all arguments
+ and persuasions. Italy breathed a negative, and war was not. So in Germany the mass
+ of Germans have for years breathed war, and war is. The war may be autocratic,
+ dynastic, what you will; but it is also national, and it symbolizes the national
+ defect.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>How About the Leaders?</b></p>
+ <p>Does the German conscript believe in the efficacy of his leaders? I mean when he
+ is lying awake and fatigued at night, not when he is shouting "Hoch!" or watching the
+ demeanor of women in front of him. Does no doubt ever lancinate him? Again I would
+ answer the question from general principles and not from observation. The German
+ conscript must know what everybody knows&mdash;that in almost every bully there is a
+ coward. And he must know that he is led by bullies. He learned that in the barrack
+ yard. An enormous number of conscripts must also know that there is something
+ seriously wrong with a system that for the sake of its own existence has killed
+ freedom of the press. And the million little things that are wrong in the system he
+ also knows out of his own daily life as a conscript. Further, he must be aware <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>{94}</span>that there is a dearth of
+ really great men in his system. In the past there were in Germany men great enough to
+ mesmerize Europe&mdash;Bismarck and von Moltke. There is none today that appeals to
+ the popular imagination as Kitchener does in England or Joffre in France. Alone, in
+ Germany, the Kaiser has been able to achieve a Continental renown. The Kaiser has
+ good qualities. But twenty-four years ago he committed an act of folly and (one may
+ say) "bad form" which nothing but results could justify, and which results have not
+ justified. Whatever his good qualities may be it is an absolute certainty that common
+ sense, foresight, and mental balance are not among them. The conscript feels that, if
+ he does not state it clearly to himself. And as for the military organization of
+ which the Kaiser is the figurehead, it has shown for many years past precisely those
+ signs which history teaches us are signs of decay. It has not withstood the fearful
+ ordeal of success. Just lately, if not earlier, the conscript must have felt that,
+ too.</p>
+ <p>What is the conclusion? Take the average conscript, the member of the lower middle
+ class. He is accustomed to think politically, because at least fifty out of every
+ hundred of him are professed Socialists with a definite and bitter political
+ programme against certain manifestations of the autocracy. (It is calculated that
+ two-fifths of the entire army is Socialist.) He may not argue very closely while in
+ the act of war; indeed, he could not. But enormous experience is accumulated in his
+ subconsciousness&mdash;experience of bullying and cowardice, of humiliation, of
+ injustice, of lying, and of his own most secret shortcomings&mdash;for he, too, is
+ somewhat of the bully, out for self-aggrandisement as well as for self-defense, and
+ his conscience privately tells him so. The organization is still colossal,
+ magnificent, terrific. In the general fever of activity he persuades himself that
+ nothing can withstand the organization; but at the height of some hand-to-hand
+ crisis, when one-hundredth of a dogged grain of obstinacy will turn the scale, he may
+ re<span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>{95}</span>member an insult
+ from an incompetent officer, or the protectionism at home which puts meat beyond his
+ purse in order to enrich the landowner, or even the quite penal legislation of the
+ autocracy against the co-operative societies of the poor, and the memory (in spite of
+ him) may decide a battle. Men think of odd matters in a battle, and it is a
+ scientific certainty that, at the supreme pinch, the subconscious must react.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Felix Adler's Comment</b></h2>
+ <h4>From The Standard, Oct. 14, 1914.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Apropos of a recent article by Mr. Arnold Bennett, wherein he speaks of the
+ resentment which the German soldiers&mdash;two-fifths of them Socialists&mdash;must
+ feel against the bullying discipline to which they have been subjected, the following
+ reflections are jotted down. The reader who is interested in pursuing the subject
+ further may profitably consult a book entitled "Imperial Germany," by Prince von
+ B&uuml;low, which contains some penetrating observations on the workings of the
+ German mind, as well as the chapter on Germany in Alfred Fouill&eacute;e's notable
+ work, "Esquisse Psychologique des Peuples Europ&eacute;ens."</p>
+ <p>The precision which characterizes the operations of the German military machine is
+ due to the German notion of discipline. Discipline in Germany is based on the
+ peculiar place assigned to the expert. Military experts exercise in their branch an
+ authority different in degree but not in kind from that belonging to experts in other
+ departments&mdash;strategy, tactics, improvements of armament, methods of
+ mobilization. The inexpert soldier submits to the military expert as a person about
+ to undergo a necessary operation would submit to a surgeon. It is a mistake to
+ suppose that the Germans, a highly intelligent and educated people, are being cowed
+ into submission by brutal non-commissioned officers. Brutality, when it occurs, is
+ looked upon as exceptional and incidental to a system on the whole approved. The
+ Germans would never tolerate the severe discipline to which they are subjected did
+ they not willingly submit to it. They regard a highly efficient army as necessary to
+ the safety of the Fatherland, and they are willing to leave the responsibility for
+ the means of securing efficiency to the experts. During the Franco-German war, when a
+ student in the University of Berlin, I talked with some of the brightest of the
+ younger men about their military obligations, and I found that they took precisely
+ the view just stated. The Pomeranian peasant may submit to military dictation in a
+ dull, half-instinctive fashion. The flower and &eacute;lite of German intelligence
+ submit to it no less&mdash;from conviction.</p>
+ <p>How shall we account for the unique predominance of the expert in German life? The
+ explanation would seem to lie in the phrase invented by a brilliant writer of the
+ last century, "Deutschland ist Hamlet" (Germany is Hamlet). The Germans are a
+ resolute people&mdash;not at all, as has been erroneously supposed, a nation of
+ dreamers&mdash;just as Hamlet, according to recent criticism, was essentially of a
+ resolute character. In the days of the Hansa and of the Hohenstaufen the Germans cut
+ a great figure in oversea commerce and in war. They were great doers of deeds. The
+ Germans are intensely volitional, but also intensely intellectual. Hence the native
+ hue of resolution has sometimes been sicklied o'er by too much thinking. The
+ intellect of the German refuses to sanction action until the successive steps to be
+ taken have been worked out with logical accuracy, and a scientific groove, so to
+ speak, has been hollowed out along which action can proceed. As soon as <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id="page96"></a>{96}</span>this is accomplished, the
+ flood of volitional impulse enters gladly into the channel prepared for it and moves
+ on in it with irresistible force. Bismarck represents the active side, as the eminent
+ philosophers of the German people represent the side of logical construction. The two
+ sides must be taken together to understand German history and the tendencies
+ prevailing in Germany today.</p>
+ <p>Underneath it all, of course, is German sentiment, but of this we need take no
+ account in discussing German discipline, except in so far as love for the Fatherland
+ enters in to sustain the patience of the people under the burden of their military
+ establishment.</p>
+ <p>Discipline, or the subordination of the inexpert to the expert, likewise accounts
+ for certain peculiarities of the German political parties. Prince von B&uuml;low
+ mentions three examples of supremely efficient organization&mdash;the Prussian Army,
+ the Roman Catholic hierarchy, and the German Social Democracy. There are some 4,200
+ Socialist associations, subject to the orders of forty-two district associations,
+ these in turn being ruled by the Central Committee. The working of the Social
+ Democratic machine is almost flawless. The discipline, it is said, is iron.</p>
+ <p>Again, the conception of Government in Germany, unlike that which prevails in
+ England, France, or America, is determined by the idea of expertness. The Government
+ is the political expert par excellence. Its business is to study the interests of the
+ State as a whole. In all matters of economic theory, of finance, of administration,
+ of social reform, it invokes the advice of specialists. But it is itself the supreme
+ political specialist. It stands high above all the political parties. It does not
+ depend for its existence on majorities in Parliament. It seeks the co-operation of
+ Parliament, but reserves to itself the right of initiative and leadership.</p>
+ <p>The object of the above remarks is to explain, not to justify, and in the face of
+ much uninstructed criticism to point out the deep sources in the nature of the German
+ people from which spring the influences that have molded their life. The chief
+ objections to their system may be summarized in the statements, that it takes too
+ little account of the value of the inexpert; that it tends to suppress latent
+ spontaneity; and, especially in the sphere of government, that it ascribes to the
+ expert a knowledge of the needs of the people such as no ruling class can ever
+ possess. And it overlooks the highest aim of political life and activity, which is
+ the education of the inexpert to such a point that they may become more or less
+ expert in understanding and promoting the public weal.</p>
+ <p>FELIX ADLER.</p>
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/maeterlinck.jpg"><img src='images/maeterlinck_thumb.jpg'
+ width='252' height='400' alt='MAURICE MAETERLINCK. See Page 144'
+ title='MAURICE MAETERLINCK' /></a> <a href="images/boutroux.jpg"><img
+ src='images/boutroux_thumb.jpg' width='251' height='400'
+ alt='EMILE BOUTROUX. (Photo from Bain News Service.) See Page 160'
+ title='EMILE BOUTROUX.' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>MAURICE MAETERLINCK. See <a href="#page144">Page 144</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>EMILE BOUTROUX. (Photo from Bain News Service.) See Page <a
+ href="#page160">160</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" id="page97"></a>{97}</span><b>When Peace
+ Is Seriously Desired</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Arnold Bennett.</h3>
+ <h4>From The Daily News of London.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>When peace is seriously desired in any quarter, the questions to be discussed by
+ the plenipotentaries will fall into three groups:</p>
+ <p>1. Those which affect all Europe.</p>
+ <p>2. Those which chiefly affect Western Europe.</p>
+ <p>3. Those which chiefly affect Eastern Europe.</p>
+ <p>The first group is, of course, the most important, both practically and
+ sentimentally. And the main question in it is the question of Belgium. The original
+ cause of the war was Germany's deliberate and advertised bellicosity, and it might be
+ thought that the first aim of peace would be by some means to extinguish that
+ bellicosity. But relative values may change during the progress of a war, and the
+ question of Belgium&mdash;which means the question of the sanction of international
+ pledges&mdash;now stands higher in the general view than the question of disarmament.
+ Germany has outraged the public law of Europe, and she has followed up her outrage
+ with a series of the most cowardly and wanton crimes. She ought to pay, and she ought
+ to apologize. Only by German payment and German apology can international law be
+ vindicated. Germany should pay a sum large enough to do everything that money can do
+ toward the re-establishment of Belgium's well-being. I have no competence to suggest
+ the amount of the indemnity. A hundred million pounds does not appear to me too
+ large.</p>
+ <p>Then the apology. It may be asked: Why an apology? Would not an apology be implied
+ in the payment of an indemnity?</p>
+ <p>It is undeniable that Germany is now directed by hysteric stupidity wielding a
+ bludgeon. Granted, if you will, that half the nation is at heart against the
+ stupidity and the bludgeon. So much the worse for the half. Citizens who have not had
+ the wit to get rid of the Prussian franchise law must accept all the consequences of
+ their political ineffectiveness. The peacemakers will not be able to divide Germany
+ into two halves.</p>
+ <p>For Potsdam a first-rate spectacular effect is needed, and that effect would best
+ be produced by a German national apology carried by a diplomatic mission with
+ ceremony to Brussels and published in all German official papers, and emphasized by a
+ procession of Belgian troops down Unter den Linden. This visible abasement of German
+ arms in front of the Socialists of Berlin would be an invaluable aid to the breaking
+ of military tyranny in Prussia.</p>
+ <p>So much for the Belgium question and the sanction of international pledges. The
+ other question affecting the whole of Europe is the hope of a universal limitation of
+ armaments. But there is a particular question, touching France, which in practice
+ would come before that. I mean Alsace-Lorraine. Unless Germany conquers Europe,
+ Alsace-Lorraine should be restored to France. A profound national sentiment, to which
+ all conceivable considerations of expediency or ultimate advantage are unimportant,
+ demands imperatively the return of the plunder. And in the councils of the Allies,
+ either alone or with German representatives, the attitude of French diplomacy would
+ be: "Is it clear about Alsace-Lorraine? If so, we may proceed. If not, it's no use
+ going any further."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Question of Armaments.</b></p>
+ <p>We now come to armaments. I have seen it suggested that the destruction of Essen,
+ Wilhelmshaven, and Heligoland ought to be a condition of peace with Germany.
+ Certainly the disappearance of these phenomena would be a gain <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>{98}</span>to the world. So would
+ the disappearance of Rosyth and Toulon. It seems to me, however, very improbable that
+ their destruction or dismantling by international command would occur after
+ hostilities have ceased, or could usefully so occur. If the French Army on its way to
+ Berlin can treat the Krupp factory as the German Army on its way to Paris treated
+ Rheims Cathedral, well and good! In fact, most excellent! And if the British Navy can
+ somehow emasculate Wilhelmshaven and Heligoland I shall not complain that its
+ behavior has been purely doctrinaire. But otherwise I see nothing practical in the
+ Essen-Wilhelmshaven-Heligoland suggestion. Nor in the project for dethroning the
+ Kaiser and sending him and his eldest son to settle their differences in St. Helena!
+ The Kaiser&mdash;happily&mdash;is not a Napoleon, nor has he yet himself accomplished
+ anything big enough or base enough to merit Napoleon's fate. Any dethroning that may
+ enliven the gray monotony of the post-bellum era at Potsdam should and will be done
+ by the German soldiers themselves. Even in international politics it is futile to try
+ to meddle in other people's private affairs.</p>
+ <p>Disarmament in Germany can be achieved by the exercise of one principle, and one
+ principle only. That principle is the principle of mutuality. A scheme in which every
+ nation will proportionately share should be presented to Germany, and she should be
+ respectfully but quite firmly asked to participate in it. There would be no sense in
+ saying to Germany: "You must disarm." The magic words would be: "We are going to
+ disarm, and so are you, whether you want to or not." As to the procedure of
+ disarmament&mdash;whether it shall be slow or fast, whether it shall include
+ destruction or be content with mere omission to renew, how the proportions shall be
+ decided, who shall give the signal to begin&mdash;here are matters which I am without
+ skill or desire to discuss. All I know about them is that they are horribly
+ complicated, unprecedentedly difficult, and bursting with danger; and that they will
+ strain the wisdom, patience, and ingenuity of the negotiators to the very utmost.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Three Vital Points.</b></p>
+ <p>Compared to disarmament, all remaining questions whatsoever affecting peace are
+ simple and secondary. Indemnities for France or Russia, or both, a Polish Kingdom, a
+ Balkan United States, the precise number of nations into which Austria-Hungary is to
+ be shattered, the ownership of the east coast of the Adriatic, even the reparation of
+ the infamy by which Denmark was robbed of Schleswig-Holstein&mdash;what are these but
+ favorable ground for the art of compromise? The vital points, at any rate for us
+ Westerners, are only three: Belgium, Alsace-Lorraine, and disarmament. * * * Stay,
+ there is another. It is vital to Great Britain's reputation that she should accept
+ nothing&mdash;neither indemnity, nor colonies; not a single pound, not a single
+ square mile.</p>
+ <p>Many persons, I gather, find it hard to believe that Prussia will ever admit that
+ she is beaten or consent to her own humiliation. Naturally her conduct will depend
+ upon the degree to which she is beaten. She has admitted defeat and swallowed the
+ leek before, though it is a long time ago. Meanwhile she has forgotten, and her
+ opponents seem to have forgotten also, that though her name is Prussia she is subject
+ to the limitations of the human race. Out of her prodigious score off little Denmark,
+ her thrashing of Austria&mdash;a country which never wins a war&mdash;and her victory
+ over France, there grew a legend that Prussia, and therefore Germany, was not as
+ other nations. This legend is contrary to fact. Every nation must yield to
+ force&mdash;here, indeed, is Germany's contribution to our common knowledge.</p>
+ <p>If in July, 1870, it had been prophesied that France would give up Alsace-Lorraine
+ and pay two hundred millions to get rid of a foreign army of occupation, France would
+ have protested that she would fight to the last man and to the last franc first. But
+ nations don't do these things. If Germany won <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99"
+ id="page99"></a>{99}</span>the present war and fulfilled her dream of establishing an
+ army in this island, we should yield, and we should submit to her terms, we who have
+ never been beaten save by our own colonies&mdash;that is a scientific certainty. And
+ Germany's terms would not be amusing; in their terribleness they would outrun our
+ poor Anglo-Saxon imagination. Similarly, if Germany is beaten, she will bow the head,
+ and to precisely the extent to which she is walloped. We need not worry about that.
+ Were she recalcitrant we need not even murmur in her ear: "What would you have
+ extorted if you'd won?" A gesture of the still uplifted sword would suffice to
+ convince her that facts are facts.</p>
+ <p>Assuming that the tide turns not again, the chances of a thorough, workmanlike
+ common sense peace can only be imperiled by one thing&mdash;the deep desire of France
+ and of Belgium for repose and recuperation. We in England do not know what war is. We
+ have not lived in hell. Our plains have not been devastated, nor our women and
+ children shot, nor our ears deafened by the boom of cannon, nor our cathedrals
+ shelled, nor our land turned into a vast and bloody hospital; and we have not
+ experienced the appalling terror and shame of the foe's absolute dominion in our
+ streets and lanes. We have suffered; we shall suffer; but our suffering is nought and
+ less than nought weighed against the suffering on the Continent. Why, in the midst of
+ a war of unparalleled horror, we grumble if a train is late! We can talk calmly of
+ fighting Germany to a stand-still, even if the job takes two years, and it behooves
+ us to talk so, and to prepare for the task; and for myself I am convinced that we
+ could make good the word. But France and Belgium will not use that tone, if Russia
+ does. Once the German armies are across the frontiers, the instinctive pressure in
+ favor of peace would be enormous, and considerations of the distant future, of the
+ welfare of our descendants and the progress of mankind, would count little in the
+ scale. In that moment, if it happily comes, our part and Russia's would be to sustain
+ and encourage and salve the supreme victims of fate. A tremendous factor in our favor
+ would be the exhaustion of Germany; and the measure of our power and of the fear we
+ inspire is the furious intensity of Germany's anger against our inconvenient selves.
+ Without us the war could not last beyond the end of this year, and the peace would be
+ unsatisfactory.</p>
+ <p>And even with us, insisting on our own terms of reconciliation, I do not see how
+ it can last over six months more on anything like the present scale, for the Kaiser,
+ despite his kinship with Deity, can neither create men nor extract gold coins out of
+ an empty hat. Military arguments, in Germany as elsewhere, hold good only for a
+ certain period.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>{100}</span><b>Barrie at
+ Bay: Which Was Brown?</b></h2>
+ <h3>An Interview on the War.</h3>
+ <h3>From The New York Times, Oct. 1, 1914.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>As our reporter entered Sir James Barrie's hotel room by one door, the next door
+ softly closed. "I was alone," writes our reporter. "I sprang into the corridor and
+ had just time to see him fling himself down the elevator. Then I understood what he
+ had meant when he said on the telephone that he would be ready for me at 10:30.</p>
+ <p>I returned thoughtfully to the room, where I found myself no longer alone. Sir
+ James Barrie's "man" was there; a stolid Londoner, name of Brown, who told me he was
+ visiting America for the first time.</p>
+ <p>"Sir James is very sorry, but has been called away," he assured me without moving
+ a muscle. Then he added: "But this is the pipe," and he placed a pipe of the largest
+ size on the table.</p>
+ <p>"The pipe he smokes?" I asked.</p>
+ <p>Brown is evidently a very truthful man, for he hesitated. "That is the interview
+ pipe," he explained. "When we decided to come to America, Sir James said he would
+ have to be interviewed, and that it would be wise to bring something with us for the
+ interviewers to take notice of. So he told me to buy the biggest pipe I could find,
+ and he practiced holding it in his mouth in his cabin on the way across. He is very
+ pleased with the way the gentlemen of the press have taken notice of it."</p>
+ <p>"So that is not the pipe he really smokes?" I said, perceiving I was on the verge
+ of a grand discovery. "I suppose he actually smokes an ordinary small pipe."</p>
+ <p>Again Brown hesitated, but again truth prevailed.</p>
+ <p>"He does not smoke any pipe," he said, "nor cigars, nor cigarettes; he never
+ smokes at all; he just puts that one in his mouth to help the interviewers."</p>
+ <p>"It has the appearance of having been smoked," I pointed out.</p>
+ <p>"I blackened it for him," the faithful fellow replied.</p>
+ <p>"But he has written a book in praise of My Lady Nicotine."</p>
+ <p>"So I have heard," Brown said guardedly. "I think that was when he was hard up and
+ had to write what people wanted; but he never could abide smoking himself. Years
+ after he wrote the book he read it; he had quite forgotten it, and he was so
+ attracted by what it said about the delights of tobacco that he tried a cigarette.
+ But it was no good; the mere smell disgusted him."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Strange Forgetfulness.</b></p>
+ <p>"Odd that he should forget his own book," I said.</p>
+ <p>"He forgets them all," said Brown. "There is this Peter Pan foolishness, for
+ instance. I have heard people talking to him about that play and mentioning parts in
+ it they liked, and he tried to edge them off the subject; they think it is his
+ shyness, but I know it is because he has forgotten the bits they are speaking about.
+ Before strangers call on him I have seen him reading one of his own books hurriedly,
+ so as to be able to talk about it if that is their wish. But he gets mixed up, and
+ thinks that the little minister was married to Wendy."</p>
+ <p>"Almost looks as if he hadn't written his own works," I said.</p>
+ <p>"Almost," Brown admitted uncomfortably.</p>
+ <p>I asked a leading question. "You don't suppose," I said, "that any one writes them
+ for him? Such things have been. You don't write them for him by any chance, just as
+ you blackened the pipe, you know?"</p>
+ <p>Brown assured me stolidly that he did not. Suddenly, whether to get away <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>{101}</span>from a troublesome
+ subject I cannot say, he vouchsafed me a startling piece of information. "The German
+ Kaiser was on our boat coming across," he said.</p>
+ <p>"Sure?" I asked, wetting my pencil.</p>
+ <p>He told me he had Sir James's word for it. There was on board, it seems, a very
+ small, shrunken gentleman with a pronounced waist and tiny, turned-up mustache, who
+ strutted along the deck trying to look fierce and got in the other passengers' way to
+ their annoyance until Sir James discovered that he was the Kaiser Reduced to Life
+ Size. After that Sir James liked to sit with him and talk to him.</p>
+ <p>Sir James is a great admirer of the Kaiser, though he has not, like Mr. Carnegie,
+ had the pleasure of meeting him in society. When he read in the papers on arriving
+ here that the Kaiser had wept over the destruction of Louvain, he told Brown a story.
+ It was of a friend who had gone to an oculist to be cured of some disease in one eye.
+ Years afterward he heard that the oculist's son had been killed in some Indian war,
+ and he called on the oculist to commiserate with him.</p>
+ <p>"You cured my eye," he said to him, "and when I read of your loss I wept for you,
+ Sir; I wept for you with that eye."</p>
+ <p>"Sir James," Brown explained, "is of a very sympathetic nature, and he wondered
+ which eye it was that the Kaiser wept with."</p>
+ <p>I asked Brown what his own views were about the war, and before replying he pulled
+ a paper from his pocket and scanned it. "We are strictly neutral," he then
+ replied.</p>
+ <p>"Is that what is written on the paper?" I asked. He admitted that Sir James had
+ written out for him the correct replies to possible questions. "Why was he neutral?"
+ I asked, and he again found the reply on the piece of paper: "Because it is the
+ President's wish."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Brown Must Be Neutral.</b></p>
+ <p>So anxious, I discovered, is Sir James to follow the President's bidding that he
+ has enjoined Brown to be neutral on all other subjects besides the war; to express no
+ preference on matters of food, for instance, and always to eat oysters and clams
+ alternately, so that there can be no ill-feeling. Also to walk in the middle of the
+ streets lest he should seem to be favoring either sidewalk, and to be very cautious
+ about admitting that one building in New York is higher than another. I assured him
+ that the Woolworth Building was the highest, but he replied politely, "that he was
+ sure the President would prefer him to remain neutral." I naturally asked if Sir
+ James had given him any further instructions as to proper behavior in America, and it
+ seems that he had done so. They amount, I gather, to this, that Americans have a
+ sense of humor which they employ, when they can, to the visitor's undoing.</p>
+ <p>"When we reach New York," Sir James seems to have told Brown in effect, "we shall
+ be met by reporters who will pretend that America is eager to be instructed by us as
+ to the causes and progress of the war; then, if we are fools enough to think that
+ America cannot make up its mind for itself, we shall fall into the trap and preach to
+ them, and all the time they are taking down our observations they will be saying to
+ themselves, 'Pompous asses.'</p>
+ <p>"It is a sort of game between us and the reporters. Our aim is to make them think
+ we are bigger than we are, and theirs is to make us smaller than we are; and any
+ chance we have of succeeding is to hold our tongues, while they will probably succeed
+ if they make us jabber. Above all, oh, Brown, if you write to the papers giving your
+ views of why we are at war&mdash;and if you don't you will be the only person who
+ hasn't&mdash;don't be lured into slinging vulgar abuse at our opponents, lest America
+ takes you for another university professor."</p>
+ <p>There is, I learned, only one person in America about whom it is impossible, even
+ in Sir James's opinion, to preserve a neutral attitude. This is the German
+ Ambassador, whose splendid work for England day by day and in every paper and to all
+ reporters cannot, Sir James thinks, be too cordially recognized. Brown has been told
+ to look upon the German Ambasador as England's great<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page102" id="page102"></a>{102}</span>est asset in America just now, and to
+ hope heartily that he will be long spared to carry on his admirable work.</p>
+ <p>Lastly, it was pleasant to find that Brown has not a spark of sympathy with those
+ who say that, because Germany has destroyed art treasures in Belgium and France, the
+ Allies should retaliate with similar rudeness if they reach Berlin. He holds that if
+ for any reason best known to themselves (such as the wish for a sunnier location) the
+ Hohenzollerns should by and by vacate their present residence, a nice villa should be
+ provided for them, and that all the ancestral statues in the Sieges-Allee should be
+ conveyed to it intact, and perhaps put up in the back garden. There the Junkers could
+ drop in of an evening, on their way home from their offices, and chat pleasantly of
+ old times. Brown thinks they should be allowed to retain all their iron crosses, and
+ even given some more, with which, after smart use of their pocket combs, they would
+ cut no end of a dash among the nursemaids.</p>
+ <p>As for the pipe, I was informed that it had now done its work, and I could take it
+ away as a keepsake. I took it, but wondered afterward at Brown's thinking he had the
+ right to give it me.</p>
+ <p>A disquieting feeling has since come over me that perhaps it was Sir James I had
+ been interviewing all the time, and Brown who had escaped down the elevator.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>A "Credo" for Keeping Faith</b></h2>
+ <h3>By John Galsworthy.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>I believe in peace with all my heart. I believe that war is outrage&mdash;a black
+ stain on the humanity and the fame of man. I hate militarism and the god of force. I
+ would go any length to avoid war for material interests, war that involved no
+ principles, distrusting profoundly the common meaning of the phrase "national
+ honor."</p>
+ <p>But I believe there is a national honor charged with the future happiness of man,
+ that loyalty is due from those living to those that will come after; that
+ civilization can only wax and flourish in a world where faith is kept; that for
+ nations, as for individuals, there are laws of duty, whose violation harms the whole
+ human race; in sum, that stars of conduct shine for peoples, as for private men.</p>
+ <p>And so I hold that without tarnishing true honor, endangering civilization present
+ and to come, and ruining all hope of future tranquillity, my country could not have
+ refused to take up arms for the defense of Belgium's outraged neutrality, solemnly
+ guaranteed by herself and France.</p>
+ <p>I believe, and claim in proof, the trend of events and of national character
+ during the last century, that in democracy alone lies any coherent hope of
+ progressive civilization or any chance of lasting peace in Europe, or the world.</p>
+ <p>I believe that this democratic principle, however imperfectly developed, has so
+ worked in France, in England, in the United States, that these countries are already
+ nearly safe from inclination to aggress, or to subdue other nationalities.</p>
+ <p>And I believe that while there remain autocratic Governments basing themselves on
+ militarism, bitterly hostile to the democratic principle, Europe will never be free
+ of the surcharge of swollen armaments, the nightmare menace of wars like
+ this&mdash;the paralysis that creeps on civilizations which adore the god of
+ force.</p>
+ <p>And so I hold that, without betrayal of trusteeship, without shirking the
+ elementary defense of beliefs coiled within its <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page103" id="page103"></a>{103}</span>fibre, or beliefs vital to the future
+ welfare of all men, my country could not stand by and see the triumph of autocratic
+ militarism over France, that very cradle of democracy.</p>
+ <p>I believe that democratic culture spreads from west to east, that only by
+ maintenance of consolidate democracy in Western Europe can democracy ever hope to
+ push on and prevail till the Eastern powers have also that ideal under which alone
+ humanity can flourish.</p>
+ <p>And so I hold that my country is justified at this juncture in its alliance with
+ the autocratic power of Russia, whose people will never know freedom till her borders
+ are joined to the borders of democracy.</p>
+ <p>I do not believe that jealous, frightened jingoism has ever been more than the
+ dirty fringe of England's peace-loving temper, and I profess my sacred faith that my
+ country has gone to war at last, not from fear, not from hope of aggrandizement, but
+ because she must&mdash;for honor, for democracy, and for the future of mankind.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Hard Blows, Not Hard Words</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Jerome K. Jerome.</h3>
+ <h4>From The London Daily News.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>In one of Shaw's plays&mdash;I think it is "Superman"&mdash;one of the characters
+ hints, toward the end of the last act, that the hero is a gentleman somewhat prone to
+ talking. The hero admits it, but excuses himself on the ground that it is the only
+ way he knows of explaining his opinions.</p>
+ <p>Times of stress and struggle, whether individual or national, afford men and women
+ other methods of expressing their views, and a large number of our citizens are, very
+ creditably, taking the present opportunity to act instead of shout. There are the
+ young fellows who in their thousands are pressing around the door of the recruiting
+ offices. They are throwing up, many of them, good jobs for the privilege of drilling
+ for the next six months for eight hours a day. Their reward will be certain hardship,
+ their share of sickness and wounds, the probability of lying ten deep in a forgotten
+ grave, their chance of glory a name printed in small type among a thousand others on
+ a War Office report.</p>
+ <p>There are the mothers and wives and children who are encouraging them to go; to
+ whom their going means semi-starvation. The old, bent crones whose feeble hands will
+ have to grasp again the hoe and the scrubbing brush. The young women who know only
+ too well what is before them&mdash;the selling of the home just got together; first
+ the easy chair and the mirror, and then the bed and the mattress; the weary tramping
+ of the streets, looking for work. The children awestruck and wondering.</p>
+ <p>There are the men who are quietly going on with their work, doing their best with
+ straitened means to keep their business going; giving employment; getting ready to
+ meet the income tax collector, who next year one is inclined to expect will be
+ demanding anything from half a crown to five shillings in the pound. There are
+ others. But there is a certain noisy and, to me, particularly offensive man (and with
+ him, I am sorry to say, one or two women) very much to the fore just now with whose
+ services the country could very well dispense. He is the man who does his fighting
+ with his mouth. Unable for reasons of his own to get at the foe in the field, he
+ thirsts for the blood of the unfortunate unarmed and helpless Germans that the
+ fortunes of war have left stranded in England. He writes to the paper thoughtfully
+ suggesting plans that have occurred to him <span class="pagenum"><a name="page104"
+ id="page104"></a>{104}</span>for making their existence more miserable than it must
+ be. He generally concludes his letter with a short homily directed against the
+ Prussian Military Staff for their lack of the higher Christian principles.</p>
+ <p>He has spies on the brain. Two quite harmless English citizens have already been
+ shot in consequence of the funk this spy mania has created among us. The vast
+ majority of Germans in England have come to live in England because they dislike
+ Germany. That a certain number of spies are among us I take to be highly probable. I
+ take it that if the Allies know their business a certain number of English spies are
+ doing what they can for us at great personal risk to themselves in Germany. Until the
+ German Army has landed on our shores German spies can do little or no harm to us. The
+ police can be trusted to know something about them, and if any are caught red-handed
+ the rules of war are not likely to be strained for their benefit.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Story from the South.</b></p>
+ <p>From a small town in the South of England comes a story I can vouch for. A couple
+ of Boy Scouts had been set to guard the local reservoir. About noon one sunny day
+ they remarked the approach, somewhat ostentatious, of a desperate-looking character.
+ Undoubtedly a German spy! What can he be up to! The boys approached him and he fled,
+ leaving behind him the damning evidence&mdash;a tin suggestive of sardines and
+ labeled "Poison!" That the gentleman should have chosen broad daylight for his
+ nefarious design, should have been careful to label his tin, seemed to the good
+ townsfolk under present scare conditions proof that they had at last discovered the
+ real German spy, full of his devilish cunning. The tin was taken possession of by the
+ police. And then the Sergeant's little daughter, who happened to have had a few
+ lessons in French, suggested that the word on the tin was "Poisson," and the town now
+ breathes again.</p>
+ <p>So long as the war continues the spy will be among us. I suggest that we face the
+ problem of his activities without blue funk and hysteria. The men and women who are
+ shrieking for vicarious vengeance upon all the Germans remaining in our midst must
+ remember that there are thousands of English families at the present moment residing
+ in Germany and Austria. The majority of them, comparatively poor people, with all
+ their belongings around them, were unable to get away. I shall, until I receive
+ convincing proof to the contrary, continue to believe that they are living among
+ their German neighbors unmolested. Even were it not so, I would suggest our setting
+ the example of humanity rather than our slavishly following an example of
+ barbarity.</p>
+ <p>We are fighting for an idea&mdash;an idea of some importance to the generations
+ that will come after us. We are fighting to teach the Prussian Military Staff that
+ other laws have come to stay&mdash;laws superseding those of Attila the Hun. We are
+ fighting to teach the German people that, free men with brains to think with, they
+ have no right to hand themselves over body and soul to their rulers to be used as
+ mere devil's instruments; that if they do so they shall pay the penalty, and the
+ punishment shall go hard. We are fighting to teach the German Nation respect for God!
+ Our weapons have got to be hard blows, not hard words. We are tearing at each other's
+ throats; it has got to be done. It is not a time for yelping.</p>
+ <p>Jack Johnson as a boxer I respect. The thing I do not like about him is his habit
+ of gibing and jeering at his opponent while he is fighting him. It isn't gentlemanly,
+ and it isn't sporting. The soldiers are fighting in grim silence. When one of them
+ does talk, it is generally to express admiration of German bravery. It is our valiant
+ stay-at-homes, our valiant clamorers for everybody else to enlist but themselves, who
+ would have us fight like some drunken fish hag, shrieking and spitting while she
+ claws.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Incredible Reports of Atrocities.</b></p>
+ <p>Half of these stories of atrocities I do not believe. I remember when I was living
+ in Germany at the time of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page105"
+ id="page105"></a>{105}</span>Boer war the German papers were full of accounts of
+ Tommy Atkins's brutality. He spent his leisure time in tossing babies on bayonets.
+ There were photographs of him doing it. Detailed accounts certified by most
+ creditable witnesses. Such lies are the stock in trade of every tenth-rate
+ journalist, who, careful not to expose himself to danger, slinks about the byways
+ collecting hearsay. In every war each side, according to the other, is supposed to
+ take a fiendish pleasure in firing upon hospitals&mdash;containing always a
+ proportion of their own wounded. An account comes to us from a correspondent with the
+ Belgian Army. He tells us that toward the end of the day a regrettable incident
+ occurred. The Germans were taking off their wounded in motor cars. The Belgian
+ sharpshooters, not noticing the red flag in the dusk, kept up a running fire, and a
+ large number of the wounded were killed. Had the incident been the other way about it
+ would have been cited as a deliberate piece of villainy on the part of the Germans.
+ According to other accounts, the Germans always go into action with screens of women
+ and children before them. The explanation, of course, is that a few poor terrified
+ creatures are rushing along the road. They get between the approaching forces, and I
+ expect the bullets that put them out of their misery come pretty even from both
+ sides.</p>
+ <p>The men are mad. Mad with fear, mad with hate, blinded by excitement. Take a mere
+ dog fight. If you interfere you have got to be prepared for your own dog turning upon
+ you. In war half the time the men do not know what they are doing. They are little
+ else than wild beasts. There was great indignation at the dropping of bombs into
+ Antwerp. One now hears that a French dirigible has been dropping bombs into
+ Luxembourg&mdash;a much more dignified retort. War is a grim game. Able editors and
+ club-chair politicians have been clamoring for it for years past. They thought it was
+ all goose-step and bands.</p>
+ <p>The truth is bad enough, God knows. There is no sense in making things out worse
+ than they are. When this war is over we have got to forget it. To build up barriers
+ of hatred that shall stand between our children and our foemen's children is a crime
+ against the future.</p>
+ <p>These stories of German naval officers firing on their wounded sailors in the
+ water! They are an insult to our intelligence. At Louvain fifty of the inhabitants
+ were taken out and shot. On Monday the fifty had grown to five hundred; both numbers
+ vouched for by eye-witnesses, "Dutchmen who would have had no interest," &amp;c. That
+ the beautiful old town has been laid in ashes is undoubted. Some criminal lunatic
+ strutting in pipeclay and mustachios was given his hour of authority and took the
+ chance of his life. If I know anything of the German people it will go hard with him
+ when the war is over, if he has not had the sense to get killed. But that won't rear
+ again the grand old stones or wipe from Germany's honor the stain of that long line
+ of murdered men and women&mdash;whatever its actual length may have been. War puts a
+ premium on brutality and senselessness. Men with the intelligence and instincts of an
+ ape suddenly find themselves possessed of the powers of a god. And we are astonished
+ that they do not display the wisdom of a god!</p>
+ <p>There are other stories that have filtered through to us. There was a dying Uhlan
+ who caught a child to his arms and kissed him. One would like to be able to kiss
+ one's own child before one dies, but failing that&mdash;well, after all, there is a
+ sort of family likeness between them. The same deep wondering eyes, the
+ same&mdash;and then the mist grows deeper. Perhaps after all it was Baby Fritz that
+ he kissed.</p>
+ <p>And of a Belgian woman. She had seen her two sons killed before her eyes. She
+ tells of that and of other horrors. Among such, of the German lads she had stepped
+ over, their blue eyes quiet in death. The passion and the fear and the hate cleansed
+ out of them. Just boys with their clothes torn&mdash;so like boys.</p>
+ <p>"They, too, have got mothers, poor lads!" is all she says, thinking of them lying
+ side by side with her own.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>{106}</span>When the
+ madness and the folly are over, when the tender green is creeping in and out among
+ the blackened ruins, it will be well for us to think of that dying Uhlan who had to
+ put up with a French baby instead of his own; of that Belgian mother to whom the
+ German youngsters were just "poor lads"&mdash;with their clothes torn.</p>
+ <p>And the savagery and the cruelty and the guiltiness that go to the making of war
+ we will seek to forget.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>"As They Tested Our Fathers"</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Rudyard Kipling.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Following is the text of an address by Mr. Kipling to a mass meeting at
+ Brighton, Sept. 8, 1914:</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Through no fault nor wish of ours we are at war with Germany, the power which owes
+ its existence to three well-thought-out wars; the power which for the last twenty
+ years has devoted itself to organizing and preparing for this war; the power which is
+ now fighting to conquer the civilized world.</p>
+ <p>For the last two generations the Germans in their books, teachers, speeches, and
+ schools have been carefully taught that nothing less than this world conquest was the
+ object of their preparations and their sacrifices. They have prepared carefully and
+ sacrificed greatly.</p>
+ <p>We must have men, and men, and men, if we with our allies are to check the onrush
+ of organized barbarism.</p>
+ <p>Have no illusions. We are dealing with a strong and magnificently equipped enemy,
+ whose avowed aim is our complete destruction.</p>
+ <p>The violation of Belgium, the attack on France, and the defense against Russia are
+ only steps by the way. The Germans' real objective, as she has always told us, is
+ England and England's wealth, trade, and worldwide possessions.</p>
+ <p>If you assume for an instant that that attack will be successful, England will not
+ be reduced, as some people say, to the rank of a second-rate power, but we shall
+ cease to exist as a nation. We shall become an outlying province of Germany, to be
+ administered with what severity German safety and interest require.</p>
+ <p>We arm against such a fate. We enter into a new life in which all the facts of war
+ that we had put behind or forgotten for the past hundred years have returned to the
+ front and test us as they tested our fathers. It will be a long and a hard road,
+ beset with difficulties and discouragements, but we tread it together and we will
+ tread it together to the end.</p>
+ <p>Our petty social divisions and barriers have been swept away at the outset of our
+ mighty struggle. All the interests of our life of six weeks ago are dead. We have but
+ one interest now, and that touches the naked heart of every man in this island and in
+ the empire.</p>
+ <p>If we are to win the right for ourselves and for freedom to exist on earth, every
+ man must offer himself for that service and that sacrifice.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>{107}</span><b>Kipling
+ and "The Truce of the Bear"</b></h2>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>STAUNTON, Va., Sept. 25, 1914.&mdash;On Sept. 5 The Staunton News printed
+ some verses by Dr. Charles Minor Blackford, an associate editor, addressed to
+ Rudyard Kipling, calling attention to the apparent inconsistency of his attitude of
+ distrust of Russia as shown in his well-known poem, "The Truce of the Bear," and
+ his present advocacy of the alliance between Russia and Great Britain. A copy of
+ the verses was sent to Mr. Kipling and the following reply was received from
+ him:</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Bateman's Burwash, Sussex.</p>
+ <p>Dear Sir: I am much obliged for your verses of Sept. 4. "The Truce of the Bear,"
+ to which they refer, was written sixteen years ago, in 1898. It dealt with a
+ situation and a menace which have long since passed away, and with issues that are
+ now quite dead.</p>
+ <p>The present situation, as far as England is concerned, is Germany's deliberate
+ disregard of the neutrality of Belgium, whose integrity Germany as well as England
+ guaranteed. She has filled Belgium with every sort of horror and atrocity, not in the
+ heat of passion, but as a part of settled policy of terrorism. Her avowed object is
+ the conquest of Europe on these lines.</p>
+ <p>As you may prove for yourself if you will consult her literature of the last
+ generation, Germany is the present menace, not to Europe alone, but to the whole
+ civilized world. If Germany, by any means, is victorious you may rest assured that it
+ will be a very short time before she turns her attention to the United States. If you
+ could meet the refugees from Belgium flocking into England and have the opportunity
+ of checking their statements of unimaginable atrocities and barbarities studiously
+ committed, you would, I am sure, think as seriously on these matters as we do, and in
+ your unpreparedness for modern war you would do well to think very seriously indeed.
+ Yours truly,</p>
+ <p>RUDYARD KIPLING.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>On the Impending Crisis</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Norman Angell.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The London Times:</i></p>
+ <p>Sir: A nation's first duty is to its own people. We are asked to intervene in the
+ Continental war because unless we do so we shall be "isolated." The isolation which
+ will result for us if we keep out of this war is that, while other nations are torn
+ and weakened by war, we shall not be, and by that fact might conceivably for a long
+ time be the strongest power in Europe, and, by virtue of our strength and isolation,
+ its arbiter, perhaps, to useful ends.</p>
+ <p>We are told that if we allow Germany to become victorious she would be so powerful
+ as to threaten our existence by the occupation of Belgium, Holland, and possibly the
+ North of France. But, as your article of today's date so well points out, it was the
+ difficulty which Germany found in Alsace-Lorraine which prevented her from acting
+ against us during the South African War. If one province, so largely German in its
+ origin and history, could create this embarrassment, what trouble will not Germany
+ pile up for herself if she should attempt the absorption of a Belgium, a Holland, and
+ a Normandy? She would have created for herself embarrassments compared with which
+ Alsace and Poland would be a trifle; and Russia, with her 160,000,000, would in a
+ year or two be as great a menace to her as ever.</p>
+ <p>The object and effect of our entering into this war would be to insure the
+ vic<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>{108}</span>tory of
+ Russia and her Slavonic allies. Will a dominant Slavonic federation of, say,
+ 200,000,000 autocratically governed people, with a very rudimentary civilization, but
+ heavily equipped for military aggression, be a less dangerous factor in Europe than a
+ dominant Germany of 65,000,000 highly civilized and mainly given to the arts of trade
+ and commerce?</p>
+ <p>The last war we fought on the Continent was for the purpose of preventing the
+ growth of Russia. We are now asked to fight one for the purpose of promoting it. It
+ is now universally admitted that our last Continental war&mdash;the Crimean
+ war&mdash;was a monstrous error and miscalculation. Would this intervention be any
+ wiser or likely to be better in its results?</p>
+ <p>On several occasions Sir Edward Grey has solemnly declared that we are not bound
+ by any agreement to support France, and there is certainly no moral obligation on the
+ part of the English people so to do. We can best serve civilization,
+ Europe&mdash;including France&mdash;and ourselves by remaining the one power in
+ Europe that has not yielded to the war madness.</p>
+ <p>This, I believe, will be found to be the firm conviction of the overwhelming
+ majority of the English people.</p>
+ <p>Yours faithfully,</p>
+ <p>NORMAN ANGELL.</p>
+ <p>4 Kings Bench Walk, Temple, E.C., July 31.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Why England Came To Be In It</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Gilbert K. Chesterton.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>I.</b></p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Unless we are all mad, there is at the back of the most bewildering business a
+ story; and if we are all mad, there is no such thing as madness. If I set a house on
+ fire, it is quite true that I may illuminate many other people's weaknesses as well
+ as my own. It may be that the master of the house was burned because he was drunk; it
+ may be that the mistress of the house was burned because she was stingy, and perished
+ arguing about the expense of the fire-escape. It is, nevertheless, broadly true that
+ they both were burned because I set fire to their house. That is the story of the
+ thing. The mere facts of the story about the present European conflagration are quite
+ as easy to tell.</p>
+ <p>Before we go on to the deeper things which make this war the most sincere war of
+ human history, it is easy to answer the question of why England came to be in it at
+ all; as one asks how a man fell down a coal hole, or failed to keep an appointment.
+ Facts are not the whole truth. But facts are facts, and in this case the facts are
+ few and simple.</p>
+ <p>Prussia, France, and England had all promised not to invade Belgium, because it
+ was the safest way of invading France. But Prussia promised that if she might break
+ in through her own broken promise and ours she would break in and not steal. In other
+ words, we were offered at the same instant a promise of faith in the future and a
+ proposal of perjury in the present.</p>
+ <p>Those interested in human origins may refer to an old Victorian writer of English,
+ who in the last and most restrained of his historical essays wrote of Frederick the
+ Great, the founder of this unchanging Prussian policy. After describing how Frederick
+ broke the guarantee he had signed on behalf of Maria Theresa he then describes how
+ Frederick sought to put things straight by a promise that was an insult. "If she
+ would but let him have Silesia, he would, he said, stand by her against any power
+ which should <span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>{109}</span>try
+ to deprive her of her other dominions; as if he was not already bound to stand by
+ her, or as if his new promise could be of more value than the old one." That passage
+ was written by Macaulay; but so far as the mere contemporary facts are concerned, it
+ might have been written by me.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Diplomacy That Might Have Been.</b></p>
+ <p>Upon the immediate logical and legal origin of the English interest there can be
+ no rational debate. There are some things so simple that one can almost prove them
+ with plans and diagrams, as in Euclid. One could make a kind of comic calendar of
+ what would have happened to the English diplomatist if he had been silenced every
+ time by Prussian diplomacy. Suppose we arrange it in the form of a kind of diary:</p>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>July 24&mdash;Germany invades Belgium.</p>
+ <p>July 25&mdash;England declares war.</p>
+ <p>July 26&mdash;Germany promises not to annex Belgium.</p>
+ <p>July 27&mdash;England withdraws from the war.</p>
+ <p>July 28&mdash;Germany annexes Belgium. England declares war.</p>
+ <p>July 29&mdash;Germany promises not to annex France. England withdraws from the
+ war.</p>
+ <p>July 30&mdash;Germany annexes France. England declares war.</p>
+ <p>July 31&mdash;Germany promises not to annex England.</p>
+ <p>Aug. 1&mdash;England withdraws from the war. Germany invades England.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>How long is anybody expected to go on with that sort of game, or keep peace at
+ that illimitable price? How long must we pursue a road in which promises are all
+ fetiches in front of us and all fragments behind us? No; upon the cold facts of the
+ final negotiations, as told by any of the diplomatists in any of the documents, there
+ is no doubt about the story. And no doubt about the villain of the story.</p>
+ <p>These are the last facts, the facts which involved England. It is equally easy to
+ state the first facts&mdash;the facts which involved Europe. The Prince who
+ practically ruled Austria was shot by certain persons whom the Austrian Government
+ believed to be conspirators from Servia. The. Austrian Government piled up arms and
+ armies, but said not a word either to Servia, their suspect, or Italy, their ally.
+ From the documents it would seem that Austria kept everybody in the dark, except
+ Prussia. It is probably nearer the truth to say that Prussia kept everybody in the
+ dark, including Austria.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Demands on Servia.</b></p>
+ <p>But all that is what is called opinion, belief, conviction, or common sense, and
+ we are not dealing with it here. The objective fact is that Austria told Servia to
+ permit Servian officers to be suspended by the authority of Austrian officers, and
+ told Servia to submit to this within forty-eight hours. In other words, the Sovereign
+ of Servia was practically told to take off not only the laurels of two great
+ campaigns, but his own lawful and national crown, and to do it in a time in which no
+ respectable citizen is expected to discharge a hotel bill. Servia asked for time for
+ arbitration&mdash;in short, for peace. But Russia had already begun to mobilize, and
+ Prussia, presuming that Servia might thus be rescued, declared war.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Between these two ends of fact, the ultimatum to Servia, the ultimatum to Belgium,
+ any one so inclined can, of course, talk as if everything were relative. If any one
+ asks why the Czar should rush to the support of Servia, it is easy to ask why the
+ Kaiser should rush to the support of Austria. If any one say that that the French
+ would attack the Germans, it is sufficient to answer that the Germans did attack the
+ French.</p>
+ <p>There remain, however, two attitudes to consider, even perhaps two arguments to
+ counter, which can best be considered and countered under this general head of facts.
+ First of all, there is a curious, cloudy sort of argument, much affected by the
+ professional rhetoricans of Prussia, who are sent out to instruct and correct the
+ minds of Americans or Scandinavians. It consists of going into convulsions of
+ incredulity and scorn at the mention of Russia's responsibility for Servia or
+ England's responsibility for Belgium; and suggesting that, treaty or <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id="page110"></a>{110}</span>no treaty, frontier or
+ no frontier, Russia would be out to slay Teutons or England to steal colonies.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>England Kept Her Contracts.</b></p>
+ <p>Here, as elsewhere, I think the professors dotted all over the Baltic plain fail
+ in lucidity and in the power of distinguishing ideas. Of course, it is quite true
+ that England has material interests to defend, and will probably use the opportunity
+ to defend them; or, in other words, of course England, like everybody else, would be
+ more comfortable if Prussia were less predominant. The fact remains that we did not
+ do what the Germans did. We did not invade Holland to seize a naval and commercial
+ advantage; and whether they say that we wished to do it in our greed or feared to do
+ it in our cowardice, the fact remains that we did not do it. Unless this common sense
+ principle be kept in view, I cannot conceive how any quarrel can possibly be judged.
+ A contract may be made between two persons solely for material advantages on each
+ side; but the moral advantage is still generally supposed to lie with the person who
+ keeps the contract. Surely, it cannot be dishonest to be honest&mdash;even if honesty
+ is the best policy. Imagine the most complex maze of indirect motives, and still the
+ man who keeps faith for money cannot possibly be worse than the man who breaks faith
+ for money.</p>
+ <p>It will be noted that this ultimate test applies in the same way to Servia as to
+ Belgium and Britain. The Servians may not be a very peaceful people; but on the
+ occasion under discussion it was certainly they who wanted peace. You may choose to
+ think the Serb a sort of a born robber; but on this occasion it was certainly the
+ Austrian who was trying to rob. Similarly, you may call England perfidious as a sort
+ of historical summary, and declare your private belief that Mr. Asquith was vowed
+ from infancy to the ruin of the German Empire &mdash;a Hannibal and hater of the
+ eagles. But when all is said, it is nonsense to call a man perfidious because he
+ keeps his promise. It is absurd to complain of the sudden treachery of a business man
+ in turning up punctually to his appointment, or the unfair shock given to a creditor
+ by the debtor paying his debts. Lastly, there is an attitude not unknown in the
+ crisis against which I should particularly like to protest. I should address my
+ protest especially to those lovers and pursuers of peace who, very shortsightedly,
+ have occasionally adopted it. I mean the attitude which is impatient of these
+ preliminary details about who did this or that and whether it was right or wrong.
+ They are satisfied with saying that an enormous calamity called war has been begun by
+ some or all of us, and should be ended by some or all of us. To these people this
+ preliminary chapter about the precise happenings must appear not only dry (and it
+ must of necessity be the dryest part of the task), but essentially needless and
+ barren. I wish to tell these people that they are wrong; that they are wrong upon all
+ principles of human justice and historic continuity; but that they are especially and
+ supremely wrong upon their own principles of arbitration and international peace.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>As to Certain Peace Lovers.</b></p>
+ <p>These sincere and high-minded peace lovers are always telling us that citizens no
+ longer settle their quarrels by private violence, and that nations should no longer
+ settle theirs by public violence. They are always telling us that we no longer fight
+ duels, and need no longer wage wars. In short, they perpetually base their peace
+ proposals on the fact that an ordinary citizen no longer avenges himself with an
+ axe.</p>
+ <p>But how is he prevented from avenging himself with an axe? If he hits his neighbor
+ on the head with the kitchen chopper what do we do? Do we all join hands, like
+ children playing mulberry bush, and say: "We are all responsible for this, but let us
+ hope it will not spread. Let us hope for the happy, happy day when he shall leave off
+ chopping at the man's head, and when nobody shall ever chop anything forever and
+ ever." Do we say: "Let bygones be bygones. Why go back to all the dull details with
+ which the business began? <span class="pagenum"><a name="page111"
+ id="page111"></a>{111}</span>Who can tell with what sinister motives the man was
+ standing there within reach of the hatchet?"</p>
+ <p>We do not. We keep the peace in private life by asking for the facts of
+ provocation and the proper object of punishment. We do not go into the dull details;
+ we do inquire into the origins; we do emphatically inquire who it was that hit first.
+ In short, we do what I have done very briefly in this place.</p>
+ <p>Given this, it is indeed true that behind these facts there are
+ truths&mdash;truths of a terrible, of a spiritual sort. In mere fact the Germanic
+ power has been wrong about Servia, wrong about Russia, wrong about Belgium, wrong
+ about England, wrong about Italy. But there was a reason for its being wrong
+ everywhere, and of that root reason, which has moved half the world against it, I
+ shall speak later in this series. For that is something too omnipresent to be proved,
+ too indisputable to be helped by detail. It is nothing less than the locating, after
+ more than a hundred years of recriminations and wrong explanations, of the modern
+ European evil&mdash;the finding of the fountain from which poison has flowed upon all
+ the nations of the earth.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h3>II.</h3>
+ <h3>Russian or Prussian Barbarism?</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>It will hardly be denied that there is one lingering doubt in many who recognize
+ unavoidable self-defense in the instant parry of the English sword and who have no
+ great love for the sweeping sabre of Sadowa and Sedan. That doubt is the doubt of
+ whether Russia, as compared with Prussia, is sufficiently decent and democratic to be
+ the ally of liberal and civilized powers. I take first, therefore, this matter of
+ civilization.</p>
+ <p>It is vital in a discussion like this that we should make sure we are going by
+ meanings and not by mere words. It is not necessary in any argument to settle what a
+ word means or ought to mean. But it is necessary in every argument to settle what we
+ propose to mean by the word. So long as our opponent understands what is the thing of
+ which we are talking, it does not matter to the argument whether the word is or is
+ not the one he would have chosen. A soldier does not say, "We were ordered to go to
+ Mechlin, but I would rather go to Malines." He may discuss the etymology and
+ archaeology of the difference on the march, but the point is that he knows where to
+ go. So long as we know what a given word is to mean in a given discussion, it does
+ not even matter if it means something else in some other and quite distinct
+ discussion. We have a perfect right to say that the width of a window comes to four
+ feet, even if we instantly and cheerfully change the subject to the larger mammals
+ and say that an elephant has four feet. The identity of the words does not matter,
+ because there is no doubt at all about the meanings, because nobody is likely to
+ think of an elephant as four feet long, or of a window as having tusks and a curly
+ trunk.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Two Meanings of "Barbarian."</b></p>
+ <p>It is essential to emphasize this consciousness of the thing under discussion in
+ connection with two or three words that are, as it were, the keywords of this war.
+ One of them is the word "barbarian." The Prussians apply it to the Russians, the
+ Russians apply it to the Prussians. Both, I think, really mean something that really
+ exists, name or no name. Both mean different things. And if we ask what these
+ different things are we shall understand why England and France prefer Russia, and
+ consider Prussia the really dangerous barbarian of the two.</p>
+ <p>To begin with, it goes so much deeper even than atrocities; of which, in the past,
+ at least, all the three empires of Central Europe have partaken pretty <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>{112}</span>equally; as they
+ partook of Poland. An English writer, seeking to avert the war by warnings against
+ Russian influence, said that the flogged backs of Polish women stood between us and
+ the Alliance. But not long before the flogging of women by an Austrian General led to
+ that officer being thrashed in the streets of London by Barclay and Perkins draymen.
+ And as for the third power, the Prussians, it seems clear that they have treated
+ Belgian women in a style compared with which flogging might be called an official
+ formality.</p>
+ <p>But, as I say, something much deeper than any such recrimination lies behind the
+ use of the word on either side. When the German Emperor complains of our allying
+ ourselves with a barbaric and half Oriental power, he is not (I assure you) shedding
+ tears over the grave of Kosciusko. And when I say (as I do most heartily) that the
+ German Emperor is a barbarian, I am not merely expressing any prejudices I may have
+ against the profanation of churches or of children. My countrymen and I mean a
+ certain and intelligible thing when we call the Prussians barbarians. It is quite
+ different from the thing attributed to Russians; and it could not possibly be
+ attributed to Russians. It is very important that the neutral world should understand
+ what this thing is.</p>
+ <p>If the German calls the Russian barbarous, he presumably means imperfectly
+ civilized. There is a certain path along which Western nations have proceeded in
+ recent times; and it is tenable that Russia has not proceeded so far as the others;
+ that she has less of the special modern system in science, commerce, machinery,
+ travel, or political constitution. The Russ plows with an old plow; he wears a wild
+ beard; he adores relics; his life is as rude and hard as that of a subject of Alfred
+ the Great. Therefore, he is, in the German sense, a barbarian. Poor fellows, like
+ Gorky and Dostoieffsky, have to form their own reflections on the scenery, without
+ the assistance of large quotations from Schiller on garden seats; or inscriptions
+ directing them to pause and thank the All-Father for the finest view in
+ Hesse-Pumpernickel. The Russians, having nothing but their faith, their fields, their
+ great courage, and their self-governing communes, are quite cut off from what is
+ called (in the fashionable street in Frankfort) the true, the beautiful, and the
+ good. There is a real sense in which one can call such backwardness barbaric, by
+ comparison with the Kaiserstrasse; and in that sense it is true of Russia.</p>
+ <p>Now we, the French and English, do not mean this when we call the Prussians
+ barbarians. If their cities soared higher than their flying ships, if their trains
+ traveled faster than their bullets, we should still call them barbarians. We should
+ know exactly what we meant by it; and we should know that it is true. For we do not
+ mean anything that is an imperfect civilization by accident. We mean something that
+ is the enemy of civilization by design. We mean something that is willfully at war
+ with the principles by which human society has been made possible hitherto. Of
+ course, it must be partly civilized even to destroy civilization. Such ruin could not
+ be wrought by the savages that are merely undeveloped or inert. You could not have
+ even Huns without horses or horses without horsemanship. You could not have even
+ Danish pirates without ships, or ships without seamanship.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The "Positive Barbarian."</b></p>
+ <p>This person, whom I may call the positive barbarian, must be rather more
+ superficially up to date than what I may call the negative barbarian. Alaric was an
+ officer in the Roman legions, but for all that he destroyed Rome. Nobody supposes
+ that Eskimos could have done it at all neatly. But (in our meaning) barbarism is not
+ a matter of methods but of aims. We say that these veneered vandals have the
+ perfectly serious aim of destroying certain ideas which, as they think, the world has
+ outgrown; without which, as we think, the world will die.</p>
+ <p>It is essential that this perilous peculiarity in the Pruss, or positive
+ barbarian, should be seized. He has what he fancies is a new idea, and he is going to
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>{113}</span>apply it to
+ everybody. As a fact, it is simply a false generalization, but he is really trying to
+ make it general. This does not apply to the negative barbarian; it does not apply to
+ the Russian or the Servian, even if they are barbarians. If a Russian peasant does
+ beat his wife, he does it because his fathers did it before him; he is likely to beat
+ less rather than more as the past fades away. He does not think, as the Prussian
+ would, that he has made a new discovery in physiology in finding that a woman is
+ weaker than a man. If a Servian does knife his rival without a word, he does it
+ because other Servians have done it. He may regard it even as piety&mdash;but
+ certainly not as progress. He does not think, as the Prussian does, that he founds a
+ new school of horology by starting before the word "Go." He does not think he is in
+ advance of the world in militarism&mdash;merely because he is behind it in
+ morals.</p>
+ <p>No; the danger of the Pruss is that he is prepared to fight for old errors as if
+ they were new truths. He has somehow heard of certain shallow simplifications, and
+ imagines that we have never heard of them. And, as I have said, his limited but very
+ sincere lunacy concentrates chiefly in a desire to destroy two ideas, the twin root
+ ideas, of national society. The first is the idea of record and promise; the second
+ is the idea of reciprocity.</p>
+ <p>It is plain that the promise, or extension of responsibility through time, is what
+ chiefly distinguishes us, I will not say from savages, but from brutes and reptiles.
+ This was noted by the shrewdness of the Old Testament when it summed up the dark,
+ irresponsible enormity of Leviathan in the words, "Will he make a pact with thee?"
+ The promise, like the wind, is unknown in nature and is the first mark of man.
+ Referring only to human civilization, it may be said with seriousness that in the
+ beginning was the Word. The vow is to the man what the song is to the bird or the
+ bark to the dog; his voice, whereby he is known. Just as a man who cannot keep an
+ appointment is not fit to fight a duel, so the man who cannot keep an appointment
+ with himself is not sane enough even for suicide. It is not easy to mention anything
+ on which the enormous apparatus of human life can be said to depend. But if it
+ depends on anything it is on this frail cord, flung from the forgotten hills of
+ yesterday to the invisible mountains of tomorrow. On that solitary string hangs
+ everything from Armageddon to an almanac, from a successful revolution to a return
+ ticket. On that solitary string the barbarian is hacking heavily with a sabre which
+ is fortunately blunt.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Prussia's Great Discovery.</b></p>
+ <p>Any one can see this well enough merely by reading the last negotiations between
+ London and Berlin. The Prussians had made a new discovery in international
+ politics&mdash;that it may often be convenient to make a promise, and yet curiously
+ inconvenient to keep it. They were charmed, in their simple way, with this scientific
+ discovery and desired to communicate it to the world. They therefore promised England
+ a promise on condition that she broke a promise, and on the implied condition that
+ the new promise might be broken as easily as the old one. To the profound
+ astonishment of Prussia, this reasonable offer was refused. I believe that the
+ astonishment of Prussia was quite sincere. That is what I mean when I say that the
+ barbarian is trying to cut away that cord of honesty and clear record on which hangs
+ all that men have made.</p>
+ <p>The friends of the German cause have complained that Asiatics and Africans upon
+ the very verge of savagery have been brought against them from India and Algiers. And
+ in ordinary circumstances I should sympathize with such a complaint made by a
+ European people. But the circumstances are not ordinary. Here again the quite unique
+ barbarism of Prussia goes deeper than what we call barbarities. About mere
+ barbarities, it is true, the Turco and the Sikh would have very good reply to the
+ superior Teuton. The general and just reason for not using non-European tribes
+ against <span class="pagenum"><a name="page114"
+ id="page114"></a>{114}</span>Europeans is that given by Chatham against the use of
+ the red Indian&mdash;that such allies might do very diabolical things. But the poor
+ Turco might not unreasonably ask, after a week-end in Belgium, what more diabolical
+ things he could do than the highly cultured Germans were doing themselves.</p>
+ <p>Nevertheless, as I say, the justification of any extra-European aid goes deeper
+ than by any such details. It rests upon the fact that even other civilizations, even
+ much lower civilizations, even remote and repulsive civilizations, depend as much as
+ our own on this primary principle on which the supermorality of Potsdam declares open
+ war. Even savages promise things, and respect those who keep their promises. Even
+ Orientals write things down; and though they write them from right to left, they know
+ the importance of a scrap of paper. Many merchants will tell you that the word of the
+ sinister and almost unhuman Chinaman is often as good as his bond; and it was amid
+ palm trees and Syrian pavilions that the great utterance opened the tabernacle to him
+ that sweareth to his hurt and changeth not. There is doubtless a dense labyrinth of
+ duplicity in the East; and perhaps more guile in the individual Asiatic than in the
+ individual German. But we are not talking of the violations of human morality in
+ various parts of the world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Fight Against Anarchy.</b></p>
+ <p>We are talking about a new inhuman morality which denies altogether the day of
+ obligation. The Prussians have been told by their literary men that everything
+ depends upon "mood," and by their politicians that all arrangements dissolve before
+ "necessity." That is the importance of the German Chancellor's phrase. He did not
+ allege some special excuse in the case of Belgium, which might make it seem an
+ exception that proved the rule. He distinctly argued, as on a principle applicable to
+ other cases, that victory was a necessity and honor was a scrap of paper. And it is
+ evident that the half-educated Prussian imagination really cannot get any further
+ than this. It cannot see that if everybody's action were entirely incalculable from
+ hour to hour, it would not only be the end of all promises but the end of all
+ projects.</p>
+ <p>In not being able to see that, the Berlin philosopher is really on a lower mental
+ level than the Arab who respects the salt, or the Brahmin who preserves the caste.
+ And in this quarrel we have a right to come with scimitars as well as sabres, with
+ bows as well as rifles, with assegai and tomahawk and boomerang, because there is in
+ all these at least a seed of civilization that these intellectual anarchists would
+ kill. And if they should find us in our last stand girt with such strange swords and
+ following unfamiliar ensigns and ask us for what we fight in so singular a company,
+ we shall know what to reply: "We fight for the trust and for the tryst; for fixed
+ memories and the possible meeting of men; for all that makes life anything but an
+ uncontrollable nightmare. We fight for the long arm of honor and remembrance; for all
+ that can lift a man above the quicksands of his needs and give him the mastery of
+ time."</p>
+ <h3><span class="pagenum"><a name="page115"
+ id="page115"></a>{115}</span><b>III.</b></h3>
+ <h3>Disposing of Germany's Civilizing Mission</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>In the last summary I suggested that barbarism, as we mean it, is not mere
+ ignorance or even mere cruelty. It has a more precise sense, and means militant
+ hostility to certain necessary human ideas. I took the case of the vow or the
+ contract which Prussian intellectualism would destroy. I urged that the Prussian is a
+ spiritual barbarian, because he is not bound by his own past, any more than a man in
+ a dream. He avows that when he promised to respect a frontier on Monday he did not
+ foresee what he calls "the necessity" of not respecting it on Tuesday. In short, he
+ is like a child who at the end of all reasonable explanations and reminders of
+ admitted arrangements has no answer except "But I want to."</p>
+ <p>There is another idea in human arrangements so fundamental as to be forgotten, but
+ now for the first time denied. It may be called the idea of reciprocity; or, in
+ better English, of give and take. The Prussian appears to be quite intellectually
+ incapable of this thought. He cannot, I think, conceive the idea that is the
+ foundation of all comedy&mdash;that in the eyes of the other man he is only the other
+ man. And if we carry this clue through the institutions of Prussianized Germany we
+ shall find how curiously his mind has been limited in the matter. The German differs
+ from other patriots in the inability to understand patriotism. Other European peoples
+ pity the Poles or the Welsh for their violated borders, but Germans only pity
+ themselves. They might take forcible possession of the Severn or the Danube, of the
+ Thames or the Tiber, of the Garry or the Garonne&mdash;and they would still be
+ singing sadly about how fast and true stands the watch on the Rhine and what a shame
+ it would be if any one took their own little river away from them. That is what I
+ mean by not being reciprocal; and you will find it in all that they do, as in all
+ that is done by savages.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"Laughs When He Hurts You."</b></p>
+ <p>Here again it is very necessary to avoid confusing this soul of the savage with
+ mere savagery in the sense of brutality or butchery, in which the Greeks, the French,
+ and all the most civilized nations have indulged in hours of abnormal panic or
+ revenge. Accusations of cruelty are generally mutual. But it is the point about the
+ Prussian that with him nothing is mutual. The definition of the true savage does not
+ concern itself even with how much more he hurts strangers or captives than do the
+ other tribes of men. The definition of the true savage is that he laughs when he
+ hurts you and howls when you hurt him. This extraordinary inequality in the mind is
+ in every act and word that comes from Berlin.</p>
+ <p>For instance, no man of the world believes all he sees in the newspapers, and no
+ journalist believes a quarter of it. We should therefore be quite ready in the
+ ordinary way to take a great deal off the tales of German atrocities; to doubt this
+ story or deny that. But there is one thing that we cannot doubt or deny&mdash;the
+ seal and authority of the Emperor. In the imperial proclamation the fact that certain
+ "frightful" things have been done is admitted and justified on the ground of their
+ frightfulness. It was a military necessity to terrify the peaceful populations with
+ something that was not civilized, something that was hardly human.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"Howls When You Hurt Him."</b></p>
+ <p>Very well. That is an intelligible policy; and in that sense an intelligible
+ argument. An army endangered by foreigners may do the most frightful things. But then
+ we turn the next page of the Kaiser's public diary, and we find him writing to the
+ President of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page116"
+ id="page116"></a>{116}</span>United States to complain that the English are using
+ dumdum bullets and violating various regulations of The Hague Conference. I pass for
+ the present the question of whether there is a word of truth in these charges. I am
+ content to gaze rapturously at the blinking eyes of the true, or positive, barbarian.
+ I suppose he would be quite puzzled if we said that violating The Hague Conference
+ was "a military necessity" to us; or that the rules of the conference were only a
+ scrap of paper. He would be quite pained if we said that dumdum bullets "by their
+ very frightfulness" would be very useful to keep conquered Germans in order. Do what
+ he will, he cannot get outside the idea that he, because he is he and not you, is
+ free to break the law and also to appeal to the law. It is said that the Prussian
+ officers play at a game called Kriegspiel, or the war game. But in truth they could
+ not play at any game, for the essence of every game is that the rules are the same on
+ both sides.</p>
+ <p>But, taking every German institution in turn, the case is the same; and it is not
+ a case of mere bloodshed or military bravado. The duel, for example, can legitimately
+ be called a barbaric thing, but the word is here used in another sense. There are
+ duels in Germany; but so there are in France, Italy, Belgium, Spain; indeed, there
+ are duels wherever there are dentists, newspapers, Turkish baths, time tables, and
+ all the curses of civilization&mdash;except in England and a corner of America. You
+ may happen to regard the duel as a historic relic of the more barbaric States on
+ which these modern States were built. It might equally well be maintained that the
+ duel is everywhere the sign of high civilization, being the sign of its more delicate
+ sense of honor, its more vulnerable vanity, or its greater dread of social disrepute.
+ But whichever of the two views you take, you must concede that the essence of the
+ duel is an armed equality. I should not, therefore, apply the word barbaric, as I am
+ using it, to the duels of German officers, or even the broadsword combats that are
+ conventional among the German students. I do not see why a young Prussian should not
+ have scars all over his face if he likes them; nay, they are often the redeeming
+ points of interest on an otherwise somewhat unenlightening countenance. The duel may
+ be defended; the sham duel may be defended.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The One-Sided Prussian Duel.</b></p>
+ <p>What cannot be defended is something really peculiar to Prussia, of which we hear
+ numberless stories, some of them certainly true. It might be called the one-sided
+ duel. I mean the idea that there is some sort of dignity in drawing the sword upon a
+ man who has not got a sword&mdash;a waiter, or a shop assistant, or even a schoolboy.
+ One of the officers of the Kaiser in the affair at Zabern was found industriously
+ hacking at a cripple. In all these matters I would avoid sentiment. We must not lose
+ our tempers at the mere cruelty of the thing, but pursue the strict psychological
+ distinction. Others besides German soldiers have slain the defenseless, for loot or
+ lust or private malice, like any other murderer. The point is that nowhere else but
+ in Prussian Germany is any theory of honor mixed up with such things, any more than
+ with poisoning or picking pockets. No French, English, Italian, or American gentleman
+ would think he had in some way cleared his own character by sticking his sabre
+ through some ridiculous greengrocer who had nothing in his hand but a cucumber. It
+ would seem as if the word which is translated from the German as "honor" must really
+ mean something quite different in German. It seems to mean something more like what
+ we should call "prestige."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Absence of the Reciprocal Idea.</b></p>
+ <p>The fundamental fact, however, is the absence of the reciprocal idea. The Prussian
+ is not sufficiently civilized for the duel. Even when he crosses swords with us his
+ thoughts are not as our thoughts; when we both glorify war we are glorifying
+ different things. Our medals are wrought like his, but they do not mean the same
+ thing; our regiments are cheered as his are, but the thought in the heart is not the
+ same; the Iron <span class="pagenum"><a name="page117"
+ id="page117"></a>{117}</span>Cross is on the bosom of his King, but it is not the
+ sign of our God. For we, alas! follow our God with many relapses and
+ self-contradictions, but he follows his very consistently. Through all the things
+ that we have examined, the view of national boundaries, the view of military methods,
+ the view of personal honor and self-defense, there runs in their case something of an
+ atrocious simplicity; something too simple for us to understand; the idea that glory
+ consists in holding the steel, and not in facing it.</p>
+ <p>If further examples were necessary it would be easy to give hundreds of them. Let
+ us leave, for the moment, the relations between man and man in the thing called the
+ duel. Let us take the relation between man and woman, in that immortal duel which we
+ call a marriage. Here again we shall find that other Christian civilizations aim at
+ some kind of equality, even if the balance be irrational or dangerous. Thus, the two
+ extremes of the treatment of women might be represented by what are called the
+ respectable classes in America and in France. In America they choose the risk of
+ comradeship, in France the compensation of courtesy. In America it is practically
+ possible for any young gentleman to take any young lady for what he calls (I deeply
+ regret to say) a joy ride; but at least the man goes with the woman as much as the
+ woman with the man. In France the young woman is protected like a nun while she is
+ unmarried; but when she is a mother she is really a holy woman; and when she is a
+ grandmother she is a holy terror.</p>
+ <p>By both extremes the woman gets something back out of life. There is only one
+ place where she gets little or nothing back, and that is the north of Germany. France
+ and America aim alike at equality; America by similarity, France by dissimilarity.
+ But North Germany does definitely aim at inequality. The woman stands up with no more
+ irritation than a butler; the man sits down with no more embarrassment than a guest.
+ This is the cool affirmation of inferiority, as in the case of the sabre and the
+ tradesmen. "Thou goest with women; forget not thy whip," said Nietzsche. It will be
+ observed that he does not say "poker," which might come more naturally to the mind of
+ a more common or Christian wife-beater. But, then, a poker is a part of domesticity,
+ and might be used by the wife as well as the husband. In fact, it often is. The sword
+ and the whip are the weapons of a privileged caste.</p>
+ <p>Pass from the closest of all differences, that between husband and wife, to the
+ most distant of all differences, that of the remote and unrelated races who have
+ seldom seen each other's faces, and never been tinged with each other's blood. Here
+ we still find the same unvarying Prussian principle. Any European might feel a
+ genuine fear of the Yellow Peril, and many Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Russians have
+ felt and expressed it. Many might say, and have said, that the heathen Chinee is very
+ heathen indeed; that if he ever advances against us he will trample and torture and
+ utterly destroy, in a way that Eastern people do, but Western people do not. Nor do I
+ doubt the German Emperor's sincerity when he sought to point out to us how abnormal
+ and abominable such a nightmare campaign would be, supposing that it could come.</p>
+ <p>But now comes the comic irony, which never fails to follow on the attempt of the
+ Prussian to be philosophic. For the Kaiser, after explaining to his troops how
+ important it was to avoid Eastern barbarism, instantly commanded them to become
+ Eastern barbarians. He told them, in so many words, to be Huns, and leave nothing
+ living or standing behind them. In fact, he frankly offered a new army corps of
+ aboriginal Tartars to the Far East, within such time as it may take a bewildered
+ Hanoverian to turn into a Tartar. Any one who has the painful habit of personal
+ thought will perceive here at once the non-reciprocal principle again. Boiled down to
+ its bones of logic, it means simply this: "I am a German and you are a Chinaman.
+ Therefore, I <span class="pagenum"><a name="page118"
+ id="page118"></a>{118}</span>being a German, have a right to be a Chinaman. But you
+ have no right to be a Chinaman, because you are only a Chinaman." This is probably
+ the highest point to which the German culture has risen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"The Principle of Being Unprincipled."</b></p>
+ <p>The principle here neglected, which may be called mutuality by those who
+ misunderstand and dislike the word equality, does not offer so clear a distinction
+ between the Prussian and the other peoples as did the first Prussian principle of an
+ infinite and destructive opportunism; or, in other words, the principle of being
+ unprincipled. Nor upon this second can one take up so obvious a position touching the
+ other civilizations or semi-civilizations of the world. Some idea of oath and bond
+ there is in the rudest tribes, in the darkest continents. But it might be maintained,
+ of the more delicate and imaginative element of reciprocity, that a cannibal in
+ Borneo understands it almost as little as a professor in Berlin. A narrow and
+ one-sided seriousness is the fault of barbarians all over the world. This may have
+ been the meaning, for aught I know, of the one eye of the Cyclops; that the barbarian
+ cannot see around things or look at them from two points of view, and thus becomes a
+ blind beast and an eater of men. Certainly there can be no better summary of the
+ savage than this, which, as we have seen, unfits him for the duel. He is the man who
+ cannot love&mdash;no, nor even hate&mdash;his neighbor as himself.</p>
+ <p>But this quality in Prussia does have one effect which has reference to the same
+ question of the lower civilizations. It disposes once and for all at least of the
+ civilizing mission of Germany. Evidently the Germans are the last people in the world
+ to be trusted with the task. They are as short-sighted morally as physically. What is
+ their sophism of "necessity" but an inability to imagine tomorrow morning? What is
+ their non-reciprocity but an inability to imagine, not a god or devil, but merely
+ another man? Are these to judge mankind? Men of two tribes in Africa not only know
+ that they are all men but can understand that they are all black men. In this they
+ are quite seriously in advance of the intellectual Prussian, who cannot be got to see
+ that we are all white men. The ordinary eye is unable to perceive in the Northeast
+ Teuton anything that marks him out especially from the more colorless classes of the
+ rest of Aryan mankind. He is simply a white man, with a tendency to the gray or the
+ drab. Yet he will explain in serious official documents that the difference between
+ him and us is a difference between "the master race and the inferior race."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>How to Know "The Master Race."</b></p>
+ <p>The collapse of German philosophy always occurs at the beginning rather than the
+ end of an argument, and the difficulty here is that there is no way of testing which
+ is a master race except by asking which is your own race. If you cannot find out, (as
+ is usually the case,) you fall back on the absurd occupation of writing history about
+ prehistoric times. But I suggest quite seriously that if the Germans can give their
+ philosophy to the Hottentots there is no reason why they should not give their sense
+ of superiority to the Hottentots. If they can see such fine shades between the Goth
+ and the Gaul, there is no reason why similar shades should not lift the savage above
+ other savages; why any Ojibway should not discover that he is one tint redder than
+ the Dakotas, or any nigger in the Kameruns say he is not so black as he is painted.
+ For this principle of a quite unproved racial supremacy is the last and worst of the
+ refusals of reciprocity. The Prussian calls all men to admire the beauty of his large
+ blue eyes. If they do, it is because they have inferior eyes; if they don't, it is
+ because they have no eyes.</p>
+ <p>Wherever the most miserable remnant of our race, astray and dried up in deserts or
+ buried forever under the fall of bad civilization, has some feeble memory that men
+ are men, that bargains are bargains, that there are two sides to a question, or even
+ that it takes two to make a quarrel&mdash;that remnant has the <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>{119}</span>right to assist the
+ New Culture, to the knife and club and the splintered stone. For the Prussian begins
+ all his culture by that act which is the destruction of all creative thought and
+ constructive action. He breaks that mirror in the mind in which a man can see the
+ face of his friend or foe.</p>
+ <h3>IV.</h3>
+ <h3>Russia Less Despotic Than Prussia</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The German Emperor has reproached this country (England) with allying itself with
+ "barbaric and semi-Oriental power." We have already considered in what sense we use
+ the word barbaric; it is in the sense of one who is hostile to civilization, not one
+ who is insufficient in it. But when we pass from the idea of the barbaric to the idea
+ of the Oriental, the case is even more curious. There is nothing particularly Tartar
+ in Russian affairs, except the fact that Russia expelled the Tartars. The Eastern
+ invader occupied and crushed the country for many years; but that is equally true of
+ Greece, of Spain, and even of Austria. If Russia has suffered from the East, she has
+ suffered in order to resist it; and it is rather hard that the very miracle of her
+ escape should make a mystery about her origin. Jonah may or may not have been three
+ days inside a fish; but that does not make him a merman. And in all the other cases
+ of European nations who escaped the monstrous captivity, we do admit the purity and
+ continuity of the European type. We consider the old Eastern rule as a wound, but not
+ as a stain. Copper-colored men out of Africa overruled for centuries the religion and
+ patriotism of Spaniards. Yet I have never heard that "Don Quixote" was an African
+ fable on the lines of "Uncle Remus." I have never heard that the heavy black in the
+ pictures of Velasquez was due to a negro ancestry. In the case of Spain, which is
+ close to us, we can recognize the resurrection of a Christian and cultured nation
+ after its age of bondage. But Russia is rather remote; and those to whom nations are
+ but names in newspapers can really fancy, like Mr. Baring's friend, that all Russian
+ churches are "mosques." Yet the land of Turgenev is not a wilderness of fakirs; and
+ even the fanatical Russian is as proud of being different from the Mongol as the
+ fanatical Spaniard was proud of being different from the Moor.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"Scratch a Russian."</b></p>
+ <p>The town of Reading, as it exists, offers few opportunities for piracy on the high
+ seas; yet it was the camp of the pirates in Alfred's days. I should think it hard to
+ call the people of Berkshire half Danish merely because they drove out the Danes. In
+ short, some temporary submergence under the savage flood was the fate of many of the
+ most civilized States of Christendom, and it is quite ridiculous to argue that
+ Russia, which wrestled hardest, must have recovered least. Everywhere, doubtless, the
+ East spread a sort of enamel over the conquered countries; but everywhere the enamel
+ cracked. Actual history, in fact, is exactly opposite to the cheap proverb invented
+ against the Muscovite. It is not true to say, "Scratch a Russian and you find a
+ Tartar." In the darkest hour of the barbaric dominion it was truer to say, "Scratch a
+ Tartar and you find a Russian." It was the civilization that survived under all the
+ barbarism. This vital romance of Russia, this revolution against Asia, can be proved
+ in pure fact; not only from the almost superhuman activity of Russia during the
+ struggle, but also (which is much rarer as human history goes) by her quite
+ consistent conduct since. She is the only great nation which has really expelled the
+ Mongol from her country and continued to protest against presence of the Mongol in
+ her continent. Knowing what he had been in Russia, she knew what <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>{120}</span>he would be in Europe.
+ In this she pursued a logical line of thought, which was, if anything, too
+ unsympathetic with the energies and religions of the East. Every other country, one
+ may say, has been an ally of the Turk&mdash;that is, of the Mongol and the Moslem.
+ The French played them as pieces against Austria; the English warmly supported them
+ under the Palmerston r&eacute;gime; even the young Italians sent troops to the
+ Crimea; and of Russia and her Austrian vassal it is nowadays needless to speak. For
+ good or evil, it is the fact of history that Russia is the only power in Europe that
+ has never supported the Crescent against the Cross.</p>
+ <p>That doubtless will appear an unimportant matter, but it may become important
+ under certain peculiar conditions. Suppose, for the sake of argument, that there were
+ a powerful Prince in Europe who had gone ostentatiously out of his way to pay
+ reverence to the remains of the Tartar, Mongol, and Moslem left as an outpost in
+ Europe. Suppose there were a Christian Emperor who could not even go to the tomb of
+ the crucified without pausing to congratulate the last and living crucifier. If there
+ were an Emperor who gave guns and guides and maps and drill instructors to defend the
+ remains of the Mongol in Christendom, what would we say to him? I think at least we
+ might ask him what he meant by his impudence when he talked about supporting a
+ semi-Oriental power. That we support a semi-Oriental power we deny. That he has
+ supported an entirely Oriental power cannot be denied, no, not even by the man who
+ did it.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Whom Has Prussia Emancipated?</b></p>
+ <p>But here is to be noted the essential difference between Russia and Prussia;
+ especially by those who use the ordinary liberal arguments against the latter Russia
+ has a policy, which she pursues, if you will, through evil and good; but at least so
+ as to produce good as well as evil. Let it be granted that the policy has made her
+ oppressive to the Finns, the Poles&mdash;though the Russian Poles feel far less
+ oppressed than do the Prussian Poles. But it is a mere historic fact, that if Russia
+ has been a despot to some small nations, she has been a deliverer to others. She did,
+ so far as in her lay, emancipate the Servians or the Montenegrins. But whom did
+ Prussia ever emancipate&mdash;even by accident? It is, indeed, somewhat extraordinary
+ that in the perpetual permutations of international politics the Hohenzollerns have
+ never gone astray into the path of enlightenment. They have been in alliance with
+ almost everybody off and on; with France, with England, with Austria, with Russia.
+ Can any one candidly say that they have left on any one of these people the faintest
+ impress of progress or liberation? Prussia was the enemy of the French monarchy, but
+ a worse enemy of the French Revolution. Prussia had been an enemy of the Czar, but
+ she was a worse enemy of the Duma. Prussia totally disregarded Austrian rights; but
+ she is today quite ready to inflict Austrian wrongs. This is the strong particular
+ difference between the one empire and the other. Russia is pursuing certain
+ intelligible and sincere ends, which to her at least are ideals, and for which,
+ therefore, she will make sacrifices and will protect the weak. But the North German
+ soldier is a sort of abstract tyrant; everywhere and always on the side of
+ materialistic tyranny. This Teuton in uniform has been found in strange places;
+ shooting farmers before Saratoga and flogging soldiers in Surrey, hanging niggers in
+ Africa and raping girls in Wicklow, but never, by some mysterious fatality, lending a
+ hand to the freeing of a single city or the independence of one solitary flag.
+ Wherever scorn and prosperous oppression are, there is the Prussian; unconsciously
+ consistent, instinctively restrictive, innocently evil; "following darkness like a
+ dream."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Disinterested Despotism.</b></p>
+ <p>Suppose we heard of a person (gifted with some longevity) who had helped Alva to
+ persecute Dutch Protestants, then helped Cromwell to persecute Irish Catholics, and
+ then helped Claverhouse to persecute Scotch Puritans&mdash;we should find it rather
+ easier to call him a persecutor than to call him a Protestant or a <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page121" id="page121"></a>{121}</span>Catholic. Curiously
+ enough, this is actually the position in which the Prussian stands in Europe. No
+ arguments can alter the fact that in three converging and conclusive cases he has
+ been on the side of three distinct rulers of different religions, who had nothing
+ whatever in common except that they were ruling oppressively. In these three
+ Governments, taken separately, one can see something excusable, or at least human.
+ When the Kaiser encouraged the Russian rulers to crush the revolution, the Russian
+ rulers undoubtedly believed they were wrestling with an inferno of atheism and
+ anarchy. A Socialist of the ordinary English kind cried out upon me when I spoke of
+ Stolypin and said he was chiefly known by the halter called "Stolypin's Necktie." As
+ a fact, there were many other things interesting about Stolypin besides his
+ necktie&mdash;his policy of peasant proprietorship, his extraordinary personal
+ courage, and certainly none more interesting than that movement in his death agony,
+ when he made the sign of the cross toward the Czar, as the crown and captain of his
+ Christianity. But the Kaiser does not regard the Czar as the captain of Christianity.
+ Far from it. What he supported in Stolypin was the necktie, and nothing but the
+ necktie; the gallows, and not the cross. The Russian ruler did believe that the
+ Orthodox Church was orthodox. The Austrian Archduke did really desire to make the
+ Catholic Church catholic. He did really believe that he was being pro-Catholic in
+ being pro-Austrian. But the Kaiser cannot be pro-Catholic, and, therefore, cannot
+ have been really pro-Austrian; he was simply and solely anti-Servian; nay, even in
+ the cruel and sterile strength of Turkey, any one with imagination can see something
+ of the tragedy, and, therefore, of the tenderness of true belief. The worst that can
+ be said of the Moslems is, as the poet put it, they offered to man the choice of the
+ Koran or the sword. The best that can be said for the German is that he does not care
+ about the Koran, but is satisfied if he can have the sword. And for me, I confess,
+ even the sins of these three other striving empires take on, in comparison, something
+ that is sorrowful and dignified; and I feel they do not deserve that this little
+ Lutheran lounger should patronize all that is evil in them, while ignoring all that
+ is good. He is not Catholic; he is not Orthodox; he is not Mohammedan. He is merely
+ an old gentleman who wishes to share the crime, though he cannot share the creed. He
+ desires to be a persecutor by the pang without the palm. So strongly do all the
+ instincts of the Prussian drive against liberty that he would rather oppress other
+ peoples' subjects than think of anybody going without the benefits of oppression. He
+ is a sort of disinterested despot. He is as disinterested as the devil, who is ready
+ to do any one's dirty work.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Paradox of Prussia.</b></p>
+ <p>This would seem obviously fantastic were it not supported by solid facts which
+ cannot be explained otherwise. Indeed it would be inconceivable if we were thinking
+ of a whole people, consisting of free and varied individuals. But in Prussia the
+ governing class is really a governing class, and a very few people are needed to
+ think along these lines to make all the other people act along them. And the paradox
+ of Prussia is this: That while its princes and nobles have no other aim on this earth
+ but to destroy democracy wherever it shows itself, they have contrived to get
+ themselves trusted, not as wardens of the past, but as forerunners of the future.
+ Even they cannot believe that their theory is popular, but they do believe that it is
+ progressive. Here again we find the spiritual chasm between the two monarchies in
+ question. The Russian institutions are, in many cases, really left in the rear of the
+ Russian people, and many of the Russian people know it. But the Prussian institutions
+ are supposed to be in advance of the Prussian people, and most of the Prussian people
+ believe it. It is thus much easier for the war lords to go everywhere and impose a
+ hopeless slavery upon every one, for they have al<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page122" id="page122"></a>{122}</span>ready imposed a sort of hopeful slavery
+ on their own simple race.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Factory of Thumbscrews.</b></p>
+ <p>And when men shall speak to us of the hoary iniquities of Russia and of how
+ antiquated is the Russian system we shall answer, "Yes; that is the superiority of
+ Russia." Their institutions are part of their history, whether as relics or fossils.
+ Their abuses have really been uses; that is to say, they have been used up. If they
+ have old engines of terror or torment, they may fall to pieces from mere rust, like
+ an old coat of armor. But in the case of the Prussian tyranny, if it be tyranny at
+ all, it is the whole point of its claim that it is not antiquated, but just going to
+ begin, like the showman. Prussia has a whole thriving factory of thumbscrews, a whole
+ humming workshop of wheels and racks, of the newest and neatest pattern, with which
+ to win Europe back to reaction * * * infandum renovare dolorem. And if we wish to
+ test the truth of this, it can be done by the same method which showed us that
+ Russia, if her race or religion could sometimes make her an invader and an oppressor,
+ could also be made an emancipator and a knight errant. In the same way, if the
+ Russian institutions are old-fashioned, they honestly exhibit the good as well as the
+ bad that can be found in old-fashioned things. In their police system they have an
+ inequality which is against our ideas of law. But in their commune system they have
+ an equality that is older than law itself. Even when they flogged each other like
+ barbarians, they called each other by their Christian names like children. At their
+ worst, they retained all the best of a rude society. At their best, they are simply
+ good, like good children or good nuns. But in Prussia, all that is best in the
+ civilized machinery is put at the service of all that is worst in the barbaric mind.
+ Here again the Prussian has no accidental merits, none of those lucky survivals, none
+ of those late repentances, which make the patchwork glory of Russia. Here all is
+ sharpened to a point and pointed to a purpose; and that purpose, if words and acts
+ have any meaning at all, is the destruction of liberty throughout the world.</p>
+ <h3>V.</h3>
+ <h3>The "Bond of Teutonism"</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>In considering the Prussian point of view we have been considering what seems to
+ be mainly a mental limitation&mdash;a kind of knot in the brain. Toward the problem
+ of Slav population, of English colonization, of French armies, and of reinforcements
+ it shows the same strange philosophic sulks. So far as I can follow it, it seems to
+ amount to saying, "It is very wrong that you should be superior to me, because I am
+ superior to you." The spokesman of this system seems to have a curious capacity for
+ concentrating this entanglement or contradiction sometimes into a single paragraph,
+ or even a single sentence. I have already referred to the German Emperor's celebrated
+ suggestion that in order to avert the peril of Hunnishness we should all become Huns.
+ A much stronger instance is his more recent order to his troops touching the war in
+ Northern France. As most people know, his words ran: "It is my royal and imperial
+ command that you concentrate your energies, for the immediate present, upon one
+ single purpose, and that is that you address all your skill and all the valor of my
+ soldiers to exterminate first the treacherous English and to walk over Gen. French's
+ contemptible little army." The rudeness of the remark an Englishman can afford to
+ pass over. What I am interested in is the mentality, the train of thought that can
+ manage to entangle itself even in so brief a space. If French's little army is
+ contemptible it would seem clear that <span class="pagenum"><a name="page123"
+ id="page123"></a>{123}</span>all the skill and valor of the German Army had better
+ not be concentrated on it, but on the larger and less contemptible allies. If all the
+ skill and valor of the German Army are concentrated on it it is not being treated as
+ contemptible. But the Prussian rhetorician had two incompatible sentiments in his
+ mind, and he insisted on saying them both at once. He wanted to think of an English
+ Army as a small thing; but he also wanted to think of an English defeat as a big
+ thing. He wanted to exult, at the same moment, in the utter weakness of the British
+ Nation in their attack and the supreme skill and valor of the Germans in repelling
+ such an attack. Somehow it must be made a common and obvious collapse for England and
+ yet a daring and unexpected triumph for Germany. In trying to express these
+ contradictory conceptions simultaneously he got rather mixed. Therefore he bade
+ Germania fill all her vales and mountains with the dying agonies of this almost
+ invisible earwig, and let the impure blood of this cockroach redden the Rhine down to
+ the sea.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Prof. Harnack's Reproach</b>.</p>
+ <p>But it would be unfair to base the criticism on the utterance of any accidental
+ and hereditary Prince; and it is quite equally clear in the case of the philosophers
+ who have been held up to us, even in England, as the very prophets of progress. And
+ in nothing is it shown more sharply than in the curious, confused talk about race,
+ and especially about the Teutonic race. Prof. Harnack and similar people are
+ reproaching us, I understand, for having broken "the bond of Teutonism"&mdash;a bond
+ which the Prussians have strictly observed, both in breach and observance. We note it
+ in the open annexation of lands wholly inhabited by negroes, such as Denmark. We note
+ it equally in their instant and joyful recognition of the flaxen hair and light blue
+ eyes of the Turks. But it is still the abstract principle of Prof. Harnack which
+ interests me most, and in following it I have the same complexity of inquiry, but the
+ same simplicity of result. Comparing the professor's concern about "Teutonism" with
+ his unconcern about Belgium, I can only reach the following result: "A man need not
+ keep a promise he has made. But a man must keep a promise he has not made." There
+ certainly was a treaty binding Britain to Belgium, if it was only a scrap of paper.
+ If there was any treaty binding Britain with Teutonism it is, to say the least of it,
+ a lost scrap of paper&mdash;almost what one might call a scrap of waste paper. Here
+ again the pedants under consideration exhibit the illogical perversity that makes the
+ brain reel. There is obligation and there is no obligation; sometimes it appears that
+ Germany and England must keep faith with each other; sometimes that Germany need not
+ keep faith with anybody and anything; sometimes that we, alone among European
+ peoples, are almost entitled to be Germans; sometimes that besides us Russians and
+ Frenchmen almost rise to a Germanic loveliness of character. But through all there
+ is, hazy but not hypocritical, this sense of some common Teutonism.</p>
+ <p>Prof. Haeckel, another of the witnesses raised up against us, attained to some
+ celebrity at one time through proving the remarkable resemblance between two
+ different things by printing duplicate pictures of the same thing. Prof. Haeckel's
+ contribution to biology, in this case, was exactly like Prof. Harnack's contribution
+ to ethnology. Prof. Harnack knows what a German is like. When he wants to imagine
+ what an Englishman is like he simply photographs the same German over again. In both
+ cases there is probably sincerity, as well as simplicity. Haeckel was so certain that
+ the species illustrated in embryo really are closely related and linked up that it
+ seemed to him a small thing to simplify it by mere repetition. Harnack is so certain
+ that the German and Englishman are almost alike that he really risks the
+ generalization that they are exactly alike. He photographs, so to speak, the same
+ fair and foolish face twice over, and calls it a remarkable resemblance between
+ cousins. Thus he can prove the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page124"
+ id="page124"></a>{124}</span>existence of Teutonism just about as conclusively as
+ Haeckel has proved the more tenable proposition of the non-existence of God.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germans and English.</b></p>
+ <p>Now, the German and the Englishman are not in the least alike&mdash;except in the
+ sense that neither of them are negroes. They are, in everything good and evil, more
+ unlike than any other two men we can take at random from the great European family.
+ They are opposite from the roots of their history&mdash;nay, of their geography. It
+ is an understatement to call Britain insular. Britain is not only an island, but an
+ island slashed by the sea till it nearly splits into three islands, and even the
+ midlands can almost smell the salt. Germany is a powerful, beautiful, and fertile
+ inland country, which can only find the sea by one or two twisted and narrow paths,
+ as people find a subterranean lake. Thus the British Navy is really national because
+ it is natural. It has cohered out of hundreds of accidental adventures of ships and
+ shipmen before Chaucer's time and after it. But the German Navy is an artificial
+ thing, as artificial as a constructed Alp would be in England. William II. has simply
+ copied the British Navy, as Frederick II. copied the French Army, and this Japanese
+ or antlike assiduity in imitation is one of the hundred qualities which the Germans
+ have and the English markedly have not. There are other German superiorities which
+ are very much superior. The one or two really jolly things that the Germans have got
+ are precisely the things which the English haven't got, notably a real habit of
+ popular music and of the ancient songs of the people; not merely spreading from the
+ towns or caught from the professionals. In this the Germans rather resemble the
+ Welsh, though heaven knows what becomes of Teutonism if they do. But the difference
+ between the Germans and the English goes deeper than all these signs of it. They
+ differ more than any other two Europeans in the normal posture of the mind.</p>
+ <p>Above all, they differ in what is the most English of all English
+ traits&mdash;that shame which the French may be right in calling "the bad shame," for
+ it is certainly mixed up with pride and suspicion, the upshot of which we call
+ shyness. Even an Englishman's rudeness is often rooted in his being embarrassed. But
+ a German's rudeness is rooted in his never being embarrassed. He eats and makes love
+ noisily. He never feels a speech or a song or a sermon or a large meal to be what the
+ English call "out of place" in particular circumstances. When Germans are patriotic
+ and religious they have no reactions against patriotism and religion, as have the
+ English and the French. Nay, the mistake of Germany in the modern disaster largely
+ arose from the facts that she thought England was simple, when England is very
+ subtle. She thought that because our politics have become largely financial they had
+ become wholly financial; that because our aristocrats had become pretty cynical they
+ had become entirely corrupt. They could not seize the subtlety by which a rather
+ used-up English gentleman might sell a coronet when he could not sell a fortress;
+ might lower the public standards and yet refuse to lower the flag. In short, the
+ Germans are quite sure that they understand us entirely because they do not
+ understand us at all. Possibly, if they began to understand us they might hate us
+ even more, but I would rather be hated for some small but real reason than pursued
+ with love on account of all kinds of qualities which I do not possess and which I do
+ not desire. And when the Germans get their first genuine glimpses of what modern
+ England is like they will discover that England has a very broken, belated, and
+ inadequate sense of having an obligation to Europe; but no sort of sense whatever of
+ having any obligation to Teutonism.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Slippery Strength of Stupidity.</b></p>
+ <p>This is the last and strongest of the Prussian qualities we have here considered.
+ There is in stupidity of this sort a strange, slippery strength, because it can be
+ not only outside rules, but outside reason. The man who really cannot see that he is
+ contradicting him<span class="pagenum"><a name="page125"
+ id="page125"></a>{125}</span>self has a great advantage in controversy, though the
+ advantage breaks down when he tries to reduce it to simple addition, to
+ chess&mdash;or to the game called war. It is the same about the stupidity of the
+ one-sided kinship. The drunkard who is quite certain that a total stranger is his
+ long-lost brother has a great advantage until it comes to matters of detail. "We must
+ have chaos within," said Nietzsche, "that we may give birth to a dancing star."</p>
+ <p>In these slight notes I have suggested the principal strong points of the Prussian
+ character&mdash;a failure in honor which almost amounts to a failure in memory; an
+ egomania that is honestly blind to the fact that the other party is an ego, and,
+ above all, an actual itch for tyranny and interference, the devil which everywhere
+ torments the idle and the proud. To these must be added a certain mental
+ shapelessness, which can expand or contract without reference to reason or
+ record&mdash;a potential infinity of excuses. If the English had been on the German
+ side the German professors would have noted what irresistible energies had evolved
+ the Teutons. As the English are on the other side, the German professors will say
+ that these Teutons were not sufficiently evolved; or they will say they were just
+ sufficiently evolved to show that they were not Teutons. Probably they will say both.
+ But the truth is that all that they call evolution should rather be called evasion.
+ They tell us they are opening windows of enlightenment and doors of progress. The
+ truth is that they are breaking up the whole house of the human intellect that they
+ may abscond in any direction. There is an ominous and almost monstrous parallel
+ between the position of their overrated philosophers and of their comparatively
+ underrated soldiers. For what their professors call roads of progress are really
+ routes of escape.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>South Africa's Boers and Britons</b></h2>
+ <h3>By H. Rider Haggard.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The heart of South Africa, Boer and Briton, is with England in this war. Here and
+ there you will find an individual who cherishes bitter and hostile memories, of which
+ there has been an example in Mr. Beyers letter the other day, so effectually answered
+ by Gen. Botha. But such instances, I believe, are so rare that really they are the
+ exceptions which seem to prove the rule. Of course, it goes without saying that every
+ person of English descent is heartily with the mother country, and I do not suppose
+ it would be an overestimate to add that quite 80 per cent, of the Dutch are of the
+ same way of thinking.</p>
+ <p>Still, there is a party among the South African Dutch that sees no necessity for
+ the invasion of German Southwest Africa. This party overlooks the fact that the
+ Germans have for long been preparing to invade them; also that if by any chance
+ Germany should conquer in this war South Africa would be one of the first countries
+ that they would seize.</p>
+ <p>In speaking of this I talk of what I understand, since for the last two and a half
+ years it has been my duty to travel around the British Empire upon the service of his
+ Majesty. In addition to South Africa, I have visited India, Australia, New Zealand,
+ Newfoundland, and Canada. I have recently traveled throughout South Africa as a
+ member of the Dominion's Royal Commission. It was my first visit there after the
+ lapse of a whole generation, and I can only say that everywhere I have found the most
+ intense loyalty and devotion to the old mother land. The empire is one and
+ indivisible; together it will stand or together it will fall.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id="page126"></a>{126}</span>South Africa
+ is united; it has forgotten its recent labor troubles. I answer "absolutely" all such
+ things are past history, blown away and destroyed by this great wind of war. South
+ Africa, down to its lowest Hottentot, has, I believe, but one object, to help England
+ to win in this vast battle of the nations. Why, even the natives, as you may have
+ noticed, are sending subscriptions from their scanty hoards and praying to be allowed
+ "to throw a few stones for the King." Did not Poutsma say as much the other day?</p>
+ <p>In the old days, of course, there were very strained relations between the English
+ and Boers, which had their roots in foolish and inconsistent acts carried out by the
+ Home Government, generally to forward party ends. I need not go into them because
+ they are too long.</p>
+ <p>Then came the Boer war, which, as you know, proved a much bigger enterprise than
+ the Home Government had anticipated. It cost Britain 20,000 lives and
+ &pound;300,000,000 of English money before the Boers were finally subdued. Only about
+ half a score of years have gone by since peace was declared. Within two or three
+ years of that peace the British Government made up its mind to a very bold step and
+ one which was viewed with grave doubts by many people&mdash;namely, to give full
+ self-government to the Transvaal and the Orange River Colonies.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Astonished at Results.</b></p>
+ <p>When I traveled through South Africa the other day this new Constitution had been
+ working for a few years, and I can only say that I was astonished at the results.
+ Here and there in the remoter districts, it is true, some racial feeling still
+ prevailed, but taken as a whole this seems absolutely to have died away. Briton and
+ Boer have come together in a manner for which I believe I am right in saying there is
+ no precedent in the history of the world, so shortly, at any rate, after a prolonged
+ and bitter struggle to the death. I might give many instances, but I will only take
+ one. At Pretoria I was asked to inspect a company of Boy Scouts, and there I found
+ English and Dutch lads serving side by side with the utmost brotherhood. Again I met
+ most of the men who had been leaders of the Boers in the war. One and all professed
+ the greatest loyalty to England. Moreover, I am certain that this was not lip
+ loyalty; it was from the heart. Especially was I impressed by that great man, Gen.
+ Botha, with whom I had several conversations. I am convinced that at this moment the
+ King has no truer or more faithful servant than Gen. Botha. Again and again did I
+ hear from prominent South Africans of Dutch or Huguenot extraction that never more
+ was there any chance of trouble between Boer and Briton.</p>
+ <p>I know it is alleged by some that this is because the Dutch feel that they have on
+ the whole made a good bargain, having won absolute constitutional liberty and the
+ fullest powers of self-government, plus the protection of the British fleet. There
+ may be something in this view, but I am sure that the feeling goes a great deal
+ deeper than self-interest. Mutual respect has arisen between those who ten years ago
+ were enemies fighting each other.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Appeal to People's Imagination.</b></p>
+ <p>Moreover, the Boer now knows a great deal more of the British Empire and what it
+ means than he did then. Lastly, the supreme generosity evinced by Britain in giving
+ their enemy of the day before every right and privilege that is owned by her other
+ oversea dominions with whom she has never had a quarrel appeals deeply to the
+ imagination of the Dutch people. Now, the world sees the results. Germany, which has
+ miscalculated so much in connection with this war and the part that the British
+ Empire would play in it, miscalculated nowhere more than it did in the case of South
+ Africa. The German war lords hoped that India and Egypt would rise, they trusted that
+ Canada and Australia would prove lukewarm, but they were certain that South Africa
+ would seize the opportunity to rebel. How could it be other<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page127" id="page127"></a>{127}</span>wise, they thought, seeing that but
+ yesterday she was at death grips with us. Then came the great surprise. Lo and
+ behold! instead of rebelling, South Africa promptly cabled to England saying that
+ every British soldier might be withdrawn from her shores, and, further, that the
+ burghers of the land would themselves undertake the conquest of the German
+ possessions of Southwest Africa for the Crown. They are doing so at this moment. I
+ believe that today there is no British soldier left at the Cape, and I know that now
+ a great force is moving on Southwest Africa furnished by Boer and Briton alike. Can
+ the history of the world tell us of any parallel case to this&mdash;that a country
+ conquered within a dozen years should not only need no garrison, but by its own free
+ will undertake war against the enemies of its late victor? Surely this is something
+ of which Britain may feel proud.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Deep Distrust of Germany.</b></p>
+ <p>Now, some of your readers may ask: "Why is it? How did this miracle, for it is
+ little less, happen?" My answer is that it has been caused first by a supreme and
+ glorious trust in the justice and generosity of England, which knows how to rule
+ colonies as no other nation has done in the history of the earth, and secondly by a
+ deep distrust of Germany. To my own knowledge, Germany has been intriguing in South
+ Africa for the last quarter of a century. I remember, I suppose it must be almost
+ twenty years ago, sending to the late Mr. Chamberlain, who was then Colonial
+ Secretary, information to this effect which reached me from undoubted sources in
+ South Africa. Again, not long ago, I was shown a document which was found among the
+ papers of the Zulu Prince Dinizulu, son of King Cetewayo, who died the other day. It
+ was concluded between himself and Germans, and under it the poor man had practically
+ sold his country nominally to a German firm, but doubtless to more powerful persons
+ behind. In short, there is no question that for many years Germany has had its eye
+ upon South Africa as a desirable field of settlement for its subjects under the
+ German and not the British flag. Now, the Boers are perfectly well acquainted with
+ this fact and have no wish to exchange the beneficent rule of Britain for that of
+ Potsdam, the King Log of George V. for the King Stork of Kaiser Wilhelm.</p>
+ <p>You ask me if I think that the Boers are likely to succeed in their attack on
+ Southwest Africa, where it must be remembered that the Germans have a very formidable
+ force; indeed, I have been told, I do not know with what accuracy, that they have
+ accumulated there the vast arsenal of war material that was obviously intended to be
+ used on some future occasion in the invasion of the Cape. I answer: "Certainly, they
+ will succeed, though not easily." Remember what stock these Boers come from. They are
+ descendants of the men who withstood and beat Alva in the sixteenth century.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Botha of Huguenot Descent.</b></p>
+ <p>I happen to be well acquainted with that period of history. I wrote a story called
+ "Lysbeth" concerning it, and to do this I found it necessary not only to visit
+ Holland on several occasions, but to read all the contemporary records. In the light
+ of the information which I thus obtained, I state positively that the world has no
+ record of a more glorious and heroic struggle than that made by the Dutch against all
+ the power of Spain. Well, the Boers are descended from these men and women (for both
+ fought). Also, they include a very large dash of some of the best blood of Europe,
+ namely, that of the Huguenots. For instance, Botha himself is of Huguenot descent. It
+ is impossible for a person like myself, who have that same blood in me, to talk with
+ him for five minutes without becoming aware of his origin. Long before he told me so
+ I knew that he was in part a Frenchman. Men so great are not easily conquered, as we
+ know to our cost. Why, it took quite 250,000 soldiers and three years of strenuous
+ guerrilla warfare to enable Britain to defeat 40,000 or 50,000 Dutch farmers.
+ Therefore I have personally not the least fear of the ultimate result of the campaign
+ against Southwest Africa.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>{128}</span>I went as a
+ lad as Secretary to the Governor of Natal. That was in 1875. Subsequently I
+ accompanied Sir Theophilus Shepstone, one of the greatest men that ever lived in
+ South Africa, on his famous mission to the Transvaal. I am now, I believe, the only
+ survivor of that mission, and certainly the only man who knows all the inner
+ political history of that event. Afterward I held office in the Transvaal, and was in
+ the country during all the disastrous period of the first Boer war. For instance, I
+ dined with Gen. Colley the night before he started on his ill-fated expedition. I
+ think there were thirteen of us present at that historical dinner. Within a few weeks
+ six or eight of these were dead, including Colley himself, killed in the fight of
+ Majuba, of which I heard the guns. Of those present at that dinner party there now
+ survive only Lady Colley, my wife, and myself.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Felt Like Rip Van Winkle.</b></p>
+ <p>After this I left Africa, and more than thirty years went by before I returned as
+ a commissioner in the service of the Crown. It was a very extraordinary experience;
+ indeed, I felt like a new Rip Van Winkle, for nearly all my old chiefs and colleagues
+ were dead, and another generation had arisen. I can only say that I was deeply
+ touched by the reception which I received throughout the country. It was with strange
+ feelings that almost on the very spot where I helped to read the proclamation of
+ annexation of the Transvaal, in 1877, and with my own hands hoisted the British flag
+ over the land, I listened to my health being proposed by the Dutch Chief Justice of
+ the Transvaal territory, once more a part of the British Empire. Such was my greeting
+ everywhere. Three and thirty years before I had left the shores of Africa, believing
+ that soon or late the British power was doomed to failure and probably to extinction
+ there. When I left them again, six months ago, it was with the glad knowledge that,
+ by the united wish of the inhabitants of South Africa, it was re-established, never
+ again to pass away. It is a wonderful thing for a man in his own lifetime to see a
+ country pass through so many vicissitudes, and in the end to appear in the face of
+ the world no longer as England's enemy, but as a constituent part of the great
+ British Empire, one of her best friends and supporters, glorying in her flag, which
+ now floats from Cape Agalhas to the Zambesi, and soon will float over those
+ contingent regions that have been seized by the mailed fist of Germany.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Capt. Mark Haggard's Death in Battle</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The [London] Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: In various papers throughout England has appeared a letter, or part of a
+ letter, written by Private C. Derry of the Second Battalion, Welsh Regiment. It
+ concerns the fall of my much-loved nephew, Capt. Mark Haggard, of the same regiment,
+ on Sept. 13 in the battle of the Aisne.</p>
+ <p>Since this letter has been published and, vivid, pathetic, and pride-inspiring as
+ it is, does not tell all the tale, I have been requested, on behalf of Mark's mother,
+ young widow, and other members of our family, to give the rest of it as it was
+ collected by them from the lips of Lieut. Somerset, who lay wounded by him when he
+ died. Therefore I send this supplementary account to you in the hope that the other
+ journals which have printed the first part of the story will copy it from your
+ columns.</p>
+ <p>It seems that after he had given the order to fix bayonets, as told by Private
+ Derry, my nephew charged the German Maxims at the head of his company, he and his
+ soldier servant outrunning the other men. Arrived at the Maxim in front of him, with
+ the rifle which he was using as Derry describes, he shot and killed <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>{129}</span>the three soldiers who
+ were serving it, and then was seen "fighting and laying out" the Germans with the
+ butt end of his empty gun, "laughing" as he did so, until he fell mortally wounded in
+ the body and was carried away by his servant.</p>
+ <br />
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/hauptmann.jpg"><img src='images/hauptmann_thumb.jpg' width='253'
+ height='400' alt='GERHART HAUPTMANN. See Page 175' title='GERHART HAUPTMANN' /></a>
+ <a href="images/fulda.jpg"><img src='images/fulda_thumb.jpg' width='252'
+ height='400' alt='LUDWIG FULDA. See Page 180' title='LUDWIG FULDA' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>GERHART HAUPTMANN. See <a href="#page175">Page 175</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>LUDWIG FULDA. See <a href="#page180">Page 180</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <p>His patient and heroic end is told by Private Derry, and I imagine that the
+ exhortation to "Stick it, Welsh!" which from time to time he uttered in his agony,
+ will not soon be forgotten in his regiment. Of that end we who mourn him can only say
+ in the simple words of Derry's letter, that he "died as he had lived&mdash;an officer
+ and a gentleman."</p>
+ <p>Perhaps it would not be inappropriate to add as a thought of consolation to those
+ throughout the land who day by day see their loved ones thus devoured by the waste of
+ war, that of a truth these do not vainly die. Not only are they crowned with fame,
+ but by the noble manner of their end they give the lie to Bernhardi and his school,
+ who tell us that we English are an effete and worn-out people, befogged with mean
+ ideals; lost in selfishness and the lust of wealth and comfort. Moreover, the history
+ of these deeds of theirs will surely be as a beacon to those destined to carry on the
+ traditions of our race in that new England which shall arise when the cause of
+ freedom for which we must fight and die has prevailed&mdash;to fall no more.</p>
+ <p>I am, Sir, your obedient servant,</p>
+ <p>H. RIDER HAGGARD.</p>
+ <p>Ditchingham, Norfolk, Oct. 9.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>An Anti-Christian War</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Robert Bridges.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of The [London] Times</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: Since the beginning of this war the meaning of it has in one respect
+ considerably changed, and I hope that our people will see that it is primarily a holy
+ war. It is manifestly a war declared between Christ and the devil.</p>
+ <p>The conduct of the German conscripts has demonstrated that they have been
+ instructed to adopt in full practice the theories of their political philosophers,
+ and that they have heartily consented to do this and freely commit every cruelty that
+ they think will terrorize the people whom they intend to crush. The details of their
+ actions are too beastly to mention.</p>
+ <p>Their philosophers, as I read them, teach openly that the law of love is silly and
+ useless, but that brutal force and cruelty are the useful and proper means of
+ attaining success in all things. Shortly, you are not to do to others as you wish
+ they should do to you, but you should do exactly what you wish they should not do to
+ you; that is, you should cut their throats and seize their property, and then you
+ will get on.</p>
+ <p>As for these enlightened philosophers, their doctrines are plainly an apostasy
+ from the Gospel&mdash;and this they do not scruple to avow; and their tenets are only
+ a recrudescence or reassertion of the barbarism which we hoped we had grown out of;
+ it is all merely damnable. But it seems to me that, judged only as utilitarian
+ policy, it is stupid; and that they blundered in neglecting the moral force (for that
+ is also a force) of the antagonism that they were bound to arouse in all gentle
+ minds, whether simple or cultured. It was stupid of them not to perceive that their
+ hellish principles would shock everything that is most beloved and living in modern
+ thought, both the "humanitarian" tendency of the time and the respect which has grown
+ up for the rights of minorities and nationalities. Now, not to reckon with such
+ things was stupid, unless they can win temporary justification by immediate
+ success.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>{130}</span>What success
+ is possible for those who thus openly outrage humanity remains to be seen; but they
+ cannot be allowed the advantage of any doubt as to what they are about. Those who
+ fight for them will fight for "the devil and all his works"; and those who fight
+ against them will be fighting in the holy cause of humanity and the law of love. If
+ the advocacy of their bad principles and their diabolical conduct do not set the
+ whole world against them, then the world is worse than I think. My belief is that
+ there are yet millions of their own countrymen who have not bowed the knee to Satan,
+ and who will be as much shocked as we are; and that this internal moral disruption
+ will much hamper them. This morning I have a legal notice sent me from a German
+ resident in England announcing that he has changed his name, for shame (I suppose) of
+ his Fatherland.</p>
+ <p>All their apology throughout has been a clumsy tissue of self-contradictory lies,
+ and their occasional hypocrisy has been hastily pretended and ill-conceived. The
+ particular contention against us&mdash;that we were betraying the cause of
+ civilization by supporting the barbarous Slav&mdash;does not come very convincingly
+ from them if their apostle is Nietzsche, while the Russian prophet is Tolstoy.</p>
+ <p>The infernal machine which has been scientifically preparing for the last
+ twenty-five years is now on its wild career like one of Mr. Wells's inventions, and
+ wherever it goes it will leave desolation behind it and put all material progress
+ back for at least half a century. There was never anything in the world worthier of
+ extermination, and it is the plain duty of all civilized nations to unite to drive it
+ back into its home and exterminate it there. I am, &amp;c.,</p>
+ <p>ROBERT BRIDGES.</p>
+ <p>Sept. 1.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>English Artists' Protest</b></h2>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Art lovers in Great Britain have drawn up a protest against the vandalism of
+ German soldiers. Copies of this protest have been sent to the Comte de Lalaing,
+ Belgian Minister in London; the American Ambassador, with a humble request that it
+ may be forwarded to the President of the United States; and Baron Kervyn de
+ Lettenhove, Art Adviser to the Belgian Government. Those who have signed include
+ well-known collectors, Trustees of the British Museum, the National Gallery, the
+ National Portrait Gallery, and the National Galleries of Scotland; the Director and
+ Principal Librarian of the British Museum; the Directors of the National Gallery,
+ the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the National Galleries of Scotland and Ireland;
+ the Keepers of the Wallace Collection and the National Gallery of British Art;
+ Keepers in the British Museum; the Joint Honorary Secretaries of the National Art
+ Collections Fund, and many critics and others prominent in the art world.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The whole civilized world has witnessed with horror the terrible effects of modern
+ warfare on helpless inhabitants of Belgium and France, and on ancient buildings and
+ other works of art which are the abiding monuments of the piety and culture of their
+ ancestors.</p>
+ <p>Some of the acts of the invading German army against buildings may be defensible
+ from the military standpoint; but it seems certain from present information that in
+ some signal instances, notably at Louvain and Rheims, this defense cannot hold good
+ against the mass of evidence to the contrary.</p>
+ <p>The signatories of this protest claim that they are in no sense a partisan body.
+ Their contention in this matter is that the splendid monuments of the arts of the
+ Middle Ages which have been destroyed or damaged are the inheritance of the whole
+ world, and that it is the duty of all civilized communities to endeavor to preserve
+ them for the benefit and instruction of posterity. While France and Belgium are
+ individually the poorer from such wanton destruction, the world at large is no less
+ impoverished.</p>
+ <p>On these grounds, therefore, we desire to express our strong indignation and
+ abhorrence at the gratuitous destruction <span class="pagenum"><a name="page131"
+ id="page131"></a>{131}</span>of ancient buildings that has marked the invasion of
+ Belgium and France by the German Army, and we wish to enter a protest in the
+ strongest terms against the continuance of so barbarous and reckless a policy. That
+ it is the result of a policy, and not of an accident, is shown by the similarity of
+ the fate of Louvain, Malines, Termonde, Senlis, and finally Rheims.</p>
+ <p>Many of us have had the opportunity of showing that our love and respect for art
+ are not bounded by our nationality, but we feel compelled to publish to the world our
+ horror and detestation of the barbarous acts committed by the army that represents a
+ country which has done so much to promote and advance the study of art and its
+ history.</p>
+ <p>The signatories are:</p>
+ DEVONSHIRE.<br />
+ CHOLMONDELEY.<br />
+ LANSDOWNE.<br />
+ FEVERSHAM.<br />
+ MABEL FEVERSHAM.<br />
+ LEICESTER.<br />
+ LONSDALE.<br />
+ NORMANTON.<br />
+ NORTHBROOK.<br />
+ PLYMOUTH.<br />
+ DILLON.<br />
+ ALINGTON.<br />
+ D'ABERNON.<br />
+ ISABEL SOMERSET.<br />
+ FREDERICK L. COOK.<br />
+ AUDLEY D. NEELD.<br />
+ HERBERT RAPHAEL.<br />
+ SIDNEY COLVIN.<br />
+ MARTIN CONWAY.<br />
+ CHARLES HOLROYD.<br />
+ FREDERIC G. KENYON.<br />
+ HUGH LANE.<br />
+ FRANCIS BEAUFORT PALMER.<br />
+ C. HERCULES READ.<br />
+ CECIL HARCOURT SMITH.<br />
+ ISIDORE SPIELMANN.<br />
+ HERBERT B. TREE.<br />
+ WHITWORTH WALLIS.<br />
+ CHARLES AITKEN.<br />
+ OTTO BEIT.<br />
+ MAURICE W. BROCKWELL.<br />
+ A.H. BUTTERY.<br />
+ C.S. CARSTAIRS.<br />
+ JAMES L. CAW.<br />
+ HERBERT COOK.<br />
+ D.H.S. CRANAGE.<br />
+ LIONEL CUST.<br />
+ CAMPBELL DODGSON.<br />
+ CHARLES DOWDESWELL.<br />
+ DAVID ERSKINE.<br />
+ H.A.L. FISHER.<br />
+ J.L. GARVIN.<br />
+ PERCIVAL GASKELL.<br />
+ ALGERNON GRAVES.<br />
+ JAMES GREIG.<br />
+ O. GUTEKUNST.<br />
+ EDWARD HUTTON.<br />
+ G.B. CROFT-LYONS.<br />
+ D.S. MACCOLL.<br />
+ ERIC MACLAGAN.<br />
+ G. MAYER.<br />
+ MORTIMER MENPES.<br />
+ ALMERIC H. PAGET.<br />
+ J.S.R. PHILLIPS.<br />
+ G.N. COUNT PLUNKETT.<br />
+ JANET ROSS.<br />
+ ROBERT ROSS.<br />
+ M.E. SADLER.<br />
+ MARION SPIELMANN.<br />
+ A.J. SULLEY.<br />
+ D. CROAL THOMSON.<br />
+ T. HUMPHRY WARD.<br />
+ W.H. JAMES WEALE.<br />
+ FREDERICK A. WHITE.<br />
+ R.C. WITT.<br />
+
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id="page132"></a>{132}</span><b>To
+ Arms!</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Is it possible that there are still some of our people who do not understand the
+ causes of this war, and are ignorant of the great stakes at issue which will speedily
+ have so important a bearing upon the lives of each and all of them? It is hard to
+ believe it, and yet it is so stated by some who profess to know. Let me try, in the
+ shortest space and in the clearest words that I can command, to lay before them both
+ the causes and the possible effects, and to implore them now, now, at this very
+ moment, before it is too late, to make those efforts and sacrifices which the
+ occasion demands. In Germany, every man from the ages of sixteen to fifty-five is
+ with the colors. The last man has been called up. And yet we hear&mdash;we could not
+ bear to see&mdash;that young athletic men in this country are playing football or
+ cricket, while our streets are full of those who should be in our camps. All our
+ lives have been but a preparation for this supreme moment. All our future lives will
+ be determined by how we bear ourselves in these few months to come. Shame, shame on
+ the man who fails his country in this its hour of need! I would not force him to
+ serve. I could not think that the service of such a man was of any avail. Let the
+ country be served by free men, and let them deal with the coward or the sluggard who
+ flinches.</p>
+ <p>The causes of the war are only of moment to us, at this stage, in that we gain
+ more strength in our arms and more iron in our souls by a knowledge that it is for
+ all that is honorable and sacred for which we fight. What really concerns us is that
+ we are in a fight for our national life, that we must fight through to the end, and
+ that each and all of us must help, in his own fashion, to the last ounce of his
+ strength, that this end may be victory. That is the essence of the situation. It is
+ not words and phrases that we need, but men, men&mdash;and always more men. If words
+ can bring the men then they are of avail. If not they may well wait for the times to
+ mend. But if there is a doubt in the mind of any man as to the justice of his
+ country's quarrel, then even a writer may find work ready to his hand.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Let us cast our minds back upon the events which have led up to this conflict.
+ They may be divided into two separate classes, those which prepared the general
+ situation, and those which caused the special quarrel. Each of these I will treat in
+ its turn.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Teuton Intoxication.</b></p>
+ <p>It is a matter of common knowledge, one which a man must be blind and deaf not to
+ understand, that for many years Germany, intoxicated by her success in war and by her
+ increase of wealth, has regarded the British Empire with eyes of jealousy and hatred.
+ It has never been alleged by those who gave expression to this almost universal
+ national passion that Great Britain had in any way, either historically or
+ commercially, done Germany a mischief. Even our most bitter traducers, when asked to
+ give any definite historical reasons for their dislike, were compelled to put forward
+ such ludicrous excuses as that the British had abandoned the Prussian King in the
+ year 1761, quite oblivious of the fact that the same Prussian King had abandoned his
+ own allies in the same war under far more damaging circumstances, acting up to his
+ own motto that no promises are binding where the vital interests of a State are in
+ question. With all their malevolence they could give no examples of any ill turn done
+ by us until their deliberate policy had forced us into antagonism. On the other hand,
+ a long list of occasions could very easily be compiled on which we had helped them in
+ some <span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id="page133"></a>{133}</span>common
+ cause, from the days of Marlborough to those of Blucher. Until the twentieth century
+ had turned they had no possible cause for political hatred against us. In commerce
+ our record was even more clear. Never in any way had we interfered with that great
+ development of trade which has turned them from one of the poorest to one of the
+ richest of European States. Our markets were open to them untaxed, while our own
+ manufactures paid 20 per cent. in Germany. The markets of India, of Egypt, and of
+ every portion of the empire which had no self-appointed tariff, were as open to
+ German goods as to British ones. Nothing could possibly have been more generous than
+ our commercial treatment. No doubt there was some grumbling when cheap imitations of
+ our own goods were occasionally found to oust the originals from their markets. Such
+ a feeling was but natural and human. But in all matters of commerce, as in all
+ matters political before the dawn of this century, they have no shadow of a grievance
+ against us.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>And yet they hated us with a most bitter hatred, a hatred which long antedates the
+ days when we were compelled to take a definite stand against them. In all sorts of
+ ways this hatred showed itself, in the diatribes of professors, in the pages of
+ books, in the columns of the press. Usually it was a sullen, silent dislike.
+ Sometimes it would flame up suddenly into bitter utterance, as at the time of the
+ unseemly dispute around the deathbed of the Emperor's father, or on the occasion of
+ the Jameson Raid. And yet this bitter antagonism was in no way reciprocated in this
+ country. If a poll had been taken at any time up to the end of the century as to
+ which European country was our natural ally, the vote would have gone overwhelmingly
+ for Germany. "America first and then Germany" would have been the verdict of nine men
+ out of ten. But then occurred two events which steadied the easy-going Briton, and
+ made him look more intently and with a more questioning gaze at his distant cousin
+ over the water. Those two events were the Boer war and the building of the German
+ fleet. The first showed us, to our amazement, the bitter desire which Germany had to
+ do us some mischief, the second made us realize that she was forging a weapon with
+ which that desire might be fulfilled.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Boer War and Germany.</b></p>
+ <p>We are most of us old enough to remember the torrent of calumny and insult which
+ was showered upon us in the day of our temporary distress by the nation to whom we
+ had so often been a friend and an ally. It is true that other nations treated us
+ little better, and yet their treatment hurt us less. The difference as it struck men
+ at the time may be summarized in this passage from a British writer of the
+ period.</p>
+ <p>"But it was very different with Germany," he says. "Again and again in the world's
+ history we have been the friends and the allies of these people. It was so in the
+ days of Marlborough, in those of the Great Frederick, and in those of Napoleon. When
+ we could not help them with men we helped them with money. Our fleet has crushed
+ their enemies. And now, for the first time in history, we have had a chance of seeing
+ who were our friends in Europe, and nowhere have we met more hatred and more slander
+ than from the German press and the German people. Their most respectable journals
+ have not hesitated to represent the British troops&mdash;troops every bit as humane
+ and as highly disciplined as their own&mdash;not only as committing outrages on
+ person and property, but even as murdering women and children.</p>
+ <p>"At first this unexpected phenomenon merely surprised the British people, then it
+ pained them, and finally, after two years of it, it has roused a deep, enduring anger
+ in their minds."</p>
+ <p>He goes on to say: "The continued attacks upon us have left an enduring feeling of
+ resentment, which will not and should not die away in this generation. It is not too
+ much to say that five years ago a complete defeat of Germany in a European war would
+ have certainly <span class="pagenum"><a name="page134"
+ id="page134"></a>{134}</span>caused British intervention. Public sentiment and racial
+ affinity would never have allowed us to see her really go to the wall. And now it is
+ certain that in our lifetime no British guinea and no soldier's life would under any
+ circumstances be spent for such an end. That is one strange result of the Boer war,
+ and in the long run it is possible that it may prove not the least important."</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Such was the prevailing mood of the nation when they perceived Germany, under the
+ lead of her Emperor, following up her expressions of enmity by starting with restless
+ energy to build up a formidable fleet, adding programme to programme, out of all
+ possible proportion to the German commerce to be defended or to the German coastline
+ exposed to attack. Already vainglorious boasts were made that Germany was the
+ successor to Britain upon the seas. "The Admiral of the Atlantic greets the Admiral
+ of the Pacific," said the Kaiser later in a message to the Czar. What was Britain to
+ do under this growing menace? So long as she was isolated the diplomacy of Germany
+ might form some naval coalition against her. She took the steps which were necessary
+ for her own safety, and without forming an alliance she composed her differences with
+ France and Russia and drew closer the friendship which united her with her old rival
+ across the Channel. The first fruit of the new German fleet was the entente cordiale.
+ We had found our enemy. It was necessary that we should find our friends. Thus we
+ were driven into our present combination.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>And now we had to justify our friendship. For the first time we were compelled to
+ openly oppose Germany in the deep and dangerous game of world politics. They wished
+ to see if our understanding was a reality or a sham. Could they drive a wedge between
+ us by showing that we were a fair-weather friend whom any stress would alienate?
+ Twice they tried it, once in 1906 when they bullied France into a conference at
+ Algeciras but found that Britain was firm at her side, and again in 1911 when in a
+ time of profound peace they stirred up trouble by sending a gunboat to Agadir, and
+ pushed matters to the very edge of war. But no threats induced Britain to be false to
+ her mutual insurance with France. Now for the third and most fatal time they have
+ demanded that we forswear ourselves and break our own bond lest a worse thing befall
+ us. Blind and foolish, did they not know by past experience that we would keep our
+ promise given? In their madness they have wrought an irremediable evil to themselves,
+ to us, and to all Europe.</p>
+ <p>I have shown that we have in very truth never injured nor desired to injure
+ Germany in commerce nor have we opposed her politically until her own deliberate
+ actions drove us into the camp of her opponents. But it may well be asked why then
+ did they dislike us, and why did they weave hostile plots against us? It was that, as
+ it seemed to them, and as indeed it actually may have been, we, independently of our
+ own wills, stood between Germany and that world empire of which she dreamed. This was
+ caused by circumstances over which we had no control and which we could not modify if
+ we had wished to do so. Britain, through her maritime power and the energy of her
+ merchants and people, had become a great world power when Germany was still unformed.
+ Thus, when she had grown to her full stature, she found that the choice places of the
+ world and those most fitted for the spread of a transplanted European race were
+ already filled up. It was not a matter which we could help nor could we alter it,
+ since Canada, Australia, and South Africa would not, even if we could be imagined to
+ have wished it, be transferred to German rule. And yet the Germans chafed, and if we
+ can put ourselves in their places we may admit that it was galling that the surplus
+ of their manhood should go to build up the strength of an alien and possibly a rival
+ State. So far we could see their grievance, or, rather their misfortune, since no one
+ was in truth to blame in the matter. Had their needs been openly and reasonably
+ expressed, and had the two States moved in concord in the matter, <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>{135}</span>it is difficult to
+ think that no helpful solution of any kind could have been found.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>As Germans See England.</b></p>
+ <p>But the German method of approaching the problem has never been to ask sympathy
+ and co-operation, but to picture us as a degenerate race from whom anything might be
+ gained by playing upon our imagined weakness and cowardice. A nation which attends
+ quietly to its own sober business must, according to their mediaeval notions, be a
+ nation of decadent poltroons. If we fight our battles by means of free volunteers
+ instead of enforced conscripts then the military spirit must be dead among us.
+ Perhaps, even in this short campaign, they have added this delusion also to the
+ dust-bin of their many errors. But such was their absurd self-deception about the
+ most virile of European races. Did we propose disarmament, then it was not
+ humanitarianism but cowardice that prompted us, and their answer was to enlarge their
+ programme. Did we suggest a navy-building holiday, it was but a cloak for our
+ weakness and an incitement that they should redouble their efforts. Our decay had
+ become a part of their national faith. At first the wish may have been the father to
+ the thought, but soon under the reiterated assertions of their crazy professors the
+ proposition became indisputable. Bernhardi in his book upon the next war cannot
+ conceal the contempt in which he has learned to hold us. Neibuhr long ago had
+ prophesied the coming fall of Britain, and every year was believed to bring it nearer
+ and to make it more certain. To these jaundiced eyes all seemed yellow, when the
+ yellowness lay only in themselves. Our army, our navy, our colonies, all were equally
+ rotten. "Old England, old, indeed, and corrupt, rotten through and through." One blow
+ and the vast sham would fly to pieces, and from those pieces the victor could choose
+ his reward. Listen to Prof. Treitschke, a man who, above all others, has been the
+ evil genius of his country, and has done most to push it toward this abyss: "A thing
+ that is wholly a sham," he cried, in allusion to our empire, "cannot, in this
+ universe of ours, endure forever. It may endure for a day, but its doom is certain."
+ Were ever words more true when applied to the narrow bureaucracy and swaggering
+ Junkerdom of Prussia, the most artificial and ossified sham that ever our days have
+ seen? See which will crack first, our democracy or this, now that both have been
+ plunged into the furnace together. The day of God's testing has come, and we shall
+ see which can best abide it.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Blame Not England's.</b></p>
+ <p>I have tried to show that we are in no way to blame for the hostility which has
+ grown up between us. So far as it had any solid cause at all it has arisen from fixed
+ factors, which could no more be changed by us than the geographical position which
+ has laid us right across their exit to the oceans of the world. That this deeply
+ rooted national sentiment, which forever regarded us as the Carthage to which they
+ were destined to play the part of Rome, would, sooner or later, have brought about
+ war between us, is, in my opinion, beyond all doubt. But it was planned to come at
+ the moment which was least favorable for Britain. "Even English attempts at a
+ rapprochement must not blind us to the real situation," says Bernhardi. "We may, at
+ most, use them to delay the necessary and inevitable war until we may fairly imagine
+ we have some prospect of success." A more shameless sentence was never penned, and
+ one stands marveling which is the more grotesque&mdash;the cynicism of the sentiment
+ or the folly which gave such a warning to the victim. For be it remembered that
+ Bernhardi's words are to be taken very seriously, for they are not the ravings of
+ some Pan-German monomaniac, but the considered views of the foremost military writer
+ of Germany, one who is in touch with those inner circles whose opinions are the
+ springs of national policy. "Our last and greatest reckoning is to be with Great
+ Britain," said the bitter Treitschke. Sooner or later the shock was to come. Germany
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id="page136"></a>{136}</span>sat brooding
+ over the chessboard of the world waiting for the opening which should assure a
+ winning game.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>It was clear that she should take her enemies separately rather than together. If
+ Britain were attacked it was almost certain that France and Russia would stand by her
+ side. But if, on the contrary, the quarrel could be made with these two powers, and
+ especially with Russia, in the first instance, then it was by no means so certain
+ that Great Britain would be drawn into the struggle. Public opinion has to be
+ strongly moved before our country can fight, and public opinion under a Liberal
+ Government might well be divided upon the subject of Russia. Therefore, if the
+ quarrel could be so arranged as to seem to be entirely one between Teuton and Slav
+ there was a good chance that Britain would remain undecided until the swift German
+ sword had done its work. Then, with the grim acquiescence of our deserted allies, the
+ still bloody sword would be turned upon ourselves, and that great final reckoning
+ would have come.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Such was the plan, and fortune favored it. A brutal murder had, not for the first
+ time, put Servia into a position where a State may be blamed for the sins of
+ individuals. An ultimatum was launched so phrased that it was impossible for any
+ State to accept it as it stood and yet remain an independent State. At the first sign
+ of argument or remonstrance the Austrian Army marched upon Belgrade. Russia, which
+ had been already humiliated in 1908 by the forcible annexation of Bosnia, could not
+ possibly submit a second time to the Caudine Forks. She laid her hand upon her sword
+ hilt. Germany sprang to the side of her ally. France ranged herself with Russia. Like
+ a thunderclap the war of the nations had begun.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>So far all had worked well for German plans. Those of the British public who were
+ familiar with the past and could look into the future might be well aware that our
+ interests were firmly bound with those of France, and that if our faggots were not
+ tied together they would assuredly be snapped each in its turn. But the unsavory
+ assassination which had been so cleverly chosen as the starting point of the war
+ bulked large in the eyes of our people, and, setting self-interest to one side, the
+ greater part of the public might well have hesitated to enter into a quarrel where
+ the cause seemed remote and the issues ill-defined. What was it to us if a Slav or a
+ Teuton collected the harbor due of Saloniki! So the question might have presented
+ itself to the average man who in the long run is the ruler of this country and the
+ autocrat of its destinies. In spite of all the wisdom of our statesmen, it is
+ doubtful if on such a quarrel we could have gained that national momentum which might
+ carry us to victory. But at that very moment Germany took a step which removed the
+ last doubt from the most cautious of us and left us in a position where we must
+ either draw our sword or stand forever dishonored and humiliated before the world.
+ The action demanded of us was such a compound of cowardice and treachery that we ask
+ ourselves in dismay what can we ever have done that could make others for one instant
+ imagine us to be capable of so dastardly a course. Yet that it was really supposed
+ that we could do it, and that it was not merely put forward as an excuse for drawing
+ us into war, is shown by the anger and consternation of the Kaiser and his Chancellor
+ when we drew back from what the British Prime Minister had described as "an infamous
+ proposal." One has only to read our Ambassador's description of his interview with
+ the German Chancellor after our decision was announced, "so evidently overcome by the
+ news of our action," to see that through some extraordinary mental aberration the
+ German rulers did actually believe that a vital treaty with Britain's signature upon
+ it could be regarded by this country as a mere "scrap of paper."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Treaty of 1839.</b></p>
+ <p>What was this treaty which it was proposed so lightly to set aside? It was the
+ guarantee of the neutrality of Belgium signed in 1839 (confirmed verbally and in
+ writing by Bismarck in 1870) by <span class="pagenum"><a name="page137"
+ id="page137"></a>{137}</span>Prussia, France, and Britain, each of whom pledged their
+ word to observe and to enforce it. On the strength of it Belgium had relied for her
+ security amid her formidable neighbors. On the strength of it also France had
+ lavished all her defenses upon her eastern frontier, and left her northern exposed to
+ attack. Britain had guaranteed the treaty, and Britain could be relied upon. Now, on
+ the first occasion of testing the value of her word it was supposed that she would
+ regard the treaty as a worthless scrap of paper, and stand by unmoved while the
+ little State which had trusted her was flooded by the armies of the invader. It was
+ unthinkable, and yet the wisest brains of Germany seem to have persuaded themselves
+ that we had sunk to such depths of cowardly indolence that even this might go
+ through. Surely they also have been hypnotized by those foolish dreams of Britain's
+ degeneration, from which they will have so terrible an awakening.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>As a matter of fact the General Staff had got ahead of the diplomatists, and the
+ German columns were already over the border while the point was being debated at
+ Berlin. There was no retreat from the position which had been taken up. "It is to us
+ a vital matter of strategy and is beyond argument," said the German soldier. "It is
+ to us a vital matter of honor and, is beyond argument," answered the British
+ statesman. The die was cast. No compromise was possible. Would Britain keep her word
+ or would she not? That was the sole question at issue. And what answer save one could
+ any Briton give to it? "I do not believe," said our Prime Minister, "that any nation
+ ever entered into a great controversy with a clearer conscience and stronger
+ conviction that it is fighting, not for aggression, not for the maintenance of its
+ own selfish interest, but in defense of principles the maintenance of which is vital
+ to the civilization of the world." So he spoke, and history will indorse his words,
+ for we surely have our quarrel just.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>So much for the events which have led us to war. Now for a moment let us glance at
+ what we may have to hope for, what we may have to fear, and, above all, what we must
+ each of us do that we win through to a lasting peace.</p>
+ <p>What have we to gain if we win? That we have nothing material to gain, no colonies
+ which we covet, no possessions of any sort that we desire, is the final proof that
+ the war has not been provoked by us. No nation would deliberately go out of its way
+ to wage so hazardous and costly a struggle when there is no prize for victory. But
+ one enormous indirect benefit we will gain if we can make Germany a peaceful and
+ harmless State. We will surely break her naval power and take such steps that it
+ shall not be a menace to us any more. It was this naval power, with its rapid
+ increase and the need that we should ever, as Mr. Churchill has so well expressed it,
+ be ready at our average moment to meet an attack at their chosen moment&mdash;it was
+ this which has piled up our war estimates during the last ten years until they have
+ bowed us down. With such enormous sums spent upon ships and guns, great masses of
+ capital were diverted from the ordinary channels of trade, while an even more serious
+ result was that our programmes of social reform had to be curtailed from want of the
+ money which could finance them. Let the menace of that lurking fleet be
+ withdrawn&mdash;the nightmare of those thousand hammers working day and night in
+ forging engines for our destruction&mdash;and our estimates will once again be those
+ of a civilized Christian country, while our vast capital will be turned from measures
+ of self-protection to those of self-improvement. Should our victory be complete,
+ there is little which Germany can yield to us save the removal of that shadow which
+ has darkened us so long. But our children and our children's children will never, if
+ we do our work well now, look across the North Sea with the sombre thoughts which
+ have so long been ours, while their lives will be brightened and elevated by money
+ which we, in our darker days, have had to spend upon our ships and our guns.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page138" id="page138"></a>{138}</span>Consider, on
+ the other hand, what we should suffer if we were to lose. All the troubles of the
+ last ten years would be with us still, but in a greatly exaggerated form. A larger
+ and stronger Germany would dominate Europe and would overshadow our lives. Her coast
+ line would be increased, her ports would face our own, her coaling stations would be
+ in every sea, and her great army, greater then than ever, would be within striking
+ distance of our shores. To avoid sinking forever into the condition of a dependant,
+ we should be compelled to have recourse to rigid compulsory service, and our
+ diminished revenues would be all turned to the needs of self-defense. Such would be
+ the miserable condition in which we should hand on to our children that free and
+ glorious empire which we inherited in all the fullness of its richness and its
+ splendor from those strong fathers who have built it up. What peace of mind, what
+ self-respect could be left for us in the remainder of our lives! The weight of
+ dishonor would lie always upon our hearts. And yet this will be surely our fate and
+ our future if we do not nerve our souls and brace our arms for victory. No regrets
+ will avail, no excuses will help, no after-thoughts can profit us. It is
+ now&mdash;now&mdash;even in these weeks and months that are passing that the final
+ reckoning is being taken, and when once the sum is made up no further effort can
+ change it. What are our lives or our labors, our fortunes or even our families, when
+ compared with the life or death of the great mother of us all? We are but the leaves
+ of the tree. What matter if we flutter down today or tomorrow, so long as the great
+ trunk stands and the burrowing roots are firm. Happy the man who can die with the
+ thought that in this greatest crisis of all he has served his country to the
+ uttermost, but who would bear the thoughts of him who lives on with the memory that
+ he had shirked his duty and failed his country at the moment of her need?</p>
+ <p>There is a settled and assured future if we win. There is darkness and trouble if
+ we lose. But if we take a broader sweep and trace the meanings of this contest as
+ they affect others than ourselves, then ever greater, more glorious are the issues
+ for which we fight. For the whole world stands at a turning point of its history, and
+ one or other of two opposite principles, the rule of the soldier or the rule of the
+ citizen, must now prevail. In this sense we fight for the masses of the German
+ people, as some day they will understand, to free them from that formidable military
+ caste which has used and abused them, spending their bodies in an unjust war and
+ poisoning their minds by every device which could inflame them against those who wish
+ nothing save to live at peace with them. We fight for the strong, deep Germany of
+ old, the Germany of music and of philosophy, against this monstrous modern aberration
+ the Germany of blood and of iron, the Germany from which, instead of the old things
+ of beauty, there come to us only the rant of scolding professors with their final
+ reckonings, their Weltpolitik, and their Godless theories of the Superman who stands
+ above morality and to whom all humanity shall be subservient. Instead of the
+ world-inspiring phrases of a Goethe or a Schiller, what are the words in the last
+ decade which have been quoted across the sea? Are they not always the ever-recurring
+ words of wrath from one ill-balanced man? "Strike them with the mailed fist." "Leave
+ such a name behind you as Attila and his Huns." "Turn your weapons even upon your own
+ flesh and blood at my command." These are the messages which have come from this
+ perversion of a nation's soul.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Mighty Despotism.</b></p>
+ <p>But the matter lies deep. The Hohenzollerns and the Hapsburgs have used their
+ peoples as a great landowner might use the serfs upon his estate. It was, and is,
+ their openly expressed theory that they were in their position by the grace of God,
+ that they owed no reckoning to any man, and that kingdom and folk were committed for
+ better or worse to their charge. Round this theory of the Dark Ages there gathered
+ all the forces <span class="pagenum"><a name="page139"
+ id="page139"></a>{139}</span>of the many courts of the empire, all the nobility who
+ make so huge a class in Germanic countries, all the vast army to whom strict
+ discipline and obedience were the breath of life, all the office-holders of the
+ State, all the purveyors of warlike stores. These and their like were the natural
+ setting to such a central idea. Court influence largely controlled the teaching at
+ school and universities, and so the growing twig could be bent. But all these forces
+ together could not have upheld so dangerous and unnatural a theory had it not been
+ for the influence of a servile press. How that press was managed, how the thoughts of
+ the people could be turned to the right or the left with the same precision as a
+ platoon of grenadiers, has been shown clearly enough in the memoirs of Bismarck.
+ Public opinion was poisoned at its very roots. The average citizen lived in a false
+ atmosphere where everything was distorted to his vision. He saw his Kaiser, not as an
+ essentially weak and impetuous man with a dangerous entourage who were ever at his
+ ear, but as Germany personified, an angel with a flaming sword, beating back envious
+ assailants from the beloved Fatherland. He saw his neighbors not as peaceful nations
+ who had no possible desire to attack him, but on the contrary lived in constant fear
+ of him, but as a band, of envious and truculent conspirators who could only be kept
+ in order by the sudden stamp of the jackboot and the menacing clatter of the sabre.
+ He insensibly imbibed the Nietzsche doctrine that the immorality of the Superman may
+ be as colossal as his strength and that the slave-evangel of Christianity was
+ superseded by a sterner law. Thus, when he saw acts which his reason must have told
+ him were indefensible he was still narcotized by this conception of some new standard
+ of right. He saw his Kaiser at the time of a petty humiliation to Great Britain
+ sending a telegram of congratulation to the man who had inflicted this rebuff. Could
+ that be approved by reason? At a time when all Europe was shuddering over the
+ Armenian massacres he saw this same Kaiser paying a complimentary visit to the Sultan
+ whose hands were still wet with the blood of murdered Christians. Could that be
+ reconciled with what is right? A little later he saw the Kaiser once again pushing
+ himself into Mediterranean politics, where no direct German interest lay, and
+ endeavoring to tangle up the French developments in Northern Africa by provocative
+ personal appearances at Morocco, and, later, by sending a gunboat to intrude upon a
+ scene of action which had already by the Treaty of Algeciras been allotted to France.
+ How could an honest German whose mind was undebauched by a controlled press justify
+ such an interference as that? He is or should be aware that, in annexing Bosnia,
+ Austria was tearing up a treaty without the consent of the other signatories, and
+ that his own country was supporting and probably inciting her ally to this public
+ breach of faith. Could he honestly think that this was right? And, finally, he must
+ know, for his own Chancellor has publicly proclaimed it, that the invasion of Belgium
+ was a breach of international right, and that Germany, or, rather, Prussia, had
+ perjured herself upon the day that the first of her soldiers passed over the
+ frontier. How can he explain all this to himself save on a theory that might is
+ right, that no moral law applies to the Superman, and that so long as one hews one's
+ way through, the rest can matter little? To such a point of degradation have public
+ morals been brought by the infernal teachings of Prussian military philosophy, dating
+ back as far as Frederick II., but intensified by the exhortations of press and
+ professors during our own times. The mind of the average kindly German citizen has
+ been debauched and yet again debauched until it needed just such a world crisis as
+ this to startle him at last from his obsession and to see his position and that of
+ his country in its true relation with humanity and progress.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Final Stakes.</b></p>
+ <p>Thus I say, that for the German who stands outside the ruling classes, our victory
+ would bring a lasting relief, and some hope that in future his destiny should be
+ controlled by his own judg<span class="pagenum"><a name="page140"
+ id="page140"></a>{140}</span>ment and not by the passions or interests of those
+ against whom he has at present no appeal. A system which has brought disaster to
+ Germany and chaos to all Europe can never, one would think, be resumed, and amid the
+ debris of his empire the German may pick up that precious jewel of personal freedom
+ which is above the splendor of foreign conquest. A Hapsburg or a Hohenzollern may
+ find his true place as the servant rather than the master of a nation. But apart from
+ Germany, look at the effects which our victory must have over the whole wide world.
+ Everywhere it will mean the triumph of reasoned democracy, of public debate, of
+ ordered freedom in which every man is an active unit in the system of his own
+ Government, while our defeat would stand for a victory to a priviliged class, the
+ thrusting down of the civilian by the arrogance and intolerance of militarism, and
+ the subjection of all that is human and progressive to all that is cruel, narrow, and
+ reactionary. This is the stake for which we play, and the world will lose or gain as
+ well as we. You may well come, you democratic oversea men of our blood, to rally
+ round us now, for all that you cherish, all that is bred in your very bones, is that
+ for which we fight. And you, lovers of freedom in every land, we claim at least your
+ prayers and your wishes, for if our sword be broken you will be the poorer. But fear
+ not, for our sword will not be broken, nor shall it ever drop from our hands until
+ this matter is forever set in order. If every ally we have upon earth were to go down
+ in blood and ruin, still would we fight through to the appointed end. Defeat shall
+ not daunt us. Inconclusive victory shall not turn us from our purpose. The grind of
+ poverty and the weariness of hopes deferred shall not blunt the edge of our resolve.
+ With God's help we shall go to the end, and when that goal is reached it is our
+ prayer that a new era shall come as our reward, an era in which, by common action of
+ State with State, mutual hatreds and strivings shall be appeased, land shall no
+ longer be estranged from land, and huge armies and fleets will be nightmares of the
+ past. Thus, as ever, the throes of evil may give birth to good. Till then our task
+ stands clear before us&mdash;a task that will ask for all we have in strength and
+ resolution. Have you who read this played your part to the highest? If not, do it
+ now, or stand forever shamed.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Conan Doyle on British Militarism</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Early last year, in the course of some comments which I made upon the slighting
+ remarks about our army by Gen. von Bernhardi, I observed: "It may be noted that Gen.
+ von Bernhardi has a poor opinion of our troops. This need not trouble us. We are what
+ we are, and words will not alter it. From very early days our soldiers have left
+ their mark upon Continental warfare, and we have no reason to think that we have
+ declined from the manhood of our forefathers." Since then he has returned to the
+ attack.</p>
+ <p>With that curious power of coming after deep study to the absolutely diametrically
+ wrong conclusion which the German expert, political or military, appears to possess,
+ he says in his "War of Today": "The English Army, trained more for purposes of show
+ than for modern war," adding in the same sentence a sneer at our "inferior colonial
+ levies."</p>
+ <p>He will have an opportunity of reconsidering his views presently upon the fighting
+ value of our oversea troops, and surely, so far as our own are concerned, he must
+ already be making some interesting notes for his next edition, or, rather, for the
+ learned volume upon "Germany and the Last War," which will, no doubt, come from his
+ pen. He is a man to whom we might well raise a statue, for I am convinced that his
+ frank <span class="pagenum"><a name="page141" id="page141"></a>{141}</span>confession
+ of German policy has been worth at least an army corps to this country. We may
+ address to him John Davidson's lines to his enemy:</p>
+ Unwilling friend, let not your spite abate.<br />
+ Spur us with scorn and strengthen us with hate.<br />
+
+ <p>There is another German gentleman who must be thinking rather furiously. He is a
+ certain Col. Gadke, who appeared officially at Aldershot some years ago, was
+ hospitably entertained, being shown all that he desired to see, and on his return to
+ Berlin published a most deprecatory description of our forces. He found no good thing
+ in them. I have some recollection that Gen. French alluded in a public speech to this
+ critic's remarks, and expressed a modest hope that he and his men would some day have
+ the opportunity of showing how far they were deserved. Well, he has had his
+ opportunity, and Col. Gadke, like so many other Germans, seems to have made a
+ miscalculation.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germans Untried in War.</b></p>
+ <p>An army which has preserved the absurd parade schritt, an exercise which is
+ painful to the bystander, as he feels that it is making fools of brave men, must have
+ a tendency to throw back to earlier types. These Germans have been trained in peace
+ and upon the theory of books. In all that vast host there is hardly a man who has
+ stood at the wrong end of a loaded gun. They live on traditions of close formations,
+ vast cavalry charges, and other things which will not fit into modern warfare. Braver
+ men do not exist, but it is the bravery of men who have been taught to lean upon each
+ other, and not the cold, self-contained, resourceful bravery of the man who has
+ learned to fight for his own hand. The British have had the teachings of two recent
+ campaigns fought with modern weapons&mdash;that of the Tirah and of South Africa. Now
+ that the reserves have joined the colors there are few regiments which have not a
+ fair sprinkling of veterans from these wars in their ranks. The Pathan and the Boer
+ have been their instructors in something more practical than those imperial grand
+ manoeuvres where the all-highest played with his puppets in such a fashion that one
+ of his Generals remarked that the chief practical difficulty of a campaign so
+ conducted would be the disposal of the dead.</p>
+ <p>Boers and Pathans have been hard masters and have given many a slap to their
+ admiring pupils, but the lesson has been learned. It was not show troops, General,
+ who, with two corps, held five of your best day after day from Mons to
+ Compi&egrave;gne. It is no reproach to your valor, but you were up against men who
+ were equally brave and knew a great deal more of the game. This must begin to break
+ upon you, and will surely grow clearer as the days go by. We shall often in the
+ future take the knock as well as give it, but you will not say that we are a slow
+ army if you live to chronicle this war, nor will your imperial master be proud of the
+ adjective which he has demeaned himself in using before his troops had learned their
+ lesson.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The South African Lesson.</b></p>
+ <p>The fact is that the German Army, with all its great traditions, has been
+ petrifying for many years back. They never learned the lesson of South Africa. It was
+ not for want of having it expounded to them, for their military attache&mdash;"'im
+ with the spatchcock on 'is 'elmet,'" as I heard him described by a British
+ orderly&mdash;missed nothing of what occurred, as is evident from their official
+ history of the war. And yet they missed it, and with all those ideas of individual
+ efficiency and elastic independent formation which are the essence of modern
+ soldiering. Their own more liberal thinkers were aware of it. Here are the words
+ which were put into the mouth of G&uuml;ntz, the representative of the younger
+ school, in Beverlein's famous novel:</p>
+ <p>"The organization of the German Army rested upon foundations which had been laid a
+ hundred years ago. Since the great war they had never seriously been put to the
+ proof, and during the last three decades they had only been altered in the most
+ trifling details. In <span class="pagenum"><a name="page142"
+ id="page142"></a>{142}</span>three long decades! And in one of those decades the
+ world at large had advanced as much as in the previous century.</p>
+ <p>"Instead of turning this highly developed intelligence to good account, they bound
+ it hand and foot on the rack of an everlasting drill which could not have been more
+ soullessly mechanical in the days of Frederick. It held them together as an iron hoop
+ holds together a cask, the dry staves of which would fall asunder at the first
+ kick."</p>
+ <p>Lord Roberts has said that if ten points represent the complete soldier, eight
+ should stand for his efficiency as a shot. The German maxim has rather been that
+ eight should stand for his efficiency as a drilled marionette. It has been reckoned
+ that about two hundred books a year appear in Germany upon military affairs, against
+ about twenty in Britain. And yet, after all this expert debate, the essential point
+ of all seems to have been missed&mdash;that in the end everything depends upon the
+ man behind the gun, upon his hitting his opponent and upon his taking cover so as to
+ avoid being hit himself.</p>
+ <p>After all the efforts of the General Staff, the result when shown upon the field
+ of battle has filled our men with a mixture of admiration and contempt&mdash;contempt
+ for the absurd tactics and admiration for the poor devils who struggle on in spite of
+ them. Listen to the voices of the men who are the real experts. Says a Lincolnshire
+ Sergeant: "They were in solid square blocks, and we couldn't help hitting them." Says
+ Private Tait (Second Essex): "Their rifle shooting is rotten. I don't believe they
+ could hit a haystack at 100 yards." "They are rotten shots with their rifles," says
+ an Oldham private. "They advance in close column, and you simply can't help hitting
+ them," writes a Gordon Highlander. "You would have thought it was a big crowd
+ streaming out from a cup tie," says Private Whitaker of the Guards. "It was like a
+ farmer's machine cutting grass," so it seemed to Private Hawkins of the Coldstreams.
+ "No damned good as riflemen," says a Connemara boy. "You couldn't help hitting them.
+ As to their rifle fire, it was useless." "They shoot from the hip, and don't seem to
+ aim at anything in particular."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Not Books That Count.</b></p>
+ <p>These are the opinions of the practical men upon the field of battle. Surely a
+ poor result from the 200 volumes a year and all the weighty labors of the General
+ Staff! "Artillery nearly as good as our own, rifle fire beneath contempt." That is
+ the verdict. How will the well-taught parade schritt avail them when it comes to a
+ stricken field?</p>
+ <p>But let it not seem as if this were meant for disparagement. We should be sinking
+ to the Kaiser's level if we answer his "contemptible little army" by pretending that
+ his own troops are anything but a very formidable and big army. They are formidable
+ in numbers, formidable, too, in their patriotic devotion, in their native courage,
+ and in the possession of such material, such great cannon, aircraft, machine guns,
+ and armored cars as none of the Allies can match. They have every advantage which a
+ nation would be expected to have when it has known that war was a certainty, while
+ others have only treated it as a possibility. There is a minuteness and earnestness
+ of preparation which are only possible for an assured event. But the fact remains,
+ and it will only be brought out more clearly by the Emperor's unchivalrous phrase,
+ that in every arm the British have already shown themselves to be the better troops.
+ Had he the Froissart spirit within him he would rather have said: "You have today a
+ task which is worthy of you. You are faced by an army which has a high repute and a
+ great history. There is real glory to be won today." Had he said this then, win or
+ lose, he would not have needed to be ashamed of his own words&mdash;the words of
+ ungenerous spirit.</p>
+ <p>It is a very strange thing how German critics have taken for granted that the
+ British Army had deteriorated, while the opinion of all those who were in close touch
+ with it was that it was never so good. Even some of the French experts <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page143" id="page143"></a>{143}</span>made the same mistake,
+ and Gen. Bonnat counseled his countrymen not to rely upon it, since "it would take
+ refuge amid its islands at the first reverse." One would think that the cause which
+ makes for its predominance were obvious. Apart from any question of national spirit
+ there is the all-important fact that the men are there of their own free will, an
+ advantage which I trust that we shall never be compelled to surrender. Again, the men
+ are of longer service in every arm, and they have far more opportunities of actual
+ fighting than come to any other force. Finally they are divided into regiments with
+ centuries of military glories streaming from their banners, which carry on a mighty
+ tradition. The very words the Guards, the Rifles, the Connaught Rangers, the Buffs,
+ the Scots Greys, the Gordons, sound like bugle calls. How could an army be anything
+ but dangerous which had such units in its line of battle?"</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>History Repeating Itself</b>.</p>
+ <p>And yet there remains the fact that both enemies and friends are surprised at our
+ efficiency. This is no new phenomenon. Again and again in the course of history the
+ British armies have had to win once more the reputation which had been forgotten.
+ Continentals have always begun by refusing to take them seriously. Napoleon, who had
+ never met them in battle, imagined that their unbroken success was due to some
+ weakness in his Marshals rather than in any excellence of the troops. "At last I have
+ them, these English," he exclaimed as he gazed at the thin, red line at Waterloo. "At
+ last they have me, these English," may have been his thought that evening as he
+ spurred his horse out of the d&eacute;bacle. Foy warned him of the truth. "The
+ British infantry is the devil," said he. "You think so because you were beaten by
+ them," cried Napoleon. Like von Kluck or von Kluck's master, he had something to
+ learn.</p>
+ <p>Why this continual depreciation? It may be that the world pays so much attention
+ to our excellent right arm that it cannot give us credit for having a very
+ serviceable left as well. Or it may be that they take seriously those jeremiads over
+ our decay which are characteristic of our people, and very especially of many of our
+ military thinkers. I have never been able to understand why they should be of so
+ pessimistic a turn of mind, unless it be a sort of exaltation of that grumbling which
+ has always been the privilege of the old soldier. Croker narrates how he met
+ Wellington in his later years, and how the Iron Duke told him that he was glad he was
+ so old, as he would not live to see the dreadful military misfortunes which were
+ about to come to his country. Looking back, we can see no reason for such pessimism
+ as this. Above all, the old soldier can never make any allowance for the latent
+ powers which lie in civilian patriotism and valor. Only a year ago I had a long
+ conversation with a well-known British General, in which he asserted with great
+ warmth that in case of an Anglo-German war with France involved the British public
+ would never allow a trained soldier to leave these islands. He is at the front
+ himself and doing such good work that he has little time for reminiscence, but when
+ he has he must admit that he underrated the nerve of his countrymen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Assurance Beneath Pessimism.</b></p>
+ <p>And yet under the pessimism of such men as he there is a curious contradictory
+ assurance that there are no troops like our own. The late Lord Goschen used to tell a
+ story of a letter that he had from a Captain in the navy at the time when he was
+ First Lord. This Captain's ship was lying alongside a foreign cruiser in some port,
+ and he compared in his report the powers of the two vessels. Lord Goschen said that
+ his heart sank as he read the long catalogue of points in which the British ship was
+ inferior&mdash;guns, armor, speed&mdash;until he came to the postscript, which was:
+ "I think I could take her in twenty minutes."</p>
+ <p>With all the grumbling of our old soldiers, there is always some reservation of
+ the sort at the end of it. Of course, those who are familiar with our ways of getting
+ things done would understand <span class="pagenum"><a name="page144"
+ id="page144"></a>{144}</span>that a good deal of the croaking is a means of getting
+ our little army increased, or at least preventing its being diminished. But whatever
+ the cause, the result has been the impression abroad of a "contemptible little army."
+ Whatever surprise in the shape of 17-inch howitzers or 900-foot Zeppelins the Kaiser
+ may have for us, it is a safe prophecy that it will be a small matter compared to
+ that which Sir John French and his men will be to him.</p>
+ <p>But above all I look forward to the development of our mounted riflemen. This I
+ say in no disparagement of our cavalry, who have done so magnificently. But the
+ mounted rifleman is a peculiarly British product&mdash;British and
+ American&mdash;with a fresh edge upon it from South Africa. I am most curious to see
+ what a division of these fellows will make of the Uhlans. It is good to see that
+ already the old banners are in the wind, Lovat's Horse, Scottish Horse, King Edward's
+ Horse, and the rest. All that cavalry can do will surely be done by our cavalry. But
+ I have always held, and I still very strongly hold, that the mounted rifleman has it
+ in him to alter our whole conception of warfare, as the mounted archer did in his
+ day; and now in this very war will be his first great chance upon a large scale. Ten
+ thousand well-mounted, well-trained riflemen, young officers to lead them, all broad
+ Germany, with its towns, its railways and its magazines before them&mdash;there lies
+ one more surprise for the doctrinaires of Berlin.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Need of Being Merciless</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Maurice Maeterlinck.</h3>
+ <h4>From The London Daily Mail.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>At these moments of tragedy none should be allowed to speak who cannot shoulder a
+ rifle, for the written word seems so monstrously useless and so overwhelmingly
+ trivial in face of this mighty drama that will for a long time and maybe forever free
+ mankind from the scourge of war&mdash;the one scourge among all that cannot be
+ excused and that cannot be explained, since alone among all scourges it issues
+ entirely from the hands of man.</p>
+ <p>But it is while this scourge is upon us&mdash;while we have our being in its very
+ centre&mdash;that we shall do well to weigh the guilt of those who committed this
+ inexpiable crime. It is now, when we are in the awful horror, undergoing and feeling
+ it, that we have the energy and clearsightedness needed to judge it. From the depths
+ of the most fearful injustice justice is best perceived. When the hour shall have
+ come for settling accounts&mdash;it will not be long delayed&mdash;we shall have
+ forgotten much of what we have suffered and a censurable pity will creep over us and
+ cloud our eyes.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Will Seek Sympathy.</b></p>
+ <p>This is the moment, therefore, for us to frame our inexorable resolution. After
+ the final victory, when the enemy is crushed&mdash;as crushed as he will
+ be&mdash;efforts will be made to enlist our sympathy. We shall be told that the
+ unfortunate German people are merely the victims of their monarch and their feudal
+ caste; that no blame attaches to the Germany we know that is so sympathetic and
+ cordial&mdash;the Germany of quaint old houses and open-hearted greetings; the
+ Germany that sits under its lime trees beneath the clear light of the moon&mdash;but
+ only to Prussia, hateful, arrogant Prussia; that homely, peace-loving Bavaria, the
+ genial, hospitable dwellers on the banks of the Rhine, the Silesian and Saxon&mdash;I
+ know not who besides&mdash;have merely obeyed and been compelled to obey orders they
+ detested, but were unable to resist.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id="page145"></a>{145}</span>We are in the
+ face of reality now. Let us look at it well and pronounce our sentence, for this is
+ the moment when we hold the proofs in our hands; when the elements of the crime are
+ hot before us and should out&mdash;the truth that will soon fade from our memory. Let
+ us tell ourselves now therefore that all we shall be told hereafter will be false.
+ Let us unflinchingly adhere to what we decide at this moment when the glare of the
+ horror is on us.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>No Degrees of Guilt.</b></p>
+ <p>It is not true that in this gigantic crime there are innocent and guilty or
+ degrees of guilt. They stand on one level, all who have taken part. The German from
+ the north has no more especial craving for blood than the German from the south has
+ especial tenderness and pity. It is very simple. It is the German from one end of the
+ country to the other who stands revealed as a beast of prey that the firm will of our
+ planet finally repudiates. We have here no wretched slaves dragged along by a tyrant
+ King who alone is responsible. Nations have the Government they deserve, or rather
+ the Government they have is truly no more than a magnified public projection of the
+ private morality and mentality of the nation.</p>
+ <p>If eighty million innocent people merely expose the inherent falseness and
+ superficiality of their innocence&mdash;and it is a monster they maintain at their
+ head who stands for all that is true in their nature, because it is he who represents
+ the eternal aspirations of their race, which lie far deeper than their apparent
+ transient virtues&mdash;let there be no suggestion of error, of intelligent people
+ having been tricked and misled. No nation can be deceived that does not wish to be
+ deceived. It is not intelligence that Germany lacks. In the sphere of intellect such
+ things are not possible, nor in the region of the enlightened, reflecting will. No
+ nation permits herself to be coerced into the one crime man cannot pardon. It is of
+ her own accord she hastens toward it. Her chief has no need to persuade. It is she
+ who urges him on.</p>
+ <p>We have forces here quite different from those on the surface&mdash;forces that
+ are secret, irresistible, profound. It is these we must judge, must crush under heel
+ once for all, for they are the only ones that will not be improved, softened or
+ brought into line by experience, progress, or even the bitterest lesson. They are
+ unalterable, immovable. Their springs lie far beneath hope or influence. They must be
+ destroyed as we destroy a nest of wasps, since we know these never can change into a
+ nest of bees.</p>
+ <p>Even though individually and singly Germans are all innocent and merely led
+ astray, they are none the less guilty in mass. This is the guilt that
+ counts&mdash;that alone is actual and real, because it lays bare underneath their
+ superficial innocence, the subconscious criminality of all. No influence can prevail
+ on the unconscious or subconscious. It never evolves. Let there come a thousand years
+ of civilization, a thousand years of peace, with all possible refinements, art, and
+ education, the German spirit which is its underlying element will remain absolutely
+ the same as today and would declare itself when the opportunity came under the same
+ aspect with the same infamy.</p>
+ <p>Through the whole course of history two distinct will-powers have been noticed
+ that would seem to be the opposing elemental manifestations of the spirit of our
+ globe, one seeking only evil, injustice, tyranny, suffering, the other strives for
+ liberty, right, radiance, joy. These two powers stand once again face to face. Our
+ opportunity is to annihilate the one that comes from below. Let us know how to be
+ pitiless that we have no more need for pity. It is the measures of organic
+ defense&mdash;it is essential that the modern world should stamp out Prussian
+ militarism as it would stamp out a poisonous fungus that for half a century had
+ poisoned its days. The health of our planet is the question. Tomorrow the United
+ States and Europe will have to take measures for the convalescence of the earth.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page146" id="page146"></a>{146}</span><b>Letters
+ to Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia University, has
+ permitted</i> THE NEW YORK TIMES <i>to have the extracts printed herewith from
+ letters sent to him since the beginning of the war by Baron d'Estournelles de
+ Constant, Senator of France, and Member of the International Court at The
+ Hague.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>First Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Aug. 15, 1914.&mdash;* * * Today I am full of grief to feel myself impotent
+ before the murderous conflicts now going on in Belgium and at a number of points on
+ our northern and eastern frontiers, while awaiting the great battles and hecatombs
+ which will follow; my thought is full of these terrible calamities willfully brought
+ about; so many precious lives already wiped out or soon to be; so much avoidable
+ mourning which one neither can nor wishes now to avoid!</p>
+ <p>In France there is not a single family which has not given without hesitation all
+ its children of military age to fight for the repulse of the invader. All the men
+ from Cr&eacute;ans, of ages 20 to 48 years, have gone, with one exception, and he is
+ now going; and meanwhile no work has ceased because of their absence. In all the
+ communes, in all the hamlets of the whole of France, the women, the children, and the
+ men over 48 have assumed all duties, in particular the gathering of the harvests,
+ which I see already finished as in normal times. * * *</p>
+ <p>When one thinks that Servia alone, even though exhausted by two atrocious wars, is
+ sufficient to hold in check imperial Austria; when one sees Italy remain neutral, and
+ in reality hostile to Austria, and Russia open slowly, inexorably, her reservoir of
+ men, resources, and infinite energy on the eastern frontier of Germany, one asks
+ truly if the Pan-Germanists have not been the veritable plague of God for their
+ country; the Fatherland, which men like Goethe, Kant, and Beethoven had made so
+ cultured, so glorious, and which asked only to live and to prosper, the
+ Pan-Germanists have isolated only to deliver it to the execration of the world. It
+ was the same in France formerly, when she ceded to chauvinistic influences.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Second Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 3, 1914.</p>
+ <p>* * * May you never witness such calamities as have fallen upon Europe. The
+ visions of horror, which formerly we evoked in order to terrify the world and to try
+ to conjure them away, are now surpassed; and we are only at the commencement of the
+ war! The trains, thronged with youth and enthusiasm, which I saw leave are now
+ returning crowded with the wounded. They have filled all the hospitals, the barracks
+ which had been left empty, the lyceums, and the schools throughout France. In but a
+ few days they have arrived everywhere in the south, the west and the centre of the
+ country. At La Fl&egrave;che alone we have five improvised hospitals with 1,200 beds.
+ Cr&eacute;ans is a hospital annex, and so it is in all the villages and in the
+ dwellings which can provide one or more beds. The wounded who occupy these beds are
+ happy, very happy. One of them, who has only a broken leg, but who thinks of the
+ thousands of his comrades who remain wounded upon the fields of battle, said to me,
+ "I am in heaven." * * *</p>
+ <p>The worst of all, (I have always said it, but it is even worse than I had
+ thought,) the worst is that each of the combatants, for the most part incapable of
+ cruelty under ordinary conditions, is now devoted to the horrible work of hatred and
+ of reprisal; and even more than the combatants, their children, their orphans, all
+ those who are to remain in mourning. * * *</p>
+ <p>As far as France is concerned, our first reverses have served to exalt the
+ national <span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id="page147"></a>{147}</span>spirit
+ and to fortify the unanimous resolution to conquer or to die. It is important that
+ this be well understood in the United States and that it be given due consideration
+ if it is desired to intervene without irritating the most noble scruples. * * *</p>
+ <p>It is the Prussian military system of domination with its contagion which has done
+ the harm and which ought to disappear, and that system itself is the fruit of
+ Napoleonic imperialism. The struggle is always, and more now than ever, between
+ imperialism and liberty, between force and right. May you in the United States profit
+ by this lesson, so that you may avoid falling into the European error. * * * It is
+ barbarity triumphant. But that triumph will be only momentary, and all agree at the
+ conclusion of this terrible drama on having a United States of Europe with
+ disarmament, or at least with armaments limited to a collective police force.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Third Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 8, 1914.</p>
+ <p>* * * You have comprehended that France is struggling for justice and peace. Be
+ sure that she will resist even to the last man, with the certainty that she is
+ defending not herself alone but also civilization. Never have I suspected to what
+ degree of savagery man can be degraded by unrestrained violence. I had believed that
+ the world could never again see the time of the Massacre of the Innocents; I deceived
+ myself; we have returned to barbarity, and the Prussian Army leaves us no alternative
+ between victory and extermination; should she become mistress of Paris, which I
+ doubt, and of the half of France, she will find the other half which will bury her
+ under its ruins. * * *</p>
+ <p>The English troops march on our roads, stop at Clermont-Cr&eacute;ans! Oh,
+ miracle! I see among my compatriots the worst chauvinists, those who openly desire
+ for me the fate of Jaur&egrave;s, those who fought me in 1902 with cries of "Fashoda"
+ or "Chicago," hasten to meet the English soldiers in order to aid and acclaim them,
+ in this country still full of the memories and the ruins of the hundred years' war!
+ It is because the English troops are also defending the land of liberty, theirs as
+ ours and as yours. Every one except the Prussians comprehend this, and this it is
+ which exalts their souls! * * *</p>
+ <p>The whole misfortune, I repeat, is the result of the crime committed forty-three
+ years ago, the crime which we accepted to avoid recommencing the war. Our resignation
+ has not sufficed; it has not caused the trouble to disappear; the German Government
+ has none the less been obliged to confirm it each day. The misfortune has been the
+ forcible annexation of Alsace-Lorraine. For that the Germans are paying today; for
+ that they will pay until they have made atonement for their fault. In this regard
+ France is irreproachable; she has resisted the chauvinists; our general elections,
+ the conferences of Berne and of Basle, have proved that, far from seeking revenge,
+ she wished by mutual concessions to arrive worthily at reconciliation in peace.</p>
+ <p>The Germans are paying today for their fault of 1870-71, because that fault has
+ corrupted and poisoned them. I have said it a thousand times. In order to keep those
+ two unfortunate provinces under their domination it has been necessary for them to
+ use force, to institute a r&eacute;gime of force. * * * It has been necessary to
+ prevent revolts by repressive measures, as at Saverne, which have disgusted, and even
+ disquieted, the whole world; that ignominious brutality become sovereign mistress, by
+ the force of circumstances, even against the will of the Kaiser and against the
+ protestation of all the &eacute;lite of Germany, of such men as Zorn, F&ouml;rster,
+ Nippold, and Bebel, has ended by being a menace and a danger to Germany itself. All
+ this is connected, and, whatever happens, Germany cannot emerge victorious from a war
+ which is itself but the logical result of the abuse of her victories. She cannot
+ conquer civilization; it is impossible. * * *</p>
+ <p>Comprehend this well, repeat it, publish it if you wish; France, Belgium, and
+ England may suffer check after check; they are prepared for this, they expect it, but
+ they will not be discouraged. The German armies may exhaust themselves <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id="page148"></a>{148}</span>uselessly in killing,
+ burning, and destroying. They will destroy themselves in the end. Our national policy
+ is to take them in their own trap and to wear them out.</p>
+ <p>The day of reckoning is coming, when the inexorable advance of the Slavic race,
+ always increasing in numbers&mdash;it little matters whether it is well or badly
+ organized&mdash;will come from the rear to attack the Germans at the time when they
+ are confident of victory and to drown them in the floods of blood which they have
+ caused to flow; terrible punishment for a war which we and our friends have done
+ everything to prevent. The victims of this punishment will be at least a half million
+ of French, Belgians, and Englishmen, together with a whole nation which desired peace
+ as we did, but which has allowed herself to be misled by a Government mad enough to
+ wish to reconcile the irreconcilable, namely, the maintenance of peace and the spirit
+ of conquest. May this punishment at least begin an era of new peace! Alas! how may we
+ hope for this when we see the human beast awakening in a delirium of fury and getting
+ beyond our control to destroy the masterpieces of human genius.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Fourth Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 11, 1914.</p>
+ <p>The Germans appear to have comprehended that the atrocities which have bitterly
+ aggravated the remorseless violation of Belgian neutrality have only aroused general
+ indignation, and have at the same time exasperated the opposing nations and armies.
+ Contrary to the tales which appear in the sensational journals, which are naturally
+ as eager today to embitter the war as they were formerly to bring it about, I am
+ assured that the German armies in France are repudiating the unworthy excesses of the
+ beginning of the campaign and are respecting life and private property. This will
+ alleviate the horrors of the war, but France nevertheless will place no limit on the
+ sacrifices which she will make. She will wear out the German Army and destroy it, day
+ after day, in continuous battles. * * *</p>
+ <p>The Belgians with us at Clermont-Cr&eacute;ans, instead of being a burden, as I
+ had feared, are making themselves useful. They are very welcome. They are gradually
+ recognized and appreciated as estimable people, and are employed in the homes and
+ farms and fields. We should like to have more of them. How we shall regret them when
+ they leave! * * *</p>
+ <p>The German Emperor must stand either as a pacifist or as a conqueror. He cannot
+ pass as both. All the results which may follow this war could well have been obtained
+ in peace by a general effort of good-will. On the other hand, the legacy of the war
+ will be endless rancor, hatred, reprisal, and savagery. When it shall be understood
+ that, in spite of Governments and Parliaments, the war has been, in large part,
+ excited by the manoeuvres of an international band of the dealers in military
+ supplies and by their all-powerful newspapers, when it shall be thoroughly
+ comprehended that these dealers and these newspapers have played with rumors of war
+ as with a scarecrow, for the purpose of keeping up a general condition of disquiet
+ favorable to their sinister operations, then, too late, alas! there will be a
+ revulsion of public opinion to sustain finally those men, like our friends, who have
+ urged arbitration rather than war, and conciliation rather than arbitration.</p>
+ <p>* * * More than ever our motto, "Pro patria per orbis concordiam," will be that of
+ every good patriot who wishes to develop the internal prosperity of his country
+ through friendly foreign relations. * * * More than a century ago you Americans
+ condemned and executed British imperialism; subsequently Europe condemned and
+ executed Napoleonic imperialism; Europe is now going to condemn and execute Germanic
+ imperialism; profit by this threefold lesson to make an end of imperialism in your
+ country, and by your good example to render to Europe an incalculable service.</p>
+ <p>Such an example will be more efficacious than overhasty or superficial
+ intervention, however well intentioned it might be. Above all, beware of offering
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>{149}</span>aid to Europe in
+ a spirit of opportunism rather than of high principle. Especially, do not try to take
+ advantage of some circumstances in order to urge a lame and ephemeral peace. Public
+ opinion will be bitterly divided if the war is brought to an end merely by lassitude
+ and a desire for comfort. Public opinion will accept only a peace inspired with high
+ ideals, without needless humiliation for the conquered, and equally without sacrifice
+ of any principles which have brought together the anti-German coalition.</p>
+ <p>The war itself, however atrocious it has been and still may be, will have been
+ only a commencement, the beginning of continual wars into which the New World will be
+ drawn, if we do not leave the desire of life and the means of living to Germany,
+ conquered but still alive. It is possible to conquer and to exterminate armies, but
+ it is not possible to exterminate a nation of 70,000,000 people. It will then be
+ necessary to make a place for Germany which will permit the exercise of her fecund
+ activity in the struggle of universal competition. If we yield to the temptation to
+ make an end of German competition, we shall neither end the competition nor shall we
+ end war.</p>
+ <p>For years I have repeated this to our English friends who were intoxicated with
+ the theories of Chamberlain. I see without surprise but with sorrow that serious
+ journals of London and Paris spread before the eyes of their readers the absurd idea
+ that this war will kill the German foreign commerce, while the English and French
+ production will be enriched without a rival, and consequently without effort. Place
+ should be made for Germany from Berlin to Vienna in the organization of a general
+ European confederation which will give full satisfaction to Italy at Trieste, will
+ install the Turkish Government in Asia, will bring about an agreement between the
+ Christian Balkan States, and give the free disposal of their destinies to Poland,
+ Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Rumania, and Alsace-Lorraine.</p>
+ <p>In this manner the worst problems on which general peace depends would be solved,
+ and with these problems that of armaments, which it would no longer be dangerous nor
+ humiliating to reduce if the general reduction, extending even to Japan and seconded
+ by all the republics of the New World, were agreed to by all. Certainly such an
+ agreement would be difficult to develop; it would terrify the diplomats, but outside
+ of such an agreement I see in perspective nothing but perpetual war, internal
+ revolution, and general ruin.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Fifth Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 18, 1914.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>* * * The pride of an empire may not be crushed without a bitter struggle. The
+ German Government has at its disposition the live force of a young and growing
+ people. However, the day is coming when that people, aware that they have been
+ deceived, will be able to repudiate their Government, just as the French people did
+ after Sedan. Meanwhile the German armies have stopped their retreat in order to form
+ a new line of resistance. But to what good? This line will be overthrown, and in the
+ end the German Army will be obliged to retreat in disorder and again to cross the
+ land which it has laid waste.</p>
+ <p>The true difficulties, in my opinion, are going to commence when the conquered
+ Germans must submit to the conditions made by the conquerors. The victors will be
+ able to agree, I believe, to stop the war and to dictate conditions. But will they
+ agree to make these conditions moderate? That is the question. At that moment even
+ France will be far from unanimous, as she has been unanimous in defending herself.
+ France is of one opinion on these principal points:</p>
+ <p>1. Alsace-Lorraine ought to be liberated at last, free to return to France; her
+ rights ought to be respected and recognized. Such liberation should extend as far as
+ possible to every country in Europe whose right has been violated.</p>
+ <p>2. We must make an end of ruinous armed peace, invented, so it was said, to
+ prevent war, but which has made war inevitable. German militarism must be crushed
+ unless it is again to become a menace and give the signal for another <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id="page150"></a>{150}</span>competition of
+ armaments. This peace will be only a truce, a sinister comedy, unless it is crowned
+ by a general convention of disarmament, to which Germany must subscribe with all the
+ others and before all the others.</p>
+ <p>3. Arbitration, conciliation, all the means already provided for amicable
+ adjustment, and if possible for the prevention of international conflicts, should be
+ organized on a more solid and more definite basis than in the past, with the
+ sanction, or at least the maximum of necessary precautions, of a federated Europe.
+ All which we have done at The Hague, far from being lost, will serve as a foundation
+ for the building of a pacific federation.</p>
+ <p>On these three points one may prophesy a unanimity almost complete; but the
+ division will begin when it comes to distinguishing between Germany and the empire,
+ between the German people who have a right to live and the German Empire which
+ opposed the right to live; the division will begin when some demand the humiliation
+ of Germany, others the ruin of her colonies, and of her very life. France, who has
+ defended peace, will, I am sure, also defend justice; but justice will not triumph
+ without difficulty. And it is here that the United States will render great service,
+ if the United States has preserved, as one can see so clearly in the Mexican crisis,
+ her moral authority and disinterestedness.</p>
+ <p>In the cuttings from the American papers which you have sent me I have read with
+ great disquietude an article which says that, after all, the United States "will be
+ the beneficiary of the European war." This article claims that the United States may
+ profit very easily by this war to take away from Germany her commerce in the three
+ Americas, &amp;c. It is a dangerous form of reasoning, which, however, is not
+ new.</p>
+ <p>If war has attracted ardent partisans it is because it appeals to the temperament
+ of many people, it flatters their self-pride, but also it serves their interests. I
+ have never understood it as I do at present. I see, for example, the town of Mons
+ enriching itself through the war; caf&eacute;s, restaurants, the hotels, are unable
+ to accommodate all who come to them; the farmers are seen disputing about their
+ products. There are also the military requisitions by which one can profit in getting
+ rid of an old horse, of a wagon, an automobile, &amp;c.; there are the butchers, the
+ bakers, the dealers in cutlery, &amp;c., who have never had so many purchasers; the
+ furnishers of materials for the hospitals, pharmacists, orthopedists, &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>Add to these an immense number of furnishers of military supplies, not only those
+ who sell cannon, arms, and ammunition, but the accessories, the uniforms, material
+ for the transports, and for the administrative work, &amp;c. They are legion. Add to
+ these all the combatants who have been promised positions as officers, Colonels,
+ Generals. * * * Napoleon I. gave titles and honors. * * * You will understand that
+ after the war, if there is an infinite number of unfortunates who mourn and who are
+ ruined by the war, there are others, on the contrary, who have profited very well,
+ who have enriched themselves and been raised to a privileged, fortunate class, who
+ will find it quite natural to demand war or whose children will demand it later;
+ while the mass of unfortunates, without strength, without resources, without
+ protection, will need years to reconquer in peace the rights which they legally
+ enjoyed before the war, and which the war suddenly took from them.</p>
+ <p>If to this class, more powerful than numerous, of natural partisans of the war in
+ Europe you are going to add the American partisans of the European war, you will
+ commit a grave fault, for the Americans have more than ever everything to gain by
+ peace and all to lose in war, which they will not be able to limit if it breaks out
+ again in the world.</p>
+ <p>The truth is that the Americans evidently gain in the war, but they lose more.
+ Europe is something else to them than a market over which to dispute, she is a
+ reservoir of experiences, good and bad, but of experiences which you cannot do
+ without. To wish for the continuation of the war in Europe or even to take <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id="page151"></a>{151}</span>sides with it as a
+ sort of half evil is for the Americans a crime, a sort of suicide; that would be to
+ applaud the destruction of models which civilization seems to have collected for your
+ edification and for your development. Later, the United States can do without many of
+ these lessons which she learns from Europe, but she will always have need of the
+ inspiration of the masterpieces of our civilization. It is only a barbarous reasoning
+ which allows one to see in the European war profit for the United States; it is a
+ loss, a mourning, a shame for the whole world, and particularly for the free
+ countries which are the guides of other peoples and which can only fulfill their
+ mission in times of peace.</p>
+ <p>I have often heard the profits of war discussed. The undertakers of impressive
+ funeral services can also congratulate themselves over catastrophes. A railroad
+ accident which puts an entire country in mourning can enrich them. The most murderous
+ battles bring profit in the final reckoning to somebody, if it is only to the jackals
+ and the crows; but it is the whole of a country, and for the United States it is the
+ whole world, which must be considered, and the more the whole world prospers the more
+ will the United States find friends, collaborators, and clients. The more the world
+ is troubled, on the contrary, the more commerce and general activities will suffer
+ from it, without mention of the development of instruction and of the progress of
+ human thought, which will be paralyzed.</p>
+ <p>I have been surprised to see a serious American paper bring up these old questions
+ for discussion, and I conclude that we are going to feel in Europe the result of our
+ errors. It is going to be necessary to find money to fill up the financial gulf which
+ we dig each day under our feet without realizing it; a gulf twice made, by the
+ billions which it has been necessary to spend for the war, by the billions of
+ ordinary income which must now go by default. We cannot reasonably expect that
+ Germany will be able to pay all the deficits in France, England, Russia, Belgium, and
+ Japan; she will have no longer her foreign commerce; her misery is going to be
+ frightful; it will be necessary then that each of the adversaries which she has so
+ rashly provoked limit his demands; we must ourselves limit her ruin unless our own
+ credit shall be ruined also.</p>
+ <p>In a word, there are two victories equally difficult for the Allies to win: the
+ first over Germany, the second over themselves. Let us prepare ourselves to the
+ uttermost and with all the authority which we can husband to facilitate the first
+ here, and from your side as well as from ours, the second. To make war there is the
+ first difficulty; but to finish well, that is what makes me anxious for the
+ future.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Sixth Letter.</b></p>
+ <p>PARIS, Sept. 24, 1914.</p>
+ <p>In spite of all, unity of purpose is maintained among the Allies as well as among
+ Frenchmen. I say in spite of all, because at Berlin this was hardly believed possible
+ at the beginning of the war.</p>
+ <p>* * * All the men have left Cr&eacute;ans; my farm is empty, and as I told you,
+ the work is accomplished just the same. Means are found to feed the wounded English,
+ becoming more and more numerous, the wounded Belgians and the prisoners. At the mill
+ the miller's wife has four sons and a son-in-law in the army. I went to see her; not
+ a tear, she looked straight before her absorbed in her work and said only "It is
+ necessary." She continues her work as yesterday, as always, only with more energy and
+ seriousness than formerly, with the purpose to accomplish double.</p>
+ <p>Meanwhile in spite of lack of news, we are beginning to learn that many sons,
+ husbands, fathers, and brothers whom we saw go away will never return. Each day a few
+ of the wounded are buried, and so it is in all the communities in the country which
+ are not occupied by the Germans. In every town, village, home, and heart the national
+ tribulations have their local echo.</p>
+ <p>If all France were victim of a catastrophe of nature, an earthquake, a
+ conflagration, or a flood, the country would be crushed; but, no, the contrary is now
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>{152}</span>true, for the
+ present catastrophe has been brought about by an evil will and each one comprehends
+ that this will, if left free to act, will continue to do evil until it has been
+ crushed. We have neither the time nor the wish to complain; we fight. * * *</p>
+ <p>The people, all those who are now devoted to my policy, to our policy, remain more
+ faithful than ever. They keep silent awaiting the end of the war and knowing well
+ that in fact it is not so much a question of Germany as of German reaction, German
+ imperialism, and German militarism. They know also that if the German reaction might
+ have been crushed sooner, the war would not have broken out. Thus, far from being
+ blind, public opinion is alive to the truth. The grandeur, and to speak the whole
+ truth, alas, the beauty of the atrocious war is that it is a war of liberation. * *
+ *</p>
+ <p>It is impossible that the New World should remain a simple spectator before the
+ gigantic struggle which is progressing in Europe. I do not ask that the New World
+ intervene by armed force, but that it shall not conceal its opinion, its aversion for
+ that horror which is called reaction and which truly is only death; that it shall not
+ conceal its indignation for the abominable calculation of that reaction which is
+ incapable of comprehending anything of the life, the work, the science and the art of
+ human genius. I ask that the New World shall not remain skeptical before the senile
+ attacks of those armies which respect nothing, neither women, children, old men,
+ unfortified cities, museums, nor cathedrals. * * *</p>
+ <p>It is impossible that the free United States, born out of the sacred struggle
+ against European domination, enlarged, enriched, and ennobled by that struggle, and
+ now in the front rank among nations as the fruit of that struggle, should hesitate
+ between revolution and reaction, between right and conquest, between peace and
+ war.</p>
+ <p>Americans are too generous to hesitate, too wise, also, for Prussian reaction is
+ cracking and is going to crumble; even Americans of German origin would be acting
+ against their own fatherland if they, by their sympathies, should sustain the
+ r&eacute;gime of caporalism which is now destroying it.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Vital Energies of France</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Henri Bergson.</h3>
+ <h4>From The Bulletin des Armees, Nov. 5, 1914.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The issue of the war is not doubtful: Germany will succumb. Material force and
+ moral force, all that sustains her will end by failing her because she lives on
+ provisions garnered once for all, because she wastes them and will not know how to
+ renew them.</p>
+ <p>Everything has been said about her material resources. She has money, but her
+ credit is sinking, and it is not apparent where she can borrow. She needs nitrates
+ for her explosives, oil for her motors, bread for her sixty-five millions of
+ inhabitants. For all this she has made provision, but the day will come when her
+ granaries will be empty and her reservoirs dry. How will she fill them? War as she
+ practices it consumes a frightful number of her men, and here, too, all
+ revitalization is impossible; no aid will come from without, since an enterprise
+ launched to impose German domination, German "culture," German products, does not and
+ never will interest those who are not Germans. Such is the situation of Germany
+ confronting a France who keeps her credit intact and her ports open, who procures
+ provisions and ammunition according to her need, who reinforces her army with all
+ that her Al<span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>{153}</span>lies
+ bring to her, and who can count&mdash;since her cause is that of humanity
+ itself&mdash;upon the increasingly active sympathy of the civilized world.</p>
+ <p>But it is not merely a question of material force, of visible force. What of the
+ moral force that cannot be seen and that is more important than the other&mdash;which
+ to a certain degree can be supplied&mdash;that is essential, since without it nothing
+ avails?</p>
+ <p>The moral energy of nations, like that of individuals, can only be sustained by
+ some ideal superior to themselves, stronger than they are, to which they can cling
+ with a strong grip when they feel their courage vacillate. Where lies the ideal of
+ contemporary Germany? The time has past when her philosophers proclaimed the
+ inviolability of justice, the eminent dignity of the person, (the individual?), the
+ obligation laid upon nations to respect one another. Germany militarized by Prussia
+ has thrust far from her those noble ideas which came to her formerly for the most
+ part from the France of the eighteenth century and the Revolution. She has made for
+ herself a new soul, or rather, she has docilely accepted that which Bismarck has
+ given her. To that statesman has been attributed the famous phrase: "Might makes
+ right." As a matter of fact Bismarck never said it, because he was unable to
+ distinguish between might and right; in his eyes right was simply that which is
+ desired by the strongest, that which is declared in the law imposed by the victor
+ upon the vanquished. His whole moral philosophy is summed up in that. The Germany of
+ the present knows no other. She also worships brute force. And as she believes
+ herself strongest she is entirely absorbed in adoration of herself. Her energy has
+ its origin in this pride. Her moral force is only the confidence by which her
+ material force inspires her. That is to say, that here also she lives on her
+ reserves, that she has no means of revitalization. Long before England was blockading
+ her coasts she had blockaded herself, morally, by isolating herself from all ideals
+ capable of revivifying her.</p>
+ <p>Therefore she will see her strength and her courage worn out. But the energy of
+ our soldiers is linked to something which cannot be worn out, to an ideal of justice
+ and liberty. Time has no hold on us. To a force nourished only by its own brutality
+ we oppose one that seeks outside of itself, above itself, a principle of life and of
+ renewal. While the former is little by little exhausted, the latter is constantly
+ revived. The former already is tottering, the latter remains unshaken. Be without
+ fear: the one will be destroyed by the other.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>France Through English Eyes</b></h2>
+ <h4>With Rene Bazin's Appreciation.</h4>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Referring to the article printed below, which appeared in The London Times
+ Literary Supplement of Oct. 1, and which the French Government ordered to be read
+ in all Parisian schools, M. Rene Bazin writes in l'Echo de Paris:</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Is not this language admirable? What full and flowing phrases. They are like a
+ ship filled with grain sailing into port with her sails full. Preserve them, these
+ fugitive lines written by a neighbor, and read them to your children. They will teach
+ them the greatness of France and the greatness of England.</p>
+ <p>The whole world recognizes two qualities in the Englishman: his bravery and his
+ common sense. We know that the Englishman is true to his given word, and that even in
+ the antipodes he never changes his habits. As I write, the postman brings me a letter
+ from the front, dated Oct. 17. The cavalryman who sends it tells of our Allies. "We
+ are fighting the enemy's cavalry," he writes, "and for two days my brigade was in
+ action with the British. They know how to fight and they astonish us by their
+ marvelous <span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id="page154"></a>{154}</span>powers
+ of organization and their coolness."</p>
+ <p>Yes, we know that of old. We also know that England never closes her doors to
+ liberty. We have a confused memory of the hospitality given to our priests in the
+ times of the Revolution. Now England provides us with fresh proof of her kindness of
+ heart. You have heard the news&mdash;the professors and students of the Catholic
+ University of Louvain invited to Cambridge. The destroyed Belgian university
+ reconstituted in the home of the celebrated English university. What a magnificent
+ idea!</p>
+ <p>I do not know whether the author who has spoken so well of France in the great
+ English newspaper has ever visited this country. But he has surely meditated on our
+ history and has divined the reason of the very existence of France; why she merits
+ love beyond her frontiers, and why she should be defended "like a treasure." England
+ is not made up of traders, soldiers, sailors, politicians, but also&mdash;and that is
+ what the French people will learn better every day&mdash;of poets, subtle
+ philosophers, and of thoughtful and religious spirits.</p>
+ <p>In truth, the day which Joan of Arc foresaw has arrived. She did not hate the
+ English. It was only their intolerable rule of the kingdom which was hateful to her.
+ The good maid of Lorraine said that after having driven the English out of France she
+ would reconcile them with the French and lead them together in a crusade. This has
+ become true. Her dream is accomplished. The crusade is not against the Saracens, but
+ it is a crusade all the same.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>France through English Eyes</b></h2>
+ <h4>From The London Times Literary Supplement</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Among all the sorrows of this war there is one joy for us in it: that it has made
+ us brothers with the French as no other two nations have ever been brothers before.
+ There has come to us, after ages of conflict, a kind of millennium of friendship; and
+ in that we feel there is a hope for the world that outweighs all our fears, even at
+ the height of the worldwide calamity. There were days and days, during the swift
+ German advance, when we feared that the French armies were no match for the German,
+ that Germany would be conquered on the seas and from her eastern frontier, that after
+ the war France would remain a power only through the support of her Allies. For that
+ fear we must now ask forgiveness; but at least we can plead in excuse that it was
+ unselfish and free from all national vanity. If, in spite of ultimate victory, France
+ had lost her high place among the nations, we should have felt that the victory
+ itself was an irreparable loss for the world. And now we may speak frankly of that
+ fear because, however unfounded it was, it reveals the nature of the friendship
+ between France and England.</p>
+ <p>That is also revealed in the praise which the French have given to our army. There
+ is no people that can praise as they can: for they enjoy praising others as much as
+ some nations enjoy praising themselves, and they lose all the reserve of egotism in
+ the pleasure of praising well. But in this case they have praised so generously
+ because there was a great kindliness behind their praise, because they, like us, feel
+ that this war means a new brotherhood stronger than all the hatreds it may provoke, a
+ brotherhood not only of war but of the peace that is to come after it. That welcome
+ of English soldiers in the villages of France, with food and wine and flowers, is
+ only a foretaste of what is to be in both countries in a happier time. It is what we
+ have desired in the past of silly wrangles and misunderstandings, and now we know
+ that our desire is fulfilled.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"That Sweet Enemy."</b></p>
+ <p>For behind all those misunderstandings, and in spite of the difference of
+ character between us, there was always an understanding which showed itself in <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>{155}</span>the courtesies of
+ Fontenoy and a hundred other battles. When Sir Philip Sidney spoke of France as that
+ sweet enemy, he made a phrase for the English feeling of centuries past and centuries
+ to be. We quarrelled bitterly and long; but it was like a man and woman who know that
+ some day their love will be confessed and are angry with each other for the quarrels
+ that delay the confession. We called each other ridiculous, and knew that we were
+ talking nonsense; indeed, as in all quarrels without real hatred, we made charges
+ against each other that were the opposite of the truth. We said that the French were
+ frivolous; and they said that we were gloomy. Now they see the gayety of our soldiers
+ and we see the deep seriousness of all France at this crisis of her fate. She, of all
+ the nations at war, is fighting with the least help from illusion, with the least
+ sense of glory and romance. To her the German invasion is like a pestilence; to
+ defeat it is merely a necessity of her existence; and in defeating it she is showing
+ the courage of doctors and nurses, that courage which is furthest removed from animal
+ instinct and most secure from panic reaction. There is no sign in France now of the
+ passionate hopes of the revolutionary wars; 1870 is between them and her; she has
+ learned, like no other nation in Europe, the great lesson of defeat, which is not to
+ mix material dreams with spiritual; she has passed beyond illusions, yet her spirit
+ is as high as if it were drunk with all the illusions of Germany.</p>
+ <p>And that is why we admire her as we have never admired a nation before. We
+ ourselves are an old and experienced people, who have, we hope, outlived gaudy and
+ dangerous dreams; but we have not been tested like the French, and we do not know
+ whether we or any other nation could endure the test they have endured. It is not
+ merely that they have survived and kept their strength. It is that they have a kind
+ of strength new to nations, such as we see in beautiful women who have endured great
+ sorrows and outlived all the triumphs and passions of their youth, who smile where
+ once they laughed; and yet they are more beautiful than ever, and seem to live with a
+ purpose that is not only their own, but belongs to the whole of life. So now we feel
+ that France is fighting not merely for her own honor and her own beautiful country,
+ still less for a triumph over an arrogant rival, but for what she means to all the
+ world; and that now she means far more than ever in the past.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Furia Francese.</b></p>
+ <p>This quarrel, as even the Germans confess, was not made by her. She saw it
+ gathering, and she was as quiet as if she hoped to escape war by submission. The
+ chance of revenge was offered as it had never been offered in forty years; yet she
+ did not stir to grasp it. Her enemy gave every provocation, yet she stayed as still
+ as if she were spiritless; and all the while she was the proudest nation on the
+ earth, so proud that she did not need to threaten or boast. Then came the first
+ failure, and she took it as if she had expected nothing better. She had to make war
+ in a manner wholly contrary to her nature and genius, and she made it as if patience,
+ not fire, were the main strength of her soul. Yet behind the new patience the old
+ fire persisted; and the <i>Furia Francese</i> is only waiting for its chance. The
+ Germans believe they have determined all the conditions of modern war, and, indeed of
+ all modern competition between the nations to suit their own national character. It
+ is their age, they think, an age in which the qualities of the old peoples, England
+ and France, are obsolete. They make war, after their own pattern, and we have only to
+ suffer it as long as we can. But France has learned what she needs from Germany so
+ that she may fight the German idea as well as the German armies; and when the German
+ armies were checked before Paris there was an equal check to the German idea. Then
+ the world, which was holding its breath, knew that the old nations, the old faith and
+ mind and conscience of Europe, were still standing fast and that science had not
+ utterly betrayed them all to the new barbarism. Twice before, at Tours and in the
+ Cata<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id="page156"></a>{156}</span>launian
+ fields, there had been such a fight upon the soil of France, and now for the third
+ time it is the heavy fate and the glory of France to be the guardian nation. That is
+ not an accident, for France is still the chief treasury of all that these conscious
+ barbarians would destroy. They knew that while she stands unbroken there is a spirit
+ in her that will make their Kultur seem unlovely to all the world. They know that in
+ her, as in Athens long ago, thought remains passionate and disinterested and free.
+ Their thought is German and exercised for German ends, like their army; but hers can
+ forget France in the universe, and for that reason her armies and ours will fight for
+ it as if the universe were at stake. Many forms has that thought taken, passing
+ through disguises and errors, mocking at itself, mocking at the holiest things; and
+ yet there has always been the holiness of freedom in it. The French blasphemer has
+ never blasphemed against the idea of truth even when he mistook falsehood for it. In
+ the Terror he said there was no God, because he believed there was none, but he never
+ said that France was God so that he might encourage her to conquer the world.
+ Voltaire was an imp of destruction perhaps, but with what a divine lightning of
+ laughter would he have struck the Teutonic Antichrist, and how the everlasting soul
+ of France would have risen in him if he could have seen her most sacred church, the
+ visible sign of her faith and her genius, ruined by the German guns. Was there ever a
+ stupidity so worthy of his scorn as this attempt to bombard the spirit? For, though
+ the temple is ruined, the faith remains; and whatever war the Germans may make upon
+ the glory of the past, it is the glory of the future that France fights for. Whatever
+ wounds she suffers now she is suffering for all mankind; and now, more than ever
+ before in her history, are those words become true which one poet who loved her gave
+ to her in the Litany of Nations crying to the earth:</p>
+ I am she that was thy sign and standard bearer,<br />
+ <span style='margin-left: 2em;'>Thy voice and cry;</span><br />
+ She that washed thee with her blood and left thee fairer,<br />
+ <span style='margin-left: 2em;'>The same am I.</span><br />
+ Are not these the hands that raised thee fallen, and fed thee,<br />
+ <span style='margin-left: 2em;'>These hands defiled?</span><br />
+ Am not I thy tongue that spake, thine eye that led thee,<br />
+ <span style='margin-left: 2em;'>Not I thy child?</span><br />
+
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Soldier of 1914</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Rene Doumic.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>In spite of the great European war, which struck France with the full force
+ of its horrors, the Institute of France, which includes the world-famous French
+ Academy, held its regular session on Oct. 26 last. The feature of this session,
+ widely heralded beforehand, was the address of the celebrated critic, M. Rene
+ Doumic of the Academy, on "The Soldier of 1914." "Every sentence, every word of it,
+ was punctuated with acclamations from the audience," says Le Figaro in its report.
+ Below is a translation of M. Doumic's address:</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The soldier of 1914. We think only of him. We live only for him, just as we live
+ only through him. I have not chosen this subject; it has forced itself upon me. My
+ only regret is that I come here in academician's costume, with its useless sword, to
+ speak to you about those whose uniforms are torn by bullets, whose rifles are black
+ with powder.</p>
+ <p>And I am ashamed, above all, of placing so feeble a voice at the service of so
+ great a cause. But what do words matter, when the most brilliant of them would pale
+ before acts of which each day makes us the witnesses? For these acts we have only
+ words, but let us hope that these, coming from the heart, may bring <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>{157}</span>to those who are
+ fighting for their country somewhere near the frontier the spirit of our gratitude
+ and the fervor of our admiration.</p>
+ <p>Our history is nothing but the history of French valor, so ingenious in adopting
+ new forms and adapting itself each time to the changing conditions of warfare.
+ Soldiers of the King or of the republic, old "grognards" of Napoleon, who always
+ growled yet followed just the same, youngsters who bit their cartridges with childish
+ lips, veterans of fights in Africa, cuirassieurs of Reichshofen, gardes-mobiles of
+ the Loire, all, at the moment of duty and sacrifice, did everything that France
+ expected of her sons.</p>
+ <p>So, too, for this war, the soldier needed has arisen. After so many heroes he has
+ invented a new form of heroism.</p>
+ <p>I say the soldier, for the soldier is what one must say. Here begins what is
+ clearly expressed in one phrase only&mdash;the French miracle. This national union in
+ which all opinions have become fused is merely a reflection of the unity which has
+ been suddenly created in our army.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>When War Broke Out.</b></p>
+ <p>When war broke out it found military France ready and armed; mere troopers,
+ officers none of whom ever thought that he would one day lead his men under fire, and
+ that admirable General Staff which, never allowing itself to be deflected from its
+ purpose, did its work silent and aloof.</p>
+ <p>But there was beside this France another France, the France of civilians,
+ accustomed by long years of peace to disbelieve in war; which, in conjuring up a
+ picture of Europe delivered over to fire and blood, could not conceive that any human
+ being in the world would assume the responsibility for such an act before history.
+ War surprised the employe at his desk, the workman in his workshop, the peasant in
+ his field. It snatched them from the intimacy of their hearths, from the amenities of
+ family life which in France is sweeter than elsewhere. These men were obliged to
+ leave behind beings whom they loved tenderly. For the last time they clasped in their
+ arms the beloved partners of their lives, so deeply moved yet so proud, and their
+ children, the eldest of whom have understood and will never forget. And all of them,
+ artist and artisan, priest and teacher, those who dreamed of revenge and those who
+ dreamed of the fraternity of nations, those of every mind, every profession, every
+ age, as they stepped into their places, were endowed with the soul of the soldier of
+ France, every one of them, and became thus the same soldier.</p>
+ <p>The war which lay in wait for these men, many of whom did not seem made for war,
+ was a war of which nobody had ever seen the like. We have heard tell of wars of
+ giants, of battles of nations, but nobody had ever seen a war extending from the
+ Marne to the Vistula, nor battles with a front of hundreds of kilometers, lasting
+ weeks without respite day or night, fought by millions of men. Never in its worst
+ nightmares had hallucinated imagination conjured up the progress made in the art of
+ mowing down human lives. The German Army, to which the German Nation has never
+ refused anything, either moral support or money, the nerve of war, has been able to
+ profit by all this progress, to reduce to a formula the violence which drives forward
+ the attack, to prepare the spy system which watches over the unarmed foe, to organize
+ even incendiarism, and to become thus, forged by forty-four years of hatred, the most
+ formidable tool of destruction that has ever sown ruin and death.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>German Meets Belgian.</b></p>
+ <p>The Germans arrived, with the irresistible impetus of their masses, with the fury
+ of a tempest, with the roar of thunder, enraged at having been confronted on their
+ road by that little Belgian Nation which has just inscribed its name among the first
+ on the roster of heroism. Already the German chiefs imagined themselves lords of
+ Paris, which they threatened to reduce to ashes&mdash;and which did not tremble.</p>
+ <p>It was to meet this colossus of war that our little soldier marched forth. And he
+ made it fall back.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id="page158"></a>{158}</span>To this new
+ war he brings his old qualities, the qualities of all time. Courage&mdash;let us not
+ speak of that. Can one speak of courage? Just read the short sentences in the army
+ orders.</p>
+ <p>Corporal Voituret of the Second Dragoons, mortally wounded on a reconnoissance,
+ cries: "Vive la France! I die for her! I die happy!" Private Chabannes of the
+ Eighteenth Chasseurs, unhorsed and wounded, replies to the Major who asks him why he
+ had not surrendered: "We Frenchmen never surrender!" And remember those who, mortally
+ wounded, stick to their posts so as to fight to the end with their men, and those
+ wounded men who have but one desire&mdash;every one of us can vouch for this&mdash;to
+ return to the firing line! And that one who, hopelessly mutilated, said to me: "It is
+ not being crippled that hurts me; it is that I shall not be able to see the best part
+ of the thing!" These, and the others, the thousands of others, shall we speak of
+ their courage? &mdash;what would it mean to speak of their courage?</p>
+ <p>And the dash of them!&mdash;the only criticism to which they lay themselves open
+ is that they are too fiery, that they do not wait the right moment for the charge, in
+ order to drive back the enemy at the point of the bayonet. What spirit! What gayety!
+ All the letters from our soldiers are overflowing with cheerfulness. Where, for
+ instance, does that nickname come from applied by them to the enemy&mdash;the
+ "Boches"? It comes from where so many more have come; its author is nobody and
+ everybody; it is the spontaneous product of that Gallic humor which jokes at danger,
+ takes liberities with it.</p>
+ <p>What pride! What sense of honor! Whereas the German officer, posted behind his
+ men, drives them forward like a flock of sheep, revolver in his hand and insults on
+ his lips, we, on our side, hear nothing but those beautiful, those radiant words:
+ "Forward! For your country!"&mdash;the call of the French officer to his children,
+ whom he impels forward by giving them the example, by plunging under fire first,
+ before all of them, at their head.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Password: "Smile!"</b></p>
+ <p>And&mdash;supreme adornment of all&mdash;with what grace they deck their
+ gallantry! A few seconds before being killed by an exploding shell, Col. Doury,
+ ordered to resist to the last gasp, replies: "All right! We will resist. And now,
+ boys, here is the password: Smile!" It is like a flower thrown on the scientific
+ brutality of modern war, that memory of the days when men went to war with lace on
+ their sleeves. There we recognize the French soldier such as we have always known him
+ through fifteen centuries of the history of France.</p>
+ <p>But now we look upon him in a form of which we did not suspect the existence, the
+ form in which he has just revealed himself to us.</p>
+ <p>To go forward is all very well; but to fall back in good order, to understand that
+ a retreat may be a masterpiece of strategy, to find in himself that other kind of
+ courage which consists in not getting discouraged, to be able to wait without getting
+ demoralized, to preserve unshaken the certainty of the final outcome&mdash;in these
+ things lies a virtue which we did not know we possessed: the virtue of patience. It
+ won us our victory of the Marne. One man is its personification today, that great
+ chief, wise and prudent, who spares his men, who makes up his mind not to give battle
+ except in his own time on his own ground, that chief toward whom at this moment the
+ calm and confident eyes of the entire country are turned.</p>
+ <p>To carry a position by assault is one thing. But to stand impassive in a rain of
+ shot, amid exploding shells, amid infernal din and blinding smoke; to fire at an
+ invisible enemy, to dispute foot by foot ground covered with traps, to retake the
+ same village ten times, to burrow into the soil and crouch there, to watch day after
+ day for the moment when the beast at bay ventures from his lair&mdash;where have we
+ acquired the phlegmatic coolness for such things? Has it come from the proximity of
+ our English allies? <span class="pagenum"><a name="page159"
+ id="page159"></a>{159}</span>It is in the English reports that we read the eulogies
+ of our army for its endurance and tenacity.</p>
+ <p>We have always known how to pluck the laurels of the brave on fields of battle and
+ to water them with our blood. We Frenchmen, all of us, are lovers of glory. The
+ stories of war which we read in our childhood days&mdash;captures of redoubts, fiery
+ charges, furious fights around the flag&mdash;made us thrill. And, like the Athenians
+ who left the performance of a tragedy by Aeschylus thirsting to close their books and
+ march on the enemy, we dreamed of combats in which we were to win fame.</p>
+ <p>But since those days military literature has undergone somewhat of a change, and
+ the communiqu&eacute;s which we devour twice a day, hungry for news, give us no such
+ tales of prowess.</p>
+ <p>"On the left wing we have progressed. On the right wing we have repulsed violent
+ counter-attacks. On the front the situation remains without change." Where are our
+ men? What troops are meant? What Generals? Nothing is told of such things. The veil
+ of anonymity shrouds great actions, a barrier of impenetrable mystery protects the
+ secret of the operations.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Great Things Done Simply.</b></p>
+ <p>Our soldiers have endured every hardship, braved every danger, never knowing
+ whether each dawning day was their last, yet the cleverest manoeuvring, the most
+ gallant feats, are obliterated, effaced, lost, in the calculated colorlessness of an
+ enigmatic report. But that sacrifice also have they made. To be at the post assigned
+ to them, to play a great or infinitesimal role in the common work, is the only reward
+ they desire. Can it be that the disease of individualism is a thing of yesterday? The
+ soldier of 1914 has cured us of it. Never have disinterestedness and modesty been
+ pushed so far.</p>
+ <p>Let us say it in a word: Never have great things been done so simply.</p>
+ <p>But he knows why he is fighting. It is not for the ambition of a sovereign or the
+ impatience of his heir, for the arrogance of a caste of country squires or the profit
+ of a firm of merchants. No; he fights for the land where he was born and where his
+ dead sleep; he fights to free his invaded country and give her back her lost
+ provinces, for her past, struck to the heart by the shells that bombarded the
+ Cathedral of Rheims; he fights so that his children may have the right to think,
+ speak, and feel in French, so that there may still be in the world a French race,
+ which the world needs. For this war of destruction is aimed at the destruction of our
+ race, and our race has been moved to its depths. It has risen as one man and
+ assembled together; it has called up from its remotest history all its energy, in
+ order to reincarnate them in the person of him whose duty is to defend the race
+ today; it has inspired in him the valor of the knights of old, the endurance of the
+ laborer bending over his furrow, the modesty of the old masters who made of our
+ cathedrals masterpieces of anonymity, the honesty of the bourgeois, the patience of
+ humble folk, the consciousness of duty which mothers teach to their children, all
+ those virtues which, developed from one generation to another, become a tradition,
+ the tradition of an industrious people, made strong by a long past and made to
+ endure. It is these qualities, all of them together, which we admire in the soldier
+ of 1914, the complete and superb type of the entire race.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Holy Intoxication.</b></p>
+ <p>When it has such an aim, the noblest of all, war is sublime; all who go into it
+ are as if transfigured. It exalts, expands, and purifies souls. On approaching the
+ battlefield a holy intoxication, a holy happiness, takes possession of those for whom
+ has been reserved the supreme joy of braving death for their country. Death is
+ everywhere, but they do not believe in it any more. And when, on certain mornings, to
+ the sound of cannon that mix their rumblings with mystic voices of bells, in the
+ devastated church which cries to the heavens through every breach opened in its
+ walls, the Chaplain <span class="pagenum"><a name="page160"
+ id="page160"></a>{160}</span>blesses the regiment that he will accompany the next
+ minute to the firing line, every head will be bent at the same time and all will feel
+ on their brows the breath of God.</p>
+ <p>Alas! the beauty of the struggle does not hide from me its sadness. How many went
+ away, full of youth and hope, to return no more. How many have fallen already without
+ seeing realized what they so ardently desired; sowers they, who to make the land
+ fertile have watered it with their blood, yet will not see the harvest.</p>
+ <p>But at least their sacrifice will not have been in vain. They have brought
+ reconciliation to their divided country, they have made her become conscious of
+ herself again, they have made her learn enthusiasm once again. They have not seen
+ victory, but they have merited it. Honor to them, struck down first, and glory to
+ those who will avenge them! We enfold them both in our devotion to the same sacred
+ cause.</p>
+ <p>Would that a new era might dawn, thanks to them, that a new world might be born in
+ which we might breathe more freely, where injustices centuries old might be made
+ good, where France, arising from long humiliation, might resume her rank and destiny.
+ Then, in that cured, vivified France, what an awakening, what a renewal, what a sap,
+ what a magnificent flowering there would be! This will be thy work, soldier of 1914!
+ To you we shall owe this resurrection of our beloved country. And later on, and
+ always, in everything beautiful and good that may be done among us, in the creations
+ of our poets and the discoveries of our savants, in the thousand forms of national
+ activity, in the strength of our young men and the grace of our young women, in all
+ that will be the France of tomorrow, there will be, soldier so brave and so simple in
+ your greatness, a little of your heroic soul!</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Germany's Civilized Barbarism</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Emile Boutroux.</h3>
+ <h4>From the Revue des Deux Mondes.</h4>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>I sincerely thank M. Emile Boutroux for the letter he has been good enough to
+ write to me; and the readers of the Revue will join me, for it is addressed to them
+ also. No one could speak of Germany more authoritatively than M. Boutroux; no one,
+ indeed, is better acquainted with the Germany of yesterday and that of today, or
+ better equipped to draw a comparison between them, which for the Prussianized Germany
+ of the present is a verdict and a condemnation. The violence, brutality, barbarism
+ which she displays&mdash;a frightful spectacle&mdash;doubtless spring from the
+ deepest instincts of race; but man always feels the need of justifying his conduct,
+ and the Germans are too much philosophers not to seek justification for theirs in a
+ scientific system in which these doctrinaires of a new sort are encouraged to
+ persevere without the least scruple or pity. M. Boutroux explains to us the
+ detestable sophism which has perverted the entire German soul and made of a nation
+ which our grandfathers loved and admired, a monster whose implacable egotism weighs
+ heavily on the world. But let M. Boutroux speak.</p>
+ <p>FRANCIS CHARMES.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <br />
+
+ <p>PARIS, 28 September, 1914.</p>
+ <p>To the Director of the Revue des Deux Mondes:</p>
+ <p>Mr. Director and Dear Colleague: You have done me the honor to ask me, as I have
+ lived in Germany and studied in part German philosophy and literature, whether I was
+ not prepared to submit some observations touching the present war. I confess that at
+ this moment words, and even thoughts, seem to me to amount to little. Like every
+ French<span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>{161}</span>man, I am
+ given up wholly to the task of the hour; all my interest is in our generous and
+ admirable army, and my sole concern is to take part, however modestly, in the work of
+ the nation. True, a thousand memories and reflections crowd my mind; the notion of
+ pausing to express them in writing had not occurred to me, but it would be ungracious
+ in me to decline your kind invitation. Please omit from the ideas I throw on paper
+ whatever seems to you to be lacking in interest.</p>
+ <center>
+ <br />
+ <a href="images/harrison.jpg"><img src='images/harrison_thumb.jpg' width='254'
+ height='400' alt='FREDERIC HARRISON. See Page 192' title='FREDERIC HARRISON' /></a>
+ <a href="images/guyot.jpg"><img src='images/guyot_thumb.jpg' width='249'
+ height='400' alt='YVES GUYOT. See Page 194' title='YVES GUYOT' /></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>FREDERIC HARRISON. See <a href="#page192">Page 192</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>YVES GUYOT. See Page <a href="#page194">194</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Mephistopheles Appears.</b></p>
+ <p>In the presence of such events as are passing before our eyes, how can we keep our
+ minds free? We have to say to ourselves: "See what has come of that philosophic,
+ artistic, scientific development whose grandeur and idealistic character all the
+ world has proclaimed!" "That is what the infernal cur had in his belly," said Faust
+ as he saw the dog which was playing at his side change into Mephistopheles. What!
+ Having declared the morality of Plato and Aristotle inadequate and mediocre, having
+ preached duty for duty's sake, having established the unconditioned supremacy of
+ moral worth, the royalty of the intellect, to end by officially declaring that a
+ signed engagement is but a scrap of paper, and that juridic or moral laws do not
+ count if they incommode us and if we are the strongest! Having given to the world
+ marvelous music, in which the purest and deepest aspirations seem to be heard; having
+ raised art and poetry to a sort of religion, in which man communes with the Eternal
+ by the worship of the ideal; having exalted the universities as the most sublime of
+ human creations, temples of science and of intellectual freedom, to come to
+ bombarding Louvain, Malines, and the Cathedral of Rheims! Having assumed the role of
+ representative par excellence of culture, of civilization in its loftiest form, at
+ the end to aim at the subjugation of the world and to strive toward that aim by the
+ methodical letting loose of brute force, wickedness, and barbarism! To boast of
+ having attained the highest plane of human nature, and to reveal themselves as
+ survivors of the Huns and Vandals!</p>
+ <p>Only yesterday Germany was feared throughout the world because of her power, but
+ esteemed for her science and her heritage of idealism. Today, on the contrary, there
+ is a common cry of reprobation and horror raised against her from one end of the
+ earth to the other. Fear is overcome by indignation. On every side it is asserted
+ that the victory of German imperialism and militarism would be the triumph of
+ despotism, brutality, and barbarism. These ideas are expressed to us by Americans of
+ the North and South, by Spaniards, Italians, Greeks, Swiss, and Rumanians. The nation
+ which burned the University of Louvain and the Cathedral of Rheims has brought
+ dishonor upon itself.</p>
+ <p>What shall we think of the prodigious contrast which manifests itself between the
+ high culture of Germany and the end at which she aims, the means which she employs in
+ the present war? Is it enough to explain this contrast, to allege that in spite of
+ all their science the Germans are but slightly civilized, that in the sixteenth
+ century they were still boorish and uncultivated and that their science, an affair of
+ specialists and pundits, has never penetrated their soul or influenced their
+ character?</p>
+ <p>This explanation is justified. Consider the German professor in the beer garden,
+ in the relations of everyday life, in his amusements. With certain notable exceptions
+ he excels only in discovering and collecting materials for study and in drawing from
+ them, by mechanical operations, solutions that rest wholly upon text and argument and
+ make no appeal whatever to ordinary judgment and good sense. What a disproportion
+ often between his science and his real education. What vulgarity of tastes and
+ sentiments and language. What brutality of methods on the part of this man whose
+ authority is indisputable in his specialty. Take this learned man from his university
+ chair, place him on that scene of war where force can alone reign and where the gross
+ appetites are un<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162"
+ id="page162"></a>{162}</span>chained, it is not surprising that his conduct
+ approaches that of savages.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Culture of Violence.</b></p>
+ <p>That is the current judgment and not without reason. The savant and the man, among
+ the Germans, are only too often strangers to each other. The German in war is inhuman
+ not merely because of an explosion of his true nature, gross and violent, but by
+ order. His brutality is calculated and systematized. It justifies the words of La
+ Harpe, "There is such a thing as a scientific barbarity." In 1900 the German Emperor
+ haranguing his soldiers about to set sail for China, exhorted them to leave nothing
+ living in their path and to bear themselves like Huns.</p>
+ <p>If, then, in this war, in the manner in which they have prepared and provoked it
+ and now conduct it, they violate without scruple the laws of the civilized world, it
+ is not despite their superior culture, it is in consequence of that very culture.
+ They are barbarous because they are more civilized. How can such a combination of
+ contradictory elements, such a synthesis, be possible?</p>
+ <p>Fichte in the famous discourses to the German Nation which he delivered at the
+ University of Berlin during the Winter of 1807 and 1808, had one object: to arouse
+ the German Nation by kindling its self-consciousness, that is to say, its pure
+ Germanic essence, <i>Deutschheit</i>, in order to realize that essence when possible
+ beyond its borders and to make it dominate the world. The general idea which must
+ guide Germany in the accomplishment of this double task is: Germany is to all the
+ rest of the world as good is to evil.</p>
+ <p>The appeal of Fichte was heard. During the century which followed, Germany in the
+ most precise and practical manner, on the one hand built up the theory of Germanism
+ or <i>Deutschtum</i>, on the other hand prepared the domination of Germanism in the
+ world. This notion of Germanism furnishes, if I am not mistaken, the principle of the
+ inference which I wish to indicate, the explanation of the surprising solidarity
+ which Germans have created between culture and barbarism.</p>
+ <p>It would be interesting to probe this notion and follow its development.</p>
+ <p>In the first place how can a people come to claim for its ideas, its virtue, its
+ achievements, not only the right to exist and to be respected by other people, but
+ the privilege of being the sole expression of the true and the good while everything
+ which emanates from other peoples represents nothing but error and evil?</p>
+ <p>The philosopher Fichte after having built up his system under the influence of
+ Kant and of French ideas, notably under the influence of Rousseau&mdash;of whom he
+ said "peace to his ashes, for he has done things"&mdash;could think of nothing better
+ to reinforce the German soul after Jena than to persuade it that in itself and itself
+ alone there was to be found the sense of the ideal combined with power to realize
+ that ideal in the world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Power to Realize.</b></p>
+ <p>Starting from a certain notion of the absolute he found after Jena that this very
+ notion constituted the foundation of the German genius. Soon this mystic method was
+ merged in a more concrete method better adapted to the positive spirit of modern
+ generations. The one science where all knowledge and ideas which concern human life
+ are concentrated is history. To this science our epoch has devoted a veritable
+ worship. Now the Germans have drawn from history two lessons of the highest
+ importance. One is that history is not only the succession of events, which mark the
+ life of humanity, it is the judgment of God upon the rivalries of peoples. Everything
+ which is wishes to be, and to endure, struggle, and impose itself. History tells us
+ which are the men and the things Providence has elected. The sign of that election is
+ success. To subsist, grow, conquer, dominate is to prove that one is the confidant of
+ the thought of Providence, the dispenser of the power of Providence. If one people
+ appears designated by history to dominate the others then that people is the
+ vicegerent <span class="pagenum"><a name="page163" id="page163"></a>{163}</span>of
+ God upon earth, is God Himself, visible and tangible for His creatures.</p>
+ <p>The second lesson which German erudition has drawn from the study of history is
+ that the actual existence of a people charged with representing God is not a myth,
+ that such a people exists and that the German people is that people. From the victory
+ of Hermann (Arminius) over Varus in the forest of Teutoburg in the year 9 A.D., the
+ will of God is evident. The Middle Ages show it, and if in modern times Germany has
+ appeared to efface herself it is because she was reposing to collect her force and
+ strike more heavily. When she was not obviously the first, she was so virtually. It
+ was in 1844 that Hoffmann von Fallersleben composed the national song, <i>Deutschland
+ &uuml;ber alles, &uuml;ber alles in der Welt</i>. Germany over all, Germany over all
+ the world, Germany extending from the Meuse to the Niemen, from the Adige to the
+ Belt.</p>
+ <p>Not only is Germany the elect of Providence but the sole elect, and other nations
+ are rejected. The sign of her election is the annihilation of the three legions of
+ Quinctilius Varus, and her eternal task is to revenge herself for the insolence of
+ the Roman General. "We shall give battle to Hermann and we shall avenge ourselves,
+ "<i>und wollen Rache haben</i>." Thus ran the celebrated national song. <i>Der Gott,
+ der Eisen wachsen liess</i>.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germanism and God.</b></p>
+ <p>German civilization has developed in antagonism with the Greco-Roman civilization.
+ To adopt the former was on the part of God to reject the latter. Therefore German
+ consciousness, realized without hindrance in all its force, is but the Divine
+ consciousness. <i>Deutschtum</i> = God and God = <i>Deutschtum</i>. In practice it is
+ enough that an idea is authentically German in order that we may and must conclude
+ that it is true, that it is just, and that it ought to prevail.</p>
+ <p>What are the essential dogmas of this truth, which is German because it is true
+ and which is true because it is German? German metaphysicians explain that to us more
+ clearly than is usual by thought. The first quality of this truth is that it is in
+ opposition to what classic or Greco-Latin thought would recognize as true. The latter
+ has sought to discover what in man is essentially human, to render man superior to
+ other beings, and to substitute more and more the superior elements for the inferior
+ elements in human life&mdash;reason for blind impulse, justice for force, good for
+ wickedness. It has undertaken to create in the world a moral force capable of
+ controlling and humanizing material forces. To this doctrine, which rests upon man as
+ its centre and which was essentially human, German thought opposes itself as the
+ infinite opposes the finite, the absolute the relative, the whole the part. The
+ disciples of the Greeks had at their disposition no light except that of human
+ reason; the German genius possesses a transcendent reason which pierces the mysteries
+ of the absolute, of the Divine. What would light be without the shadow from which it
+ is detached? How could the ego exist if there was not somewhere a non ego to which it
+ is opposed? Evil is not less indispensable than good in the transcendent symphony of
+ the whole.</p>
+ <p>There is something more. It may be a satisfaction for a Greco-Latin, impelled by
+ his mediocre logic to say that good is good, evil is evil, but these simple formulas
+ are contrary to the truth per se. Good by itself is absolutely impotent to realize
+ itself. It is only an idea, an abstraction. The power and faculty of creation belong
+ to evil alone. So that if good is to be realized it can only be by means of evil, and
+ by means of evil left entirely to itself. God could not exist if He were not created
+ by the devil, and thus, in a sense, evil is good and good is bad. Evil is good
+ because it creates. Good is bad because it is impotent. The supreme and true divine
+ law is just this: That evil left to itself, evil as evil, gives birth to good, which,
+ by itself, would never be able to advance from the ideal to the real. "I am," said
+ Mephistopheles, "part of that force which always wishes evil and always creates the
+ good." Such is the divine order. He who undertakes to do good by good will only do
+ evil. It is only in unchaining the power of evil <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page164" id="page164"></a>{164}</span>that one has a chance to realize any
+ good.</p>
+ <p>From these metaphysical principles questions raised by the idea of civilization
+ receive most remarkable solutions.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Essence of Civilization.</b></p>
+ <p>What is civilization in the German and true sense of the word?</p>
+ <p>Nations in general, especially the Latin nations, put the essence of civilization
+ in the moral element of human life, in the softening of human manners. To those who
+ understand human culture in this way the Germans will apply the words of Ibsen's
+ Brand, "You wish to do great things but you lack energy. You expect success from
+ mildness and goodness." According to the German thought, mildness and goodness are
+ only weakness and impotence. Force alone is strong and force <i>par excellence</i> is
+ science, which puts at our disposal the powers of nature and indefinitely multiplies
+ our strength. Science, then, should be the principal object of our efforts. From
+ science and from the culture of scientific intelligence there will necessarily
+ result, by the effect of Divine grace, the progress of the will and of the conscience
+ which is called moral progress. It is in this sense that Bismarck said, "Imagination
+ and sentiment are to science and intelligence what the tares are to the wheat. The
+ tares threaten to stifle the wheat; that is why they are cut down and burned." True
+ civilization is a virile education, aiming at force and implying force. A
+ civilization which under pretext of humanity and of courtesy enervates and softens
+ man is fit only for women and for slaves.</p>
+ <p>Is that to say that the notion of right which men invoke against force has in
+ reality no meaning, and that a highly civilized people would disregard it? We must
+ clearly understand the relation which exists between the notion of right and the
+ notion of force. Force is not the right. All existing forces do not have an equal
+ right to exist; mediocre forces in reality have but a feeble share in the Divine
+ force; but in proportion as a force becomes greater it is more noble. A universally
+ victorious and all-powerful force would be identical with Divine force and should,
+ therefore, be obeyed and honored in the same degree. Justice and force, moreover,
+ belong to two different worlds&mdash;the natural and the spiritual. The former is the
+ phenomenon and symbol of the latter. We live in a world of symbols; and so
+ preponderant force is for us the visible and practical equivalent of right.</p>
+ <p>It is, then, puerile to admit the existence of a natural right inherent in
+ individuals or in nations, and manifested in their aspirations, their powers, their
+ sympathies, their wills. The right of peoples should be determined by a purely
+ objective method.</p>
+ <p>Now in this sense people should be divided into <i>Naturv&ouml;lker</i>,
+ <i>Halbkulturv&ouml;lker</i>, and <i>Kulturv&ouml;lker</i>&mdash;people in the state
+ of nature, half-cultivated people, and cultivated people. This is not all. There are
+ people who are simply cultivated&mdash;<i>Naturv&ouml;lker</i>&mdash;and people who
+ are wholly cultivated&mdash;<i>Vollkulturv&ouml;lker</i>. Now the degree of right
+ depends on the degree of culture. As compared with the <i>Kulturv&ouml;lker</i> the
+ <i>Naturv&ouml;lker</i> have no rights. They have only duties&mdash;submission,
+ docility, obedience. And if there exists a people which deserves more than all others
+ the title of <i>Vollkulturv&ouml;lker</i>&mdash;completely cultured people&mdash;to
+ this people the earth belongs and the supremacy thereof. Its mission is to bend all
+ other peoples beneath the yoke of its omnipotence co-ordinated with its supreme
+ culture.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Master Nation.</b></p>
+ <p>Such is the idea of the master nation. This nation must not be simply an abstract
+ type, it must necessarily be able to realize itself in our world. In effect the
+ spirit is the supreme form of being; it necessarily wishes to be; and as it is
+ infinite, it can be realized only by means of an infinite force. A nation capable of
+ imposing its will upon everybody is the necessary instrument of the Divine will which
+ can grant the prayer: "Our Father, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it
+ is done in heaven."</p>
+ <p>As a master nation is necessary in the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page165"
+ id="page165"></a>{165}</span>world there must be subordinate nations. There can be no
+ efficient "yes" without a decided "no." The ego, says Fichte, is effort. Therefore it
+ presupposes something that resists it, namely, that which we call matter. The master
+ nation commands. Therefore nations must exist who are made to obey it. It is needful
+ even that these nations, which are to the master nation what the non ego is to the
+ ego, should resist the action of this superior nation. For this resistance is
+ necessary to enable the latter to develop and employ its force and to become fully
+ itself; that is, to become the whole, enriching itself by the spoils of its
+ enemies.</p>
+ <p>The ideal nation is thus defined by a transcendental deduction, and this same
+ deduction leads us to affirm that the master nation must be not merely an idea but a
+ reality. Now, it is plain that this realization of the ideal nation is going on under
+ our eyes in the German Nation, which represents the highest created race and which
+ surpasses all other nations in science and in power. It is to her, and to her alone,
+ that the task of accomplishing the will of God upon earth is consigned.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Means of Success.</b></p>
+ <p>To succeed in it, what means must she employ?</p>
+ <p>In the first place she must acquire complete consciousness of her superiority and
+ of her own genius. Nothing German is found in the same degree of excellence in other
+ nations. German women, German fidelity, German wine, the German song, hold the first
+ rank in the world. To combat Satan, that is to say, enemies of Germany, the Germans
+ have at their service the ancient god, the German god, <i>der alte, der deutsche
+ Gott</i>, who identifies His cause with theirs. And as everything which is German is
+ by that very fact unique and inimitable, so it is correspondingly true that
+ everything which the world has of excellence belongs to Germany in fact and in right.
+ Rembrandt, Shakespeare, Ibsen, are Germans. A German brain alone could understand
+ them and has a right to admire them. It is doubtful if even Joan of Arc, that sublime
+ heroine, is French. German savants have maintained her German nationality. If the
+ people of Alsace and Lorraine are faithful to France that only proves that they ought
+ to be German subjects, because fidelity is a German virtue.</p>
+ <p>As Germany possesses, in principle, all the virtues, all the perfections, she
+ suffices to herself and can learn nothing from other people. By still stronger reason
+ she owes them no duty of respect or good-will. What is called humanity has no meaning
+ for the German. The <i>mot</i> of William II., "Humanity for me stops at the Vosges,"
+ is not merely an instance of national egoism. The German Emperor feels that what is
+ for the present beyond his empire can only acquire value when it shall be annexed to
+ it.</p>
+ <p>How, then, ought Germany to behave to other nations?</p>
+ <p>There are people who wish to be loved, who believe that among nations as between
+ individuals, courtesy may have a place and that it would be an advance for humanity
+ to admit that justice and equity may rule international relations. But Germany, as
+ regards other nations, makes no account of justice. She has nothing but scorn for
+ that feminine sentiment which particularly characterizes the Latin races. The
+ sentiment of justice and humanity is weakness and Germany is and ought to be force.
+ <i>Wo Preussens Macht in Frage kommt, kenne ich kein Gesetz,</i> said
+ Bismarck&mdash;"When the power of Prussia is in question I know no law."</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Enemies Most Welcome.</b></p>
+ <p>The German does not ask to be loved. He prefers to be hated provided he is feared.
+ <i>Oderint, dum metuant</i>. He does not mind being surrounded by enemies. He knows
+ with satisfaction that in the very heart of the empire certain annexed provinces
+ constantly protest against the violence which has been done to them. The ego cannot
+ work without opposition. The German needs enemies to keep himself in that state of
+ tension and of struggle which is the condition of vigor. He willingly applies to
+ himself what the Lord God said of man in general in the prologue of Goethe's
+ "Faust":</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id="page166"></a>{166}</span>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>Man's activity has only too great a propensity to relax. Left by himself man
+ seeks repose. That is why I give him a devil for a companion. He will excite him
+ and keep him from getting sleepy.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Germany has a certain satisfaction in recognizing in the neighbors whom she
+ menaces, in the subjects whom she oppresses, these providential devils whose mischief
+ will stimulate her activity and her virtue.</p>
+ <p>Not that Germany rejects, as regards other nations, every r&eacute;gime except
+ that of hostility. Her aim is domination, the only r&ocirc;le which suits the people
+ of God. Now, to attain that, two means are offered to her. The first plainly is
+ intimidation which must never flag. The feeble quickly become insolent if their
+ feebleness is not recalled to them. Other nations must feel themselves constantly
+ threatened with the worst catastrophes if they resist Germany. But it being well
+ understood that Germany is the strongest, that she will never give up what she
+ possesses, however unjustly, then bargains advantageous not only for herself but
+ occasionally for the other party, may be the more direct and less onerous means than
+ violence to attain her end. So Germany will be, by turns, or both at once,
+ threatening and amiable. Amiability itself can be effective when it rests on hatred,
+ contempt, and omnipotence.</p>
+ <p>Now power counts before all. Germany must possess armaments superior to those of
+ all other nations. The reason is plain. The German Empire is a rock of peace, <i>der
+ Hort des Friedens</i>. The force which it accumulates is directed toward imposing
+ upon mankind the German peace, the divine peace. Since Germany represents peace,
+ whoever opposes Germany intends war. Now it is legitimate that Germany should arm to
+ the teeth because she is the incarnation of peace, but the adversaries of Germany,
+ who, in opposing Germany oppose peace, cannot have the same right. It is the duty of
+ Germany to carry her armaments to the maximum; other peoples have the right to arm
+ only as Germany may permit.</p>
+ <p>Germany does not seek war. On the contrary, she tries by inspiring terror to
+ render it impossible. But if some nation should profit or be capable of profiting by
+ her love of peace to pretend to rights which offend her she will consent to punish
+ that nation. She will be pained by the violence she has to do to that nation and the
+ severity which she has to use toward the guilty. But soldier of God as she is, she
+ cannot fail to her mission. Any nation which refuses to do the will of Germany proves
+ by that very fact its cultural inferiority and becomes guilty. It must be
+ chastised.</p>
+ <p>The method according to which Germany will make war is determined by these
+ premises. War is a return to the state of nature. Germany yields to this temporary
+ retrogression because she has to do with people of an inferior culture who must be
+ taught a lesson, and must be spoken to in a language which they understand. Now a
+ characteristic of a state of nature is that force reigns undisputed. In this very
+ trait resides the sublime beauty of that state, its grandeur and its fecundity. Don't
+ talk of that romantic chivalry which pretends in time of war to temper the violence
+ of savage instincts by the intervention of feminine sensibility. War is war. <i>Krieg
+ ist Krieg</i>. It isn't child's play, it isn't sport where it is necessary to blend
+ barbarity and humanity so as to conciliate and humanize them. It is barbarity itself
+ let loose as widely and fully as possible. This is not perversity. Man as man suffers
+ in becoming barbarous, but the man who replaces God suppresses the feebleness of the
+ creature. He submits himself to the mysterious and sublime law in virtue of which
+ evil is by so much more beneficent as it is achieved with resolution and
+ completeness. <i>Pecca fortiter.</i></p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Nature of War.</b></p>
+ <p>The first article of the code of war is then the suppression of all sensibility,
+ pity, humanity. The nature of war is to kill and destroy. The more it destroys and
+ kills the sooner it comes to its ideal form. Moreover, it is at bottom <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page167" id="page167"></a>{167}</span>more humane the more
+ inhuman it is, because the very terrors which its excesses inspire shorten it and
+ make it less murderous.</p>
+ <p>In the second place, war necessarily ignores moral laws. Respect for laws,
+ treaties, conventions, loyalty, good faith, sentiment and honor, scruples, nobility
+ of soul generosity&mdash;these are mere fetters. The God-people do not recognize
+ them. It will then, without hesitation, violate the rights of neutrals if it is to
+ its interest. It will use falsehood, perfidy, treachery. It will justify itself by
+ futile pretexts in committing the most atrocious acts&mdash;bombardment of undefended
+ cities, massacre of old men, women and children; barbarous torture, pillage and
+ assassination; bestiality to women; organized incendiarism; methodical destruction of
+ monuments which, by their history and their antiquity and by the admiration of the
+ world, would seem to be inviolable. "I am told: I must avenge myself." This reason
+ suffices. We are told that some inhabitant of one city or another has been wanting in
+ respect toward one of our men. Therefore we must burn the city and show the
+ inhabitants what we have. Definitively, our duty is to let loose the elementary
+ energies of nature as far as possible to attain the maximum force and the maximum of
+ result.</p>
+ <p>The effect should, moreover, be psychological as well as material. Actions which
+ seem horrible to man and which spread terror are commendable means, because they
+ break the spirit even if they have no value from a military point of view. Moreover,
+ what offends common morality is conformed to transcendent morality. The mission of
+ the Germans at war is to punish. They work Divine vengeance. They compel their
+ enemies to expiate the crime of resisting them. After they have taken a city, if the
+ enemy has the insolence to take it back, it is just that they shall sack that city if
+ possible, killing its inhabitants and burning its finest monuments.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Barbarity Multiplied by Science.</b></p>
+ <p>Given this problem, how to let loose most widely the powers of evil, it is clear
+ that a people of superior culture is better equipped than any other to resolve that
+ problem. In fact, science, where it excels, can work destruction and evil with the
+ very forces which nature employs only to create light, heat, life, and beauty. The
+ God-people therefore unites the maximum of science to the maximum of barbarity. The
+ formula of its action may be thus written: "Barbarity multiplied by science."</p>
+ <p>This is the last word of the famous doctrine of Germanism. Now the identity of the
+ ultimate consequences of the doctrine and the features which the present war presents
+ is evident. The problem which we undertook is, therefore, solved. If, contrary to all
+ likelihood, barbarity co-exists with culture in the Germans; if in the present war it
+ appears to be absolutely bound up in that culture, the reason is that German culture
+ differs profoundly from what humanity understands by culture and civilization. Human
+ civilization tries to humanize war. German culture tends indefinitely to increase its
+ primitive brutality by science.</p>
+ <p>In everything the Germans must be unique&mdash;in their women, their God, their
+ wine, their loyalty. The war which the Germans wage against us strikes the world with
+ horror and terror, because it is in the full force of the term "the German way,
+ <i>die deutsche Art</i>, the German war."</p>
+ <p>As the world recognizes this astonishing proposition it asks with anxiety, what
+ may be its future relations to Germany? Knowingly and systematically, Germany opposes
+ to all Hellenic, Christian, humane civilizations the devastating theory of the Huns.
+ True, after the war she will claim that she has done nothing but conform, often with
+ pain, to the conditions of ideal and divine war, and she will appear willing to
+ pardon to her enemies the cruelties she has had to inflict upon them. Decidedly, the
+ world will refuse to admire this horrible magnanimity which on the first impulse of
+ resistance becomes savagery. Today the veil is torn away. German culture is shown to
+ be a scientific bar<span class="pagenum"><a name="page168"
+ id="page168"></a>{168}</span>barity. The world, which means in the future to rid
+ itself of all despotism, will not compromise with the despotism of barbarity.</p>
+ <p>But what a disappointment and what a grief! Formerly, Germany was held to be a
+ great nation. Its praises were sounded in many a land of solid and high culture. The
+ German tradition once held other doctrines than those we have now seen devolop under
+ the hands of Prussia. Germanism, as the Prussians formulate it, consists essentially
+ in contempt for all other nations and in the pretension of domination. But
+ Leibnitz&mdash;as highly esteemed in the Latin world as in the German&mdash;professed
+ a philosophy which valued unity only under the form of harmony between free and
+ autonomous forces. Leibnitz exalted the multiple, the diverse, the spontaneous.
+ Between rival powers he sought to establish relations which would reconcile them
+ without changing or diminishing the value or independence of any of them. Witness his
+ effort at the reunion of the Catholic and Protestant Churches. After Leibnitz came
+ Kant. He certainly was very much of a German. He owned, nevertheless, that he had
+ learned from Rousseau to honor the common man who, not being a savant, possesses
+ moral value far above the savant, who has no merit but science. And, starting from
+ the principle that every person, so far as he is capable of moral value, is entitled
+ to respect, he urged men to create not a universal and despotic monarchy but a
+ republic of nations in which each should possess a free and independent
+ personality.</p>
+ <p>This willingness to put liberty before unity, and respect and honor the dignity of
+ other nations while at the same time serving its own, was not extinguished in Germany
+ with Leibnitz and Kant. Permit me, my dear Director, on this subject to indulge in
+ some personal reminiscences.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Treitschke Versus Bluntschli.</b></p>
+ <p>In January, 1869, I was sent to Heidelberg by the Minister of Public Instruction,
+ Victor Duruy, to study the organization of German universities. Germany was for me
+ the land of metaphysics, music, and poetry. I was greatly astonished to find that
+ outside of the lecture courses the only thing discussed was the war which Prussia was
+ about to make on France. Invited to a soir&eacute;e, I heard it whispered behind me,
+ <i>Vielleicht ist er ein franz&ouml;sischer Spion</i>&mdash;"Perhaps he is a French
+ spy." Such were the words as I caught them. At the beer garden a student seated
+ himself near me. He said to me, "We are going to war with you. We shall take Alsace
+ and Lorraine." That night I could see from my window, looking out on the Neckar, the
+ students clad in their club costumes floating down the river on an illuminated raft
+ singing the famous song in honor of Bl&uuml;cher, who "taught the Welches the way of
+ the Germans." And at the university itself the lectures of Treitschke, attended by
+ excited crowds, were heated harangues against the French, inciting to hatred and to
+ war. Seeing that nothing was thought of but the preparation for war, I came back at
+ the Easter vacation of 1869 convinced that hostilities would ensue. I returned to
+ Heidelberg some time later and became acquainted with other persons, other centres of
+ ideas. I understood then that opinion in Germany was divided between two opposite
+ doctrines. The general aspiration was for the unity of Germany, but there was no
+ agreement as to the way of conceiving and realizing this unity. The thesis of
+ Treitschke was, <i>Freiheit durch Einheit</i>, "liberty through unity," that is to
+ say, unity first, unity before all; liberty later, when circumstances should permit.
+ And to realize at once this unity, which really was the only thing that mattered, the
+ enrollment of all Germany under the command of Prussia for a war against France.</p>
+ <p>Now the formula of Treitschke was opposed by that of Bluntschli, <i>Einheit durch
+ Freiheit</i>&mdash;"Unity through liberty." This doctrine, which counted at that time
+ some eminent advocates, aimed first to safeguard the independence and unity of the
+ German States and then to establish between them on that basis a <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>{169}</span>federated union. And
+ as it contemplated in the heart of Germany a union without hegemony, so it conceived
+ of German unity as something to be realized without harm to other nations, and
+ especially without harm to France. It was to be a free Germany in a free world.</p>
+ <p>Germany at that epoch was at the parting of the ways. Should she follow a tendency
+ still living in many and noble minds or should she abandon it entirely, to march head
+ down in the ways in which Prussia had entangled her? That was the question. The party
+ of war, the party of unity as a means of attacking and despoiling France, the
+ Prussian party, gained the day. And its success rendered its preponderance
+ definitive. Since then those who have undertaken to remain faithful to an ideal of
+ liberty and humanity have been annihilated.</p>
+ <p>Is it still possible that Germany may some day regain the parting of the ways
+ where she was before 1870 and this time take the other road, the road of the
+ Leibnitzes, the Kants, the Bluntschlis, which leads first to the liberty of
+ individuals and of peoples and afterward&mdash;- and only afterward&mdash;a form of
+ harmony where the rights of all are equally respected? A word of the Scotch
+ professor, William Knight, comes back to my memory at this moment: "The best things
+ have to die and be reborn." The Germany which the world respected and admired, the
+ Germany of Leibnitz, appears indeed dead. Can it be reborn?</p>
+ <p>Accept, I beg, my dear Director, the assurance of my cordial devotion.</p>
+ <p>EMILE BOUTROUX.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id="page170"></a>{170}</span><b>The
+ German Religion of Duty</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Gabriele Reuter.<a id="FNanchor_2" name='FNanchor_2'></a><a
+ href='#Footnote_2'><sup>[2]</sup></a></h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>On various occasions in the past I have been reproached by my friends for not
+ showing the proper spirit of patriotism.</p>
+ <p>I have merely smiled at their criticism, for it was my opinion that true
+ patriotism does not consist of flowery speeches and assertions, but in the effort
+ dutifully to accomplish that for which one is best qualified.</p>
+ <p>It seemed to me that I was truly showing my love for the Fatherland by writing my
+ books to the best of my ability.</p>
+ <p>But the source of this reproach was very evident to me. The cause could be traced
+ to a quality which I share with many of my compatriots. It must, in truth, be called
+ a particularly characteristic trait. This is a very earnest desire for and love of
+ justice, which is not satisfied simply to "recognize," but endeavors thoroughly to
+ understand the material and spiritual points of view of the other nations in order to
+ show them the proper appreciation.</p>
+ <p>It is natural to develop affection for that which one earnestly desires to
+ understand.</p>
+ <p>Many Germans have had the experience that they have rather overzealously commenced
+ by weighing the good of a foreign people in the balance with the good of their own,
+ and with well-nigh fanatic honesty they have ended by acknowledging their own
+ shortcomings compared to the merits and advantages of the foreign nation. There have
+ been instances when some foreigner has drawn our attention to this or that particular
+ weakness and immediately innumerable of my countrymen assented, saying, "Certainly it
+ is true, the criticism is just, matters are probably even worse than they have been
+ represented."</p>
+ <p>Many of us, and I acknowledge I am one of the many, have developed a form of
+ ascetic mania for self-abasement, a desire for truth which knows no limits in the
+ dissection of its own condition and the disclosure of social and personal
+ shortcomings and disadvantages. This tendency may be easily discerned in much of the
+ German literature of the past twenty years; also, in my books.</p>
+ <p>The individual is really always the symbol of the whole, and the thoughts and
+ feelings of one person are but the expression of strong forces in national life and
+ culture. It was not want of patriotism, but an unbounded love for the universality of
+ European culture which drove us, drove many thousand people with German souls, to
+ reach out over the boundaries of our own Fatherland for intellectual conquests, for
+ permeation and coalescence with all the world's riches, goodness, and beauty.</p>
+ <p>We loved the others; and believing ourselves among friends we were candid and
+ disclosed our weaknesses.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Germans Trusted Too Well.</b></p>
+ <p>We permitted criticism and criticised ourselves, because we were convinced that
+ those others had our welfare at heart, and also because we were convinced that only
+ by unsparing self-knowledge can the heights be scaled which lead to superior and more
+ refined development. It is therefore probable that we ourselves have delivered the
+ weapons into our enemies' hands.</p>
+ <p>Confiding and harmless as children, we were blind to the enigmatical hatred which
+ has to an appalling extent developed all around us. This hate which has been
+ nourished systematically and with satanic cleverness probably originated in a slight
+ feeling of jealousy, and the tendency of my countrymen to criticise each other led
+ our enemies to believe that they might look for internal disc<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page171" id="page171"></a>{171}</span>ord in the Fatherland and that our
+ humiliation could therefore be more easily accomplished.</p>
+ <p>If we had recognized the danger in time, we might have prevented this hatred, to
+ which they at the beginning were hardly prone, from taking root in the souls of
+ nations. But only very few among us were aware of it and they received little
+ credence from the others. There were times when each one of us sensed the antipathy
+ which we encountered beyond the boundary lines of our own country. But we never
+ realized how deeply it had taken root and how widely it had spread. We loved our
+ enemies! We loved this French nation for its high development of etiquette, language,
+ and taste; a culture which seemed well adapted to serve as a complement to our own.
+ How much misery France might have been spared had she but understood this unfortunate
+ love of the German people for the "Hereditary Enemy!"</p>
+ <p>We loved the deep, mystically religious soul of the Russians in their anguished
+ struggles for freedom! How many Germans have looked upon Tolstoy as a new savior!</p>
+ <p>Above all, though, the German admired the Englishman, in the r&ocirc;le of the
+ "royal merchant," the far-seeing colonizer, the master of the seas. Without envy
+ Germany gave England credit for all these qualities. And when during the Boer war
+ voices were raised to warn against the English character, even then to most of us our
+ Anglo-Saxon cousin remained the "Gentleman beyond reproach."</p>
+ <p>Then there is the great German love for Holland, Switzerland, and the Scandinavian
+ countries; here we may find the Germanic race less adulterated than in our own
+ country. Scandinavian poets have become our poets and we are as proud of the works of
+ the Swedish artist as we are of those of our people.</p>
+ <p>We gaze with delight upon the proud, blonde grace of the Norse maid; the more
+ gentle and pliant manners of the Swedes and Danes arouse our admiration; and we
+ dearly love their beautiful fjords and forests of beech and birch.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Love Changed to Suspicion.</b></p>
+ <p>Many of us wonder today how much of all this love we, in the days to come, will be
+ able to rescue from the debris. "Has the world gone mad that it has ceased to believe
+ in our sincerity?" This at present is the cry of many, many thousand German men and
+ women. Do we deserve to have our love requited with hate? And to find in the
+ countries which declare themselves neutral, distrust, reserve, and, in fact, doubt of
+ our honest intentions? Sad, dull despair has taken possession of the hearts of our
+ best men and women. It is not because they tremble for the fate of the loved ones who
+ have been compelled to go to the front and not because there is any fear as to the
+ outcome of this war. Not one among us doubts the ultimate triumph of Germany. We also
+ know that we must pay a terrible toll for this victory with the blood of our sons,
+ fathers and husbands.</p>
+ <p>Equally as much as they mourn the loss of our young manhood many of our best
+ citizens deplore the hatred which has spread over the face of the globe, hate which
+ has torn asunder what was believed to have been a firmly woven net of a common
+ European culture. That which we with ardent souls have labored to create is being
+ devastated by ruthless force.</p>
+ <p>The following story of the non-commissioned German officer is typical or
+ symbolical of many. He, while the bullets of the inhabitants of Louvain fell around
+ him, rescued the priceless old paintings from the burning Church of St. Peter, simply
+ because he was an art-historian and knew and loved each of the masterpieces. And well
+ we all understand the feelings which mastered him during those moments of horror.</p>
+ <p>He would probably think and say, "I have but done my duty."</p>
+ <p>And now we have arrived at the point which gives rise to the greatest amount of
+ antipathy. Our opponents declare we are endowed with great ability&mdash;they say
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page172" id="page172"></a>{172}</span>they must
+ acknowledge that. But how can a race of stiff, dry, duty-performing beings awaken
+ love? The German must lose all claim to individual freedom and independence of
+ thought in consequence of the training which he receives. When he is a child he
+ commences it in a military subordination in the school, he continues it in the
+ barracks, and later, when he enters a vocational life, under the stern leadership of
+ his superiors. He becomes, our critics continue, simply a disagreeable pedantic tool
+ of the all-powerful "drill." This atmosphere of "drill," or in other words this stern
+ hard military spirit, envelops him, accompanies him as guardian from the cradle to
+ the grave, and makes of him an unbearable companion for all the more refined, gentle,
+ and amiable nations. Yes, our opponents often declare that they are waging war not
+ only against Germany, but against this pedantic, military, tyrannical sense of duty,
+ which they call the "Prussian spirit." It shall once and for all, they assert, be
+ eradicated from the world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Religious Feeling of Duty.</b></p>
+ <p>Far be it from me to deny that my country people, male and female, do indeed
+ possess an unusually strong sense of duty. This is combined with a desire for justice
+ which is so often looked upon by outsiders as a lack of patriotic pride, and with an
+ honesty which easily makes the German appear so clumsy and awkward. These three
+ characteristics belong indissolubly together and one is not to be thought of without
+ the other. The spirit from which the German sense of duty arises is what the
+ foreigner so often misunderstands in us. He generally confuses sense of duty with
+ blind obedience. But this sense of duty does not originate from a need for submission
+ or from a mental dependence. No, it rests on a deep philosophical reason and arises
+ from the mental recognition of ethical and national necessity. That is why it can
+ exist side by side with the most extreme individualism, which also belongs to the
+ peculiarities of the character of our people. The Germans have always been a nation
+ of thinkers. Not only the scholar, also the simple worker, the laborer, the modest
+ mother take a deep pleasure in forming their philosophy of life and the world. Side
+ by side with the loud triumph of our industry goes this quieter existence, which has
+ been rather pushed into the background in the last decades, but has not, therefore,
+ ceased to exist. And the further the belief in miracles stepped into the background,
+ the more the belief in duty acquired a warm religious tinge. The loud complaints
+ about the vanishing of the sense of duty among the young, which has so often been
+ voiced by public opinion, only prove how strongly this ethical force was governing
+ people's minds. Every seeming diminution of it was felt to be a disastrous
+ endangerment of the knowledge of the people. We have perhaps acted childishly and
+ foolishly toward other nations by too great confidence. But in the consciousness of
+ the entire German Nation the ominous feeling was living and working with mighty
+ power, that only if every one of us devotes his entire strength to the post assigned
+ to him, and works until the exhaustion of his last mental and physical power, only
+ then can we as a national whole retain our high level and, surrounded by dangers on
+ all sides, create sufficient room for ourselves to breathe and live.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Military and the Socialists.</b></p>
+ <p>Two mighty organizations exist among us which were opposed to each other until
+ recently&mdash;the military and the Social Democratic. The world sees with amazement
+ the perfection which has been reached by the military organization of our army. Its
+ achievements have only become possible through the above-mentioned philosophical
+ conception of the sense of duty which raises it far above any systematic obedience
+ and lets it appear in the light of religious ideal. Duty becomes in these serious and
+ energetic minds a voluntary adaptation to a carefully organized whole with the
+ knowledge that to serve this whole at the same time produces the highest achievement
+ of the individual personality. The Social Democratic or<span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page173" id="page173"></a>{173}</span>ganization, opposed though it is to the
+ military organization, is also composed of Germans and is, therefore, directed by the
+ same basic principles as the military organization, although for entirely different
+ purposes. For this one reason it was almost a matter of course that the Social
+ Democrats offered their services for the war at the moment when they recognized that
+ it had become of imperious necessity to set aside personal wishes and ideals and to
+ put in the foreground only the duty of the defense of their country. The idea of our
+ opponents, that they would find a support in the Socialists of our country, rested on
+ a complete misunderstanding of the German character.</p>
+ <p>A foreign woman wrote to me in the days of the mobilization: "I do not understand
+ the German enthusiasm for war&mdash;how it is possible that one can become
+ enthusiastic about murder!" The woman only saw the exterior and superficial phase of
+ things.</p>
+ <p>In its endeavor to unite itself with the world the German soul had suddenly come
+ upon the wildest hatred * * * numerous high ideals of culture fell to ruin within a
+ few hours. Deeply wounded, it was hurled back into its most personal possessions.
+ Here it found itself face to face with tasks which far surpassed anything demanded
+ heretofore of it as fulfillment of duty. And now there came to pass a wonder which
+ will be unforgettable for every one who lived through this period. Everything dry,
+ petty, pedantic, connected with German ways, which had often made many of us
+ impatient with ourselves, was suddenly swept away by the storm of these days.</p>
+ <p>A gigantic wave of fiery hot feeling passed through our country flaming up like a
+ beautiful sacrificial pyre. It was no longer a duty to offer one's self and one's
+ life&mdash;it was supreme bliss. That might easily sound like a hollow phrase. But
+ there is a proof, which is more genuine than words, than songs, and cheers. That is
+ the expression in the faces of the people, their uncontrolled spontaneous movements.
+ I saw the eyes light up of an old woman who had sent four sons into battle and
+ exclaimed: "It is glorious to be allowed to give the Fatherland so much!" I saw the
+ controlled calm in the features of sorrowing mothers who knew that their only sons
+ had fallen. But the expression in the faces of many wounded who were already
+ returning home gripped me the most. They had lived through the horror of the battle,
+ their feet had waded through blood, their young bodies were horribly maimed. I saw
+ this strangely serene, quietly friendly expression in the young faces. They were men
+ who had sacrificed their ego. They were great patient conquerors of selfishness. And
+ with what tenderness, what goodness are they surrounded, to lighten their lot, to
+ give them joy. How the general sentiment is often expressed in the gesture of a
+ single person&mdash;you did that for us&mdash;how can we sufficiently requite
+ you?</p>
+ <p>A stream of love is flowing through our Fatherland and is uniting all hearts. The
+ unobtrusive mother "duty" gave birth to the genial child "feeling." She bestowed on
+ it her strong vitality so that it can defy a world of hatred&mdash;and conquer
+ it.</p>
+ <p><b>Note:</b></p>
+ <div class='note'>
+ <a id="Footnote_2" name='Footnote_2'></a> <a href='#FNanchor_2'>[2]</a> Gabriele
+ Reuter is one of the foremost German woman authors.<br />
+ <br />
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>{174}</span><b>A Letter
+ to Gerhart Hauptmann</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Romain Rolland.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>I am not, Gerhart Hauptmann, of those Frenchmen who call Germany barbarian. I
+ recognize the intellectual and moral grandeur of your mighty race. I realize all that
+ I owe to the thinkers of old Germany; and even at this extreme hour I recall to mind
+ the example and the words of our Goethe&mdash;for he belongs to all
+ humanity&mdash;repudiating national hatred and preserving his soul serene in those
+ heights "where one feels the joys and sorrows of all peoples as one's own." It has
+ been the labor of my life to bring together the minds of our two nations; and the
+ atrocities of impious war shall never lead me to soil my heart with hatred.</p>
+ <p>Whatever reason I may have, therefore, to suffer through the deeds of your Germany
+ and to judge as criminal the German policy and the German methods, I do not hold
+ responsible the people who submit thereto and are reduced to mere blind instruments.
+ This does not mean that I regard war as a fatality. A Frenchman knows no such word as
+ fatality. Fatality is the excuse of souls that lack a will.</p>
+ <p>No. This war is the fruit of the feebleness of peoples and of their stupidity. One
+ can only pity them; one cannot blame them. I do not reproach you for our sorrows.
+ Your mourning will not be less than ours. If France is ruined, so also will be
+ Germany. I did not even raise my voice when I saw your armies violate the neutrality
+ of noble Belgium. This forfeit of honor, which compels the contempt of every
+ right-thinking mind, is too well within the political tradition of Prussian Kings to
+ have surprised me.</p>
+ <p>But the fury with which you treated that generous land whose one crime was to
+ defend, unto despair, its independence and the idea of justice&mdash;that was too
+ much! The world revolts in wrath at this. Reserve for us your violence&mdash;for us
+ French, who are your enemies. But to trample upon your victims, upon the little
+ Belgian people, unfortunate and innocent&mdash;that is ignominy!</p>
+ <p>And not content with assaulting the Belgium that lives, you wage war on the dead,
+ on the glory of past centuries. You bombard Malines, you put Rubens to flame, Louvain
+ comes from your hands a heap of ashes&mdash;Louvain with its treasures of art and
+ knowledge, the holy city! Who indeed are you and what name do you conjure us to call
+ you, Hauptmann, you who reject the title of barbarian?</p>
+ <p>Are you the children of Goethe or of Attila? Do you wage war against armies or
+ against the human spirit? Kill men if you must, but respect man's work. For this is
+ the heritage of the human race. And you, like us, are its trustees. In making pillage
+ of it as you have done you prove yourselves unworthy of this great inheritance,
+ unworthy of holding rank in the small European army which is the garde d'honneur of
+ civilization.</p>
+ <p>It is not to the sense of the rest of the world that I appeal against you. It is
+ to yourself, Hauptmann. In the name of our Europe, of which up to the present you
+ have been one of the noblest champions&mdash;in the name of that civilization for
+ which the greatest of men have struggled&mdash;in the name of the honor even of your
+ German race, Gerhart Hauptmann, I adjure you, I command you, you and the intellectual
+ &eacute;lite of Germany, where I have so many friends, to protest with utmost
+ vehemence against this crime which leaps back upon yourselves.</p>
+ <p>If you fail in this, one of two things will be proved&mdash;that you acquiesce,
+ (and then the opinion of the world will crush you,) or that you are powerless to
+ raise <span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id="page175"></a>{175}</span>your voice
+ against the Huns that now command you. And in that case, with what right will you
+ still pretend, as you have written, that your cause is that of liberty and human
+ progress?</p>
+ <p>You will be giving to the world a proof that, incapable of defending the liberty
+ of the world, you are helpless even to uphold your own; that the &eacute;lite of
+ Germany lies subservient to the blackest despotism&mdash;to a tyranny which mutilates
+ masterpieces and assassinates the human spirit.</p>
+ <p>I await your response, Hauptmann&mdash;a response which shall be an act. The
+ opinion of Europe awaits it, as do I. Bear this in mind; in a moment like this, even
+ silence is an act.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>A Reply to Rolland</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Gerhart Hauptmann.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>You address me, Herr Rolland, in public words which breathe the pain over this
+ war, (forced by England, Russia and France,) pain over the endangering of European
+ culture and the destruction of hallowed memorials of ancient art. I share in this
+ general sorrow, but that to which I cannot consent is to give an answer whose spirit
+ you have already prescribed and concerning which you wrongly assert that it is
+ awaited by all Europe. I know that you are of German blood. Your beautiful novel,
+ "Jean-Christophe," will remain immortal among us Germans together with "Wilhelm
+ Meister," and "der gr&uuml;ne Heinrich."</p>
+ <p>But France became your adopted fatherland; therefore your heart must now be torn
+ and your judgment confused. You have labored zealously for the reconciliation of both
+ peoples. In spite of all this when the present bloody conflict destroys your fair
+ concept of peace, as it has done for so many others, you see our nation and our
+ people through French eyes, and every attempt to make you see clearly and as a German
+ is absolutely sure to be in vain.</p>
+ <p>Naturally everything which you say of our Government, of our army and our people,
+ is distorted, everything is false, so false that in this respect your open letter to
+ me appears as an empty black surface.</p>
+ <p>War is war. You may lament war, but you should not wonder at the things that are
+ inseparable from the elementary fact itself. Assuredly it is deplorable that in the
+ conflict an irreplaceable Rubens is destroyed, but&mdash;with all honor to
+ Rubens!&mdash;I am among those in whom the shattered breast of his fellow-man compels
+ far deeper pain.</p>
+ <p>And, Herr Rolland, it is not exactly fitting that you should adopt a tone implying
+ that the people of your land, the French, are coming out to meet us with palm
+ branches, when in reality they are plentifully equipped with cannon, with cartridges,
+ yes, even with dumdum bullets. It is apparent that you have grown pretty fearful of
+ our brave troops! That is to the glory of a power which is invincible through the
+ justice of its cause. The German soldier has nothing whatsoever in common with the
+ loathsome and puerile were-wolf tales which your lying French press so zealously
+ publishes abroad, that press which the French and the Belgian people have to thank
+ for their misfortune.</p>
+ <p>Let the idle Englishmen call us Huns; you may, for all I care, characterize the
+ warriors of our splendid Landwehr as sons of Attila; it is enough for us if this
+ Landwehr can shatter into a thousand pieces the ring of our merciless enemies. Far
+ better that you should call us sons of Attila, cross yourselves in fear and remain
+ outside our borders, than that you should indict tender inscriptions upon the tomb of
+ our German name, call<span class="pagenum"><a name="page176"
+ id="page176"></a>{176}</span>ing us the beloved descendants of Goethe. The epithet
+ Huns is coined by people who, themselves Huns, are experiencing disappointment in
+ their criminal attacks on the life of a sound and valorous race, because it knows the
+ trick of parrying a fearful blow with still more fearful force. In their impotence,
+ they take refuge in curses.</p>
+ <p>I say nothing against the Belgian people. The peaceful passage of German troops, a
+ question of life for Germany, was refused by Belgium because the Government had made
+ itself a tool of England and France. This same Government then organized an
+ unparalleled guerrilla warfare in order to support a lost cause, and by that
+ act&mdash;Herr Rolland, you are a musician!&mdash;struck the horrible keynote of
+ conflict. If you are at all in a position to break your way through the giant's wall
+ of anti-German lies, read the message to America, by our Imperial Chancellor, of
+ Sept. 7; read further the telegram which on Sept. 8 the Kaiser himself addressed to
+ President Wilson. You will then discover things which it is necessary to know in
+ order to understand the calamity of Louvain.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Another Reply to Rolland</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Karl Wolfskehl.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>To you, Rolland, belonging as a chosen one to the more important Frenchmen who can
+ rise above their race, the German nature has often been revealed. To you, now, we
+ shall make answer, offer frank testimony concerning the spirit of the time,
+ concerning that fate, that very fate in which you, the Frenchman, do not believe. You
+ do not believe in it; what to us is fate, mysterious necessity, to you is
+ fatalit&eacute;, an unavoidable Alp which threatens the individual in his individual
+ freedom. This fatalit&eacute;, we, too, do not believe in it, but we do believe in
+ the forces which bring forth the eternal in human will, that these both are one, will
+ and forces, one with necessity, with actuality, with creative, moral power, of which
+ all great ideas are the children, the idea of freedom, the idea of the beautiful, the
+ idea of tragic fidelity, and that these, reaching far above being and passing away,
+ are nevertheless real, life entire, fact entire. All that which is as dear to you as
+ to us, great works and great feelings, resignation and self-restraint, all that is
+ necessity, is fate, that became will&mdash;all that a unity out of choice and
+ compulsion. All that is for us eternal, not according to the measure of time, but
+ according to the beginning and the power of its working forces, in so far as it is
+ necessary.</p>
+ <p>Thus has it become fate, destiny, not fatalit&eacute;, rather like that fate which
+ in Beethoven's own words in the first movement of his "Eroica" "is the knocking at
+ the gate."</p>
+ <p>Such a fate is this war. No one wanted it in our Germany, for it was forced upon
+ us with terrible arbitrariness, contrary to all right. Do you not know of the net
+ that has been spun around us and drawn tight for the last half of a generation, to
+ choke us? Do you not know how often this most peaceful of peoples has drawn back, how
+ often the strange powers in the East and in the West have with contemptuous snarls
+ said, "Wilhelm will not make war"? That you ought to know, Rolland, for it is known
+ to the whole world.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The War "Came from God."</b></p>
+ <p>But I will betray something to you that you cannot know, because you are a
+ stranger; and this will probably show you where we see fate. I will betray to you the
+ fact that there is still another Germany behind the exterior in which great politics
+ and great finance meet <span class="pagenum"><a name="page177"
+ id="page177"></a>{177}</span>with the literary champions of Europe. That Germany
+ tells you in this heavy hour of Europe:</p>
+ <p>This undesired war that has been forced upon us is nevertheless a necessity; it
+ had to come to pass for the sake of Germany and the world of European humanity, for
+ the sake of the world. We did not want it, but it came from God. Our poet knew of it.
+ He saw this war and its necessity and its virtues, and heralded it, long before an
+ ugly suspicion of it flew through the year&mdash;before the leaves began to turn. The
+ "Stern des Bundes" ["Star of the Federation"] is this book of prophecy, this book of
+ necessity and of triumph.</p>
+ <p>The present need and the present triumph are quite human and quite inexorable.
+ They have a part in all that has taken place, and they are unprecedented and new.
+ None of us&mdash;do you hear, Rolland?&mdash;none of us Germans today would hesitate
+ to help destroy every monument of our holy German past, if necessity made it a matter
+ of the last ditch, for that from which alone all monuments of all times draw their
+ right of existence and their worth unless they are empty husks, skeletons, and
+ framework; even so, we alone may ask what shall come to pass, not what shall cease.
+ Which ruins are ravings, and which are the pains of childbirth, we do not presume to
+ decide; but you, too, who are so pained by ruins, even as we are pained by them, you,
+ too, do not know it.</p>
+ <p>Today it is a question of the life or death of the European soul. Do you not
+ believe that this soul is more endangered at the hands of the hordes of stub-nosed
+ Slavs than of the phalanx of those whom you, Rolland, call Huns? Your sense must give
+ you the right to answer. Recall the terrible story of Russian incendiarism for the
+ last hundred years, which has torn to pieces in ever-increasing lust for murder
+ bodies and souls; recall the eternally perjured and law-defying regiment of grave
+ diggers; and then blush that you have characterized as a heavy crime a manfully
+ confessed act of self-defense on the part of the Germans, the temporary occupation of
+ Belgium! Blush that you have forgotten the Russian Moloch now loosed upon us, drunk
+ with the blood and tears of alien peoples as well as of its own children! That you
+ have forgotten all that, in order to lament over buildings which we have been forced
+ in self-defense&mdash;again in self-defense&mdash;to sacrifice! And blush for those
+ of your people who have become accomplices of that Moloch! Those who are sinning
+ against the Holy Ghost of Europe, in order to attempt belated vengeance against
+ Germany! Do you know what the ancients, the very Greeks and Romans from whom you have
+ drawn your blood and temperament, called that sin? Blood-guiltiness is the name of
+ that horror. And do you know how it is atoned for? I shrink to ask further, yea, even
+ to think further; for horror falls upon me, and I see the unspeakable.</p>
+ <p>Today, battling against you allies of the swarms of Muscovites, we Europeans are
+ battling also for that France which you are threatening&mdash;you, not we!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>German Intellectuals "All Afire."</b></p>
+ <p>Yes, Romain Rolland, try, Frenchman that you are, to look into the mysteries of
+ the time. Ask yourself, marvel, how it comes to pass that we, the intellectuals among
+ the Germans, take part without exception in this dreadful war; take part with body
+ and soul. None of us ambitious, none of us a politician, not one of us who, till this
+ war, busied himself about anything except his idea, the Palladium of his life! And
+ now we are all afire, with all our hearts, with our whole people, all full of
+ determination and prepared for the last. All our youth in the field, every man among
+ us thrilled with faith in our God and this battle of our God, every man among us
+ conscious of the sacred necessity that has driven us, every man among us consecrated
+ for timely death! Are these incendiaries? Are these slaves, whom a despot points the
+ way to the rolling dead? Every one knows it is our all that is at stake; it is a
+ matter of the divine in humanity, a matter of our preservation and that of
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id="page178"></a>{178}</span>And so we
+ stand amid death and ruins under the star&mdash;one federation, one single union.
+ This I have had to tell you, whether you will listen to it, whether Europe has ears
+ to hear it, or not. From now on, may our deeds be our words!</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Are We Barbarians?</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Gerhart Hauptmann.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The idea of cosmopolitanism has never taken deeper root anywhere than in Germany.
+ Let any person reflect about our literary translations and then name a nation that
+ has tried so honestly as we to do justice to the spirit and the feelings of other
+ races, to understand their inmost soul in all good-will.</p>
+ <p>I must out with it: We had and have no hatred against France: we have idolized the
+ fine arts, the sculpture and painting and the literature of that country. The
+ worldwide appreciation of Rodin had its origin in Germany&mdash;we esteem Anatole
+ France, Maupassant, Flaubert, Balzac, as if they were German authors. We have a deep
+ affection for the people of South France. We find passionate admirers of Mistral in
+ small German towns, in alleys, in attics. It was deeply to be regretted that Germany
+ and France could not be friends politically. They ought to have been, because they
+ were joint trustees of the intellectual treasures of the Continent, because they are
+ two of the great cultivated nations of Europe. But fate has willed it otherwise.</p>
+ <p>In the year 1870 the German races fought for the union of the Germans and the
+ German Empire. Owing to the success of this struggle Germany has enjoyed an era of
+ peace for more than forty years. A time of budding, growing, becoming strong,
+ flowering, and bearing fruit, without parallel in history. Out of a population,
+ growing more and more numerous, an ever-increasing number of individuals have been
+ formed. Individual energy and a general tendency to expand led to the great
+ achievements of our industry, our commerce, and our trade. I do not think that any
+ American, Englishman, Frenchman, or Italian when in a German family, in German towns,
+ in German hotels, on German ships, in German concerts, in German theatres, at
+ Baireuth, in German libraries, or in German museums, ever felt as if he were among
+ "barbarians." We visited other countries and kept an open door for every
+ stranger.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>English Relations.</b></p>
+ <p>It is with pain and with bitterness that I speak the word England. I am one of
+ those barbarians on whom the English University of Oxford conferred the degree of
+ Doctor Honoris Causa. I have friends in England who stand with one foot on the
+ intellectual soil of Germany. Haldane, formerly English Minister of War, and with him
+ countless other Englishmen, made regular pilgrimages to the little barbarous town of
+ Weimar, where the barbarians Goethe, Schiller, Herder, Wieland, and others, have
+ created another world for humanity. We have a poet, whose plays, more than those of
+ any other German poet, have become national property; his name is Shakespeare. This
+ Shakespeare is, at the same time, the prince of English poets. The mother of our
+ Emperor is an English woman, the wife of the King of England a German, and yet this
+ nation, so closely related by blood and choice, has declared war against us. Why?
+ Heaven only knows. This much, however, is certain, that the now beginning European
+ concert, saturated with blood, as it is, has an English statesman for its impresario
+ and its conductor. It is doubtful, however, whether the finale of this terrible music
+ will find the same conductor at <span class="pagenum"><a name="page179"
+ id="page179"></a>{179}</span>the stand. "My cousin, you did not mean well either with
+ yourselves or with us when your tools threw the fire-brand into our dwellings!"</p>
+ <p>If heaven wills that we should issue regenerated from this terrible trial, we
+ shall have the sacred duty of showing ourselves worthy of our regeneration. By the
+ complete victory of German arms the independence of Europe would be secured. It would
+ be necessary to make it clear to the different nations of Europe that this war must
+ be the last between themselves. They must see at last that their sanguinary duels
+ only bring a shameful advantage to the one who, without taking part in them, is their
+ originator. Then they must devote themselves mutually to the work of civilization and
+ peace, which will then make misunderstandings impossible.</p>
+ <p>In this direction much had already been done before the war began. The dfferent
+ nations had already met in peaceful emulation and were to meet again at Berlin for
+ the Olympian games. It is only necessary to recall the aeronautic races, the boat
+ races, the horse races, and the beneficial international influence of the arts and
+ sciences, and the great super-national Nobel Prizes. The barbarian Germany has, as is
+ well known, led the way among the other nations with her great institutions for
+ social reform. A victory would oblige us to go forward on this path and to make the
+ blessings of such institutions general. Our victory would, furthermore, secure the
+ future existence of the Teutonic race for the welfare of the world. During the last
+ decade, for example, how fruitful has the Scandinavian literature been for the
+ German, and vice versa, the German for the Scandinavian. How many Swedes, Norwegians,
+ and Danes have lately, without feeling conscious of a drop of foreign blood, shaken
+ hands with German brothers in Stockholm, Christiania, Copenhagen, Munich, Vienna, and
+ Berlin. How much homely good-fellowship has grown up around the noble names of Ibsen,
+ Bj&ouml;rnsen, and Strindberg.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Faust and Rifles.</b></p>
+ <p>I hear that abroad an enormous number of lying tales are being fabricated to the
+ detriment of our honor, our culture, and our strength. Well, those who create these
+ idle tales should reflect that the momentous hour is not favorable for fiction. On
+ three frontiers our own blood bears witness. I myself have sent out two of my sons.
+ All our intrepid German soldiers know why they are going to war. There are no
+ analphabets to be found among them; all the more, however, of those who, besides
+ their rifle, have their Goethe's "Faust," their "Zarathustra," a work of
+ Schopenhauer's, the Bible, or their Homer in their knapsacks. And even those who have
+ no book in the knapsack know that they are fighting for a hearth at which every guest
+ is welcome.</p>
+ <p>On the frontier stands our blood testimony; the Socialist side by side with the
+ bourgeois, the peasant beside the man of learning, the Prince beside the workman; and
+ they all fight for German freedom, for German domestic life, for German art, German
+ science, German progress; they fight with the full, clear consciousness of a noble
+ and rich national possession, for internal and external goods, all of which serve for
+ the general progress and development of mankind.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>{180}</span><b>To
+ Americans From a German Friend</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Ludwig Fulda.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Like most of the champions of Germany in the literary field, Ludwig Fulda is
+ a Doctor of Philosophy. He is also author of many famous poetical and prose works
+ of fiction.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Many things have been revealed to us by this war that even the keenest-minded
+ among us would have declared immediately before its outbreak to be impossibilities.
+ Nothing, however, has been a greater and more painful surprise to Germans than the
+ position taken by a great part of the American press. There is nothing that we would
+ have suspected less than that within the one neutral nation with which we felt
+ ourselves most closely connected, both by common interests and by common ideals,
+ voices would be raised that in the hour of our greatest danger would deny us their
+ sympathy, yes, even their comprehension of our course.</p>
+ <p>To me, personally&mdash;I cannot avoid saying it&mdash;this was a very bitter
+ disappointment. A year has hardly passed since I was over there the second time as a
+ guest and returned strengthened in my admiration for that great, upward striving
+ community. In my book, "Amerikanische Eindrucke," ("American Impressions,") a new
+ edition of which has just appeared in a considerably supplemented form, comprising
+ the fruits of that trip, I have made every effort to place before my countrymen in
+ the brightest light the advantages and superiorities of Americans, and especially to
+ convince them that the so-called land of the dollar was not only economically but
+ also mentally and spiritually striding upward irresistibly; that also in the longing
+ and effort to obtain education and knowledge and in the valuation of all the higher
+ things in life, it was not surpassed by any other country in the world. In the entire
+ book there is not a page that is not filled with the confidence that for these very
+ reasons America and Germany were called upon to march hand in hand at the head of
+ cultured humanity. Is this belief now to be contradicted? Shall I as a German no
+ longer be permitted to call myself a friend of America because over there they think
+ the worst of us for the reason that we, attacked in dastardly wise by a world of
+ foes, are struggling with unanimous determination for our existence?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Guillotining German Honor.</b></p>
+ <p>Of course I know very well that public opinion over there has largely been misled
+ by our opponents and is continuously being misled. Did not the English at the very
+ beginning of the war cut our cable, in order to be able to guillotine our honor
+ without the least interference? For this reason I cannot blame the masses if they
+ took for truth the absurd fables dished out to them, when no contradicting voice
+ could reach them. Less than that, however, can I understand how educated beings, even
+ men who, thanks to their gifts and their standing, play the part of responsible
+ leaders, not only accepted believingly these prevarications and distortions, but,
+ with them as a basis, immediately rendered a verdict against us. For he who publicly
+ judges must be expected to have heard first both parties; and whoever is not in a
+ position to do this must in decency be expected to postpone his verdict. Yes, even
+ more than that, one should think that the sense of justice of every non-partisan must
+ be violated if the one party is absolutely muzzled by the other, and even for this
+ one reason the cause of the latter must be considered as not being free from reason
+ for doubt. Furthermore, one should assume that he who once has been unmasked as a
+ liar therewith should have lost the blind confidence of the impartial in his future
+ assertions. In spite of this, although the first ridiculous news <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>{181}</span>of German defeats and
+ internal dissent could not withstand the far-sounding echo of facts, there still
+ seems to be no twisting of the truth, no defamation, which over there is considered
+ as too thin and too ridiculous by the press and as too shameless by the public.</p>
+ <p>Should the Germans, who, since the time when they fought for and attained their
+ national unity, have exclusively devoted themselves to works of peace and culture,
+ suddenly have been transformed into an adventurous, booty-hungry horde which from
+ mere lust challenged a tremendously superior force to do battle? Should they suddenly
+ have sacrificed to their so-called militarism all their other efforts in commerce,
+ industry, art, and science, in order to risk their very existence for the love of
+ this Moloch? Do you believe that, Americans?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Question of Militarism.</b></p>
+ <p>Our militarism! What does this expression, quoted until it is sickening, mean in
+ the mouth of enemies who in respect of the energy and extent of their armaments were
+ not behind us? Is there no such thing as militarism in France and in Russia? Is the
+ English giant fleet an instrument of peace? Was the Triple Entente founded in order
+ to bring about the millennium on earth? Would the Entente, if we had been foolish
+ enough to disarm, have guaranteed our possessions as a reward for being good? Do you
+ believe that, Americans?</p>
+ <p>It certainly may be difficult for the citizens of the Union&mdash;happy beings
+ they are for it&mdash;to put themselves in the place of a nation that knows it is
+ surrounded on its open borders by jealous, hateful, and greedy neighbors; of a
+ country that for centuries has been the battlefield of all European wars, the place
+ of strife of all the European peoples. They, the members of a nation which for itself
+ occupies a space nearly as large as Europe, almost half of a continent, protected on
+ both sides by the ocean and on the other borders not seriously threatened for as long
+ a time to come as may be anticipated, have no people's army because they do not need
+ any; and yet they would&mdash;their history proves it&mdash;give their blood and that
+ of their sons for the cause of their nation just as gladly as we, if the necessity
+ for doing so came to them. Will they, therefore, reproach us for loving our country
+ not less than they do theirs, only for the reason that we have a thousand times more
+ difficulty in protecting it?</p>
+ <p>Our general military service, which today is being defamed by the word
+ "militarism," is born of the iron commandment of self-preservation. Without it the
+ German Empire and the German Nation long ago would have been struck out of the list
+ of the living. Only lack of knowledge or intentional misconception of our character
+ could accuse us of having an aggressive motive back of it. On earth there is no more
+ peaceful nation than Germany, providing she be left in peace and her room to breathe
+ be not lessened. Germany never has had the least thought of assuming for herself the
+ European hegemony, much less the rulership of the world. She has never greedily eyed
+ colonial possessions of other great powers. On the contrary, in the acquisition of
+ her colonies she was satisfied with whatever the others had left for her. And least
+ of all did she carry up her sleeve a desire of extending the frontiers of the empire.
+ The famous word of Bismarck, that Germany was "saturated" with acquired territory, is
+ still accepted as fully in force to such an extent that even in case of her victory
+ the question as to which parts of the enemies' territory we should claim for our own
+ would cause us a great deal of perplexity. The German Empire could only lose as the
+ national State she is in strength and unity by acquiring new and strange
+ elements.</p>
+ <p>Otherwise would the empire, from the day of its founding until now, for nearly
+ half a century, actually have avoided every war, often enough under the most
+ difficult circumstances? Would it have quietly suffered the open or hidden
+ challenges, the machinations of its enemies constantly appearing more plainly? Yes,
+ would it have tried again and again to improve its relations with these very same
+ enemies by the greatest ad<span class="pagenum"><a name="page182"
+ id="page182"></a>{182}</span>vances? As opposed to the ill-concealed hostility of the
+ French, would it not have been shaken in its steadfast policy of conciliation by the
+ fact that this policy with them only made the impression of weakness and fear? Would
+ it have permitted France to reconstruct her power which was destroyed in 1870 to a
+ greater extent than before, and, in addition, allowed her to conquer a new and
+ gigantic colonial empire? Would it have permitted prostrate Russia to recuperate
+ undisturbed from the almost annihilating blows of the revolution and the Japanese
+ war? Would it, in the countless threatening conflicts of the last decades, have on
+ every occasion thrown the entire weight of its sword into the scales for the
+ preservation of peace?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Kaiser's Responsibility.</b></p>
+ <p>Then, too, many Americans emphasize the fact that they are making not the German
+ people but the Emperor alone responsible for this war. It is hardly conceivable how
+ serious-minded people can lend themselves to the spreading of a fable so childish.
+ When William II., 29 years old, mounted the throne, the entire world said of him that
+ his aim was the acquirement of the laurels of war. In spite of this for twenty-six
+ years he has shown that this accusation was absurd and has proved himself to be the
+ most honest and most dependable protector of European peace. In fact, the very circle
+ of enemies which now dares to call him a military despot thirsting for glory, has
+ year in and year out ridiculed him as a ruler, whose provocation to the very limit
+ was an amusement absolutely fraught with no danger. He who has never been misled by
+ the fiery enthusiasm of youth nor by the full strength of ripe manhood to adorn his
+ brow with the bloody halo of glory, should he suddenly, when his hair is turned gray,
+ have turned into a Caesar, an Attila? Do you believe that, Americans?</p>
+ <p>It is a fact in times of peace there have been certain differences of opinion
+ between the Emperor and his people. Although at all times the honesty of his
+ intentions was elevated above every doubt, the one or other impulsive moves he took
+ to obtain their realization exposed him to criticism at home. Today one may safely
+ admit that&mdash;today, when of these trifling disputes not even a breath, not even a
+ shadow, remains. Never before has his whole people, his whole nation, in every grade
+ of education, in all classes, in all parties, stood behind him so absolutely without
+ reserve as now, when in the last, the very last hour, and driven by direst need, he
+ finally drew the sword to ward off an attack from three sides, long ago prepared.</p>
+ <p>Our nation and our Emperor have not wanted this war and are not to be blamed for
+ it. Even the "White Book" of the German Government, by the very uncontrovertible
+ language of its documents, must convince every impartial being of this fact. And day
+ by day the overwhelming evidence of the plot systematically hatched and
+ systematically carried out under the guidance of England, which put before us the
+ alternative of cutting our way through or being annihilated, is increasing.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>No Treason to Austria Considered.</b></p>
+ <p>It may be that the catastrophe, so far as we are concerned, might have been staved
+ off once more if we would have disregarded the obligation of our alliance and would
+ have left Austria in the lurch&mdash;the Austria which did not want anything else
+ than to put a stop to the nasty work of a band of assassins organized by a
+ neighboring State. But it requires an extreme degree of political blindness for the
+ assumption that by such cowardly treason we should have been able to purchase a
+ change of mind or a lasting peace from our enemies. On the contrary, they would soon
+ enough have used a suitable opportunity to fall upon Germany, which then would have
+ been completely isolated, and the struggle for our national existence would have had
+ to be fought under conditions very much more favorable to our enemies.</p>
+ <p>According to a newspaper report, the esteemed President Eliot of Harvard has
+ written that the fear of the Muscovites could not explain our action, and that an
+ alliance with the Western powers would <span class="pagenum"><a name="page183"
+ id="page183"></a>{183}</span>have offered better protection against a Russian attack.
+ Yes; if such a thing had been possible! As a matter of fact, however, the Western
+ powers did not ally themselves with us against Russia, but with Russia against us;
+ and not the fear of the Muscovites, but their mobilization, encouraged and aided by
+ the very same Western powers, drove us to war. I wonder what President Eliot himself
+ would have done under these circumstances had he been the guardian responsible for
+ Germany's fate?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Belgium's Alleged Neutrality.</b></p>
+ <p>But then the violation of Belgian neutrality! How with the aid of this bugaboo the
+ entire neutral world has been stirred up against us, after England made it the
+ hypocritical excuse for her declaration of war! We knew very well that England and
+ France were determined to violate this neutrality; but, then, we ought to have been
+ very good; we ought to have waited until they did so. Waited until their armies would
+ break into our country across our unprotected Belgian frontier! In other words, we
+ ought to have committed national suicide. Whoever, even up until now, has doubted the
+ German assertion that Belgium was under one roof with England and France, and had
+ herself thrown away her neutrality, must have his eyes opened by the latest official
+ developments. The documents of the Belgian General Staff which have fallen into our
+ hands contain an agreement according to which the march through Belgium of British
+ troops in the case of a Franco-German war was provided for in every detail. Whosoever
+ in the face of these documents repeats the assertion that we have committed a
+ violation of innocent Belgium gives aid to a historical forgery.</p>
+ <p>We have violated the alleged neutrality of Belgium in self-defense. On the other
+ hand, the Japanese, egged on and supported by England, have violated the real
+ neutrality of China from pure lust for robbery. For the three great powers allied
+ against Germany and Austria have not been satisfied with their own nominal
+ superiority of 220 millions against 110 millions! In addition to this they have urged
+ on into war against us a Mongolian people, the most dangerous enemy of the white race
+ and its culture. They have supplemented their armies by a motley collection of all
+ the African negro tribes. They lead into battle against us Indian troops, and the
+ Christian Germanic King of England prays to God for the victory of the heathen Hindus
+ over his coreligionists and blood relatives. Americans, does your racial feeling, at
+ other times so sensitive, remain silent in view of this unexampled shame? Do you
+ accord to the English and the French, who are attacking us in co-operation with the
+ Russians, the Servians, and the Montenegrins, who are dirtying themselves with a
+ brotherhood in arms with the yellow skins, the brown skins, and the blacks, the right
+ to declare themselves the representatives of civilization and us to be
+ barbarians?</p>
+ <p>In order to drive home such evident absurdities, they were, of course, obliged to
+ carry on the poisoning of the spring of information to the utmost, they had to
+ suppress the news of the vile deeds of guerrillas and "snipers" in Belgium and of the
+ Russian ghouls in East Prussia, that were crying to heaven, and to send out into the
+ world instead fables of German brutality. Our national army, permeated with ethical
+ seriousness and iron discipline, the scientist standing beside the farmer, the
+ workman beside the artist, should be guilty of unnecessary severity, uncontrollable
+ brutality, brutality against people unable to defend themselves? Do you believe that,
+ Americans?</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Charge of Vandalism.</b></p>
+ <p>The climax of absurdity, however, is reached when the Germans, who in their love
+ and appreciation of art are not surpassed by any people in the world, are accused of
+ having raged as vandals against works of art. Even now these accusations, which the
+ French Government itself had the pitiful courage to support, have proved totally
+ groundless. The City Hall at Louvain stands uninjured; while the populace fired at
+ them, our soldiers had, risking their own lives, <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page184" id="page184"></a>{184}</span>saved it from the flames. An imperial art
+ commission followed at the heels of our victorious troops in Belgium, in order to
+ take charge of the guarding and administration of the treasures of art. The cathedral
+ at Rheims has received but slight damage, and would not have been damaged at all had
+ its tower not been misused by the French as an observation station. I should like to
+ see the commander of an army who, for the sake of the safety of a historical
+ monument, would forget the safety of the troops intrusted into his care!</p>
+ <p>Enough of it! What I have stated is sufficient to show what low weapons our
+ enemies are using behind the battlefield to sully Germany's shield of honor. It is
+ enough for those who care to listen at all. But, also, wherever the weak voice of one
+ rebounds from ears stubbornly closed, the more powerful voice of truth eventually
+ will force a more just verdict.</p>
+ <p>Justice&mdash;that is all that we expect from America. We respect its neutrality;
+ we do not ask from it an ideal partisanship for our benefit. If it does not have for
+ us the sympathy which we have already extended to it and, after a century and a half
+ of unclouded intercourse between the two nations, have anticipated there, then we
+ cannot imbue it with that spirit by reasoning. Furthermore, in the existence of
+ nations sympathy is not the deciding factor, and every nation should be rebuked which
+ out of regard for sympathy would in decisive matters act against its own interests.
+ But just for that very reason one more question must be raised. In the present
+ conflict, which momentarily almost splits the entire world into two camps, where do
+ the interests of America lie?</p>
+ <p>That they are not lying on the side of Russia probably is self-evident. No free
+ American can find desirable a further extension of the Russian world empire and of
+ Russian despotism at the expense of Germany. But how about a country from which once
+ America had to wrest its own liberty in bloody battle? How about England? Where, if
+ England should succeed in downing Germany, would her eyes next be pointed? Has she
+ not herself admitted that she is making war on us principally because she sees in us
+ an uncomfortable competitor in trade? And which competitor would be the next one
+ after us that would become awkward to the trust on the Thames? Yes, have they not
+ already hauled off for the smash against America, when Japan is given opportunity to
+ increase her power&mdash;the same Japan with whom America sooner or later will be
+ bound to have an accounting and whose victory over us would make that accounting a
+ great deal more difficult for the United States?</p>
+ <p>Germany's fate certainly does not depend upon the friendly or unfriendly feeling
+ of America. It will be decided solely upon the European battlefields. But because we
+ are looking out from the night to a future dawn, because in the midst of our national
+ need the cause of humanity is close to our heart, for these reasons it is not
+ immaterial to us how the greatest neutral nation of culture thinks of us. Americans,
+ the cable between us has been cut. It is our wish and our hope that the stronger band
+ that unites American ideals with German ideals shall not also be cut.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id="page185"></a>{185}</span><b>To the
+ Civilized World</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Professors of Germany.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>As representatives of German science and art, we hereby protest to the civilized
+ world against the lies and calumnies with which our enemies are endeavoring to stain
+ the honor of Germany in her hard struggle for existence&mdash;in a struggle which has
+ been forced upon her.</p>
+ <p>The iron mouth of events has proved the untruth of the fictitious German defeats,
+ consequently misrepresentation and calumny are all the more eagerly at work. As
+ heralds of truth we raise our voices against these.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that Germany is guilty of having caused this war. Neither
+ the people, the Government, nor the Kaiser wanted war. Germany did her utmost to
+ prevent it; for this assertion the world has documental proof. Often enough during
+ the twenty-six years of his reign has Wilhelm II. shown himself to be the upholder of
+ peace, and often enough has this fact been acknowledged by our opponents. Nay, even
+ the Kaiser they now dare to call an Attila has been ridiculed by them for years,
+ because of his steadfast endeavors to maintain universal peace. Not till a numerical
+ superiority which had been lying in wait on the frontiers assailed us did the whole
+ nation rise to a man.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that we trespassed in neutral Belgium. It has been proved
+ that France and England had resolved on such a trespass, and it has likewise been
+ proved that Belgium had agreed to their doing so. It would have been suicide on our
+ part not to have been beforehand.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that the life and property of a single Belgian citizen was
+ injured by our soldiers without the bitterest self-defense having made it necessary;
+ for again and again, notwithstanding repeated threats, the citizens lay in ambush,
+ shooting at the troops out of the houses, mutilating the wounded, and murdering in
+ cold blood the medical men while they were doing their Samaritan work. There can be
+ no baser abuse than the suppression of these crimes with the view of letting the
+ Germans appear to be criminals, only for having justly punished these assassins for
+ their wicked deeds.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that our troops treated Louvain brutally. Furious
+ inhabitants having treacherously fallen upon them in their quarters, our troops with
+ aching hearts were obliged to fire a part of the town as a punishment. The greatest
+ part of Louvain has been preserved. The famous Town Hall stands quite intact; for at
+ great self-sacrifice our soldiers saved it from destruction by the flames. Every
+ German would of course greatly regret if in the course of this terrible war any works
+ of art should already have been destroyed or be destroyed at some future time, but
+ inasmuch as in our great love for art we cannot be surpassed by any other nation, in
+ the same degree we must decidedly refuse to buy a German defeat at the cost of saving
+ a work of art.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that our warfare pays no respect to international laws. It
+ knows no indisciplined cruelty. But in the east the earth is saturated with the blood
+ of women and children unmercifully butchered by the wild Russian troops, and in the
+ west dumdum bullets mutilate the breasts of our soldiers. Those who have allied
+ themselves with Russians and Servians, and present such a shameful scene to the world
+ as that of inciting Mongolians and negroes against the white race, have no right
+ whatever to call themselves upholders of civilization.</p>
+ <p><i>It is not true</i> that the combat against our so-called militarism is not a
+ combat against our civilization, as our enemies hypocritically pretend it is. Were it
+ not <span class="pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>{186}</span>for German
+ militarism German civilization would long since have been extirpated. For its
+ protection it arose in a land which for centuries had been plagued by bands of
+ robbers as no other land had been. The German Army and the German people are one and
+ today this consciousness fraternizes 70,000,000 of Germans, all ranks, positions, and
+ parties being one.</p>
+ <p>We cannot wrest the poisonous weapon&mdash;the lie&mdash;out of the hands of our
+ enemies. All we can do is to proclaim to all the world that our enemies are giving
+ false witness against us. You, who know us, who with us have protected the most holy
+ possessions of man, we call to you:</p>
+ <p>Have faith in us! Believe that we shall carry on this war to the end as a
+ civilized nation, to whom the legacy of a Goethe, a Beethoven, and a Kant is just as
+ sacred as its own hearths and homes.</p>
+ <p>For this we pledge you our names and our honor:</p>
+ <p>ADOLF VON BAEYER, Professor of Chemistry, Munich.</p>
+ <p>Prof. PETER BEHRENS, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>EMIL VON BEHRING, Professor of Medicine, Marburg.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM VON BODE, General Director of the Royal Museums, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ALOIS BRANDL, Professor, President of the Shakespeare Society, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>LUJU BRENTANO, Professor of National Economy, Munich.</p>
+ <p>Prof. JUSTUS BRINKMANN, Museum Director, Hamburg.</p>
+ <p>JOHANNES CONRAD, Professor of National Economy, Halle.</p>
+ <p>FRANZ VON DEFREGGER, Munich.</p>
+ <p>RICHARD DEHMEL, Hamburg.</p>
+ <p>ADOLF DEITZMANN, Professor of Theology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>Prof. WILHELM DOERPFELD, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRIEDRICH VON DUHN, Professor of Archaeology, Heidelberg.</p>
+ <p>Prof. PAUL EHRLICH, Frankfort on the Main.</p>
+ <p>ALBERT EHRHARD, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Strassburg.</p>
+ <p>KARL ENGLER, Professor of Chemistry, Karlsruhe.</p>
+ <p>GERHARD ESSER, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Bonn.</p>
+ <p>RUDOLF EUCKEN, Professor of Philosophy, Jena.</p>
+ <p>HERBERT EULENBERG, Kaiserswerth.</p>
+ <p>HEINRICH FINKE, Professor of History, Freiburg.</p>
+ <p>EMIL FISCHER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM FOERSTER, Professor of Astronomy, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>LUDWIG FULDA, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>EDUARD VON GEBHARDT, Dusseldorf.</p>
+ <p>J.J. DE GROOT, Professor of Ethnography, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRITZ HABER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ERNST HAECKEL, Professor of Zoology, Jena.</p>
+ <p>MAX HALBE, Munich.</p>
+ <p>Prof. ADOLF VON HARNACK, General Director of the Royal Library, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>GERHART HAUPTMANN, Agnetendorf.</p>
+ <p>KARL, HAUPTMANN, Schreiberhau.</p>
+ <p>GUSTAV HELLMANN, Professor of Meteorology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM HERRMANN, Professor of Protestant Theology, Marburg.</p>
+ <p>ANDREAS HEUSLER, Professor of Northern Philology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ADOLF VON HILDEBRAND, Munich.</p>
+ <p>LUDWIG HOFFMANN, City Architect. Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>LEOPOLD GRAF KALCKREUTH, President of the German Confederation of Artists,
+ Eddelsen.</p>
+ <p>ARTHUR KAMPF, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRITZ AUG. VON KAULBACH, Munich.</p>
+ <p>THEODOR KIPP, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FELIX KLEIN, Professor of Mathematics, Goettingen.</p>
+ <p>MAX KLINGER, Leipsic.</p>
+ <p>ALOIS KNOEPFLER, Professor of History of Art, Munich.</p>
+ <p>ANTON KOCH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, M&uuml;nster.</p>
+ <p>PAUL LABAND, Professor of Jurisprudence, Strassburg.</p>
+ <p>KARL LEMPRECHT, Professor of History, Leipsic.</p>
+ <p>PHILIPP LENARD, Professor of Physics, Heidelberg.</p>
+ <p>MAX LENZ, Professor of History, Hamburg.</p>
+ <p>MAX LIEBERMANN, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRANZ VON LISZT, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>LUDWIG MANZEL, President of the Academy of Arts, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>JOSEF MAUSBACH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, M&uuml;nster.</p>
+ <p>GEORG VON MAYR, Professor of Political Sciences, Munich.</p>
+ <p>SEBASTIAN MERKLE, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Wurzburg.</p>
+ <p>EDUARD MEYER, Professor of History, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>HEINRICH MORF, Professor of Roman Philology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRIEDRICH NAUMANN, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ALBERT NEISSER, Professor of Medicine, Breslau.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>{187}</span>
+ <p>WALTER NERNST, Professor of Physics, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM OSTWALD, Professor of Chemistry, Leipsic.</p>
+ <p>BRUNO PAUL, Director of School for Applied Arts, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>MAX PLANCK, Professor of Physics, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ALBERT PLEHN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>GEORG REICKE, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>Prof. MAX REINHARDT, Director of the German Theatre, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ALOIS RIEHL, Professor of Philosophy, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>KARL ROBERT, Professor of Archaeology, Halle.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM ROENTGEN, Professor of Physics, Munich.</p>
+ <p>MAX RUBNER, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRITZ SCHAPER, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>ADOLF VON SCHLATTER, Professor of Protestant Theology, Tubingen.</p>
+ <p>AUGUST SCHMIDLIN, Professor of Sacred History, M&uuml;nster.</p>
+ <p>GUSTAV VON SCHMOLLER, Professor of National Economy, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FRANZ VON STUCK, Munich.</p>
+ <p>REINHOLD SEEBERG, Professor of Protestant Theology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>MARTIN SPAHN, Professor of History, Strassburg.</p>
+ <p>HERMANN SUDERMANN, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>HANS THOMA, Karlsruhe.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM TRUEBNER, Karlsruhe.</p>
+ <p>KARL VOLLMOELLER, Stuttgart.</p>
+ <p>RICHARD VOTZ, Berchtesgaden.</p>
+ <p>KARL VOTZLER, Professor of Roman Philology, Munich.</p>
+ <p>SIEGFRIED WAGNER, Baireuth.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM WALDEYER, Professor of Anatomy, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>AUGUST VON WASSERMANN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>FELIX VON WEINGARTNER.</p>
+ <p>THEODOR WIEGAND, Museum Director, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM WIEN, Professor of Physics, Wurzburg.</p>
+ <p>ULRICH VON WILAMOWITZ-MOELLEN-DORFF, Professor of Philology, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>RICHARD WILLSTAETTER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM WINDELBAND, Professor of Philosophy, Heidelberg.</p>
+ <p>WILHELM WUNDT, Professor of Philosophy, Leipsic,</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Appeal of the German Universities</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>The campaign of systematic lies and slander which has been carried on against the
+ German people and empire for years has since the outbreak of the war surpassed
+ everything with which one might have credited even the most unscrupulous press. To
+ repudiate any charges raised against our Kaiser and his Government rests with the
+ authorities in question. They have done so, and their defense is substantiated by
+ striking proofs. He who wants to know the truth can learn it, and we trust that truth
+ will prevail. But if we are to look on, when our enemies, guided by envy and malice,
+ are shameless enough to charge our army and with it our whole nation with barbarous
+ atrocities and senseless vandalism, and when their statements appear to be believed,
+ to a certain extent, among neutrals and in places which, at other times, were well
+ disposed toward us; if we are quietly to look on when all this happens, we, the
+ appointed trustees of culture and education in our Fatherland, feel in duty bound to
+ break the reserve which our calling and position impose on us with a strong
+ expression of protest. Hence we now appeal to the learned bodies with whom we
+ hitherto worked in common in the interests of the highest ideals of the human race
+ and with whom, even at this time, when hatred and passion rule the world and confuse
+ the minds of men, we hope to remain of the same mind, in the same service of truth.
+ We appeal to them in the confident belief that our voice will find hearing, and that
+ the expression of our honest indignation will meet with credence. Moreover, we appeal
+ to the love of truth and to the sense of justice of the many thousands all over the
+ world who, being welcome guests in our educational institutions, have taken part in
+ the inheritance of German culture, and who thus have had an opportunity of watching
+ and appreciating the German people in peaceful labor, their industry and uprightness,
+ their sense of order and discipline, their reverence for intellectual work of every
+ kind, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id="page188"></a>{188}</span>and their
+ profound love for sciences and arts. All of you who know that our army is no
+ mercenary host but embraces the entire nation from first to last, that it is led by
+ the country's best sons, and that, at this very hour, thousands from our midst,
+ teachers as well as students, are shedding their life's blood as officers and
+ soldiers on the battlefields of Russia and France; you who have seen and heard for
+ yourselves in what spirit and with what success our youths are treated and taught,
+ and that nothing is stamped upon their minds more deeply than reverence and
+ admiration for artistic, scientific and technical creations of the human mind, no
+ matter what country and nation brought them forth; we call upon you who know all this
+ as witnesses, whether it can be true what our enemies report that the German Army is
+ a horde of barbarians and a band of incendiaries who take pleasure in leveling
+ defenseless cities to the ground and in destroying venerable monuments of history and
+ art. If you wish to pay honor to the cause of truth you will be as firmly convinced
+ as we are that German troops, wherever they had to do destructive work, could only
+ have done so in the bitterness of defensive warfare. But we appeal to all those whom
+ the slanderous reports of our enemies reach and who are not yet altogether blinded by
+ passion, in the name of truth and justice, to shut their ears to such insults to the
+ German people, and not allow themselves to be prejudiced by those who prove ever anew
+ that they hope to be victorious by the instrumentality of lies. Now, if in this
+ fearful war, in which our nation is compelled to fight not only for its power, but
+ for its very existence and its entire civilization, the work of destruction should be
+ greater than in former wars, and if many a precious achievement of culture falls to
+ ruin, the responsibility for all this entirely rests with those who were not content
+ with letting loose this ruthless war, nay, who did not even shrink from pressing
+ murderous weapons upon a peaceful population for them to fall surreptitiously upon
+ our troops who trusted in the observance of the military usages of all civilized
+ peoples. They alone are the guilty authors of everything which happens here. Upon
+ their heads the verdict of history will fall for the lasting injury which culture
+ suffers.</p>
+ <p>September, 1914.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>UNIVERSITIES.</p>
+ <p>Tuebingen, Berlin, Bonn, Breslau, Erlangen, Frankfurt, Freiburg, Giessen,
+ Goettingen, Greifswald, Halle, Heidelberg, Jena, Kiel, K&ouml;nigsberg, Leipzig,
+ Marburg, Muenchen, M&uuml;nster, Rostock, Strassburg, Wuerzburg.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Reply to the German Professors</b></h2>
+ <h3>By British Scholars.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>We see with regret the names of many German professors and men of science, whom we
+ regard with respect and, in some cases, with personal friendship, appended to a
+ denunciation of Great Britain so utterly baseless that we can hardly believe that it
+ expresses their spontaneous or considered opinion. We do not question for a moment
+ their personal sincerity when they express their horror of war and their zeal for
+ "the achievements of culture." Yet we are bound to point out that a very different
+ view of war, and of national aggrandizement based on the threat of war, has been
+ advocated by such influential writers as Nietzsche, von Treitschke, von B&uuml;low,
+ and von Bernhardi, and has received widespread support from the press and from public
+ opinion in Germany. This has not occurred, and in our judgment would scarcely be
+ possible, in any other civilized country. We must also remark that it is German
+ armies alone which <span class="pagenum"><a name="page189"
+ id="page189"></a>{189}</span>have, at the present time, deliberately destroyed or
+ bombarded such monuments of human culture as the Library at Louvain and the
+ Cathedrals at Rheims and Malines.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Diplomatic Papers.</b></p>
+ <p>No doubt it is hard for human beings to weigh justly their country's quarrels;
+ perhaps particularly hard for Germans, who have been reared in an atmosphere of
+ devotion to their Kaiser and his army; who are feeling acutely at the present hour,
+ and who live under a Government which, we believe, does not allow them to know the
+ truth. Yet it is the duty of learned men to make sure of their facts. The German
+ "White Book" contains only some scanty and carefully explained selections from the
+ diplomatic correspondence which preceded this war. And we venture to hope that our
+ German colleagues will sooner or later do their best to get access to the full
+ correspondence, and will form therefrom an independent judgment.</p>
+ <p>They will then see that, from the issue of the Austrian note to Servia onward,
+ Great Britain, whom they accuse of causing this war, strove incessantly for peace,
+ Her successive proposals were supported by France, Russia, and Italy, but,
+ unfortunately, not by the one power which could by a single word at Vienna have made
+ peace certain. Germany, in her own official defense&mdash;incomplete as that document
+ is&mdash;does not pretend that she strove for peace; she only strove for "the
+ localization of the conflict." She claimed that Austria should be left free to
+ "chastise" Servia in whatever way she chose. At most she proposed that Austria should
+ not annex a portion of Servian territory&mdash;a futile provision, since the
+ execution of Austria's demand would have made the whole of Servia subject to her
+ will.</p>
+ <p>Great Britain, like the rest of Europe, recognized that, whatever just grounds of
+ complaint Austria may have had, the unprecedented terms of her note to Servia
+ constituted a challenge to Russia and a provocation to war. The Austrian Emperor in
+ his proclamation admitted that war was likely to ensue. The German "White Book"
+ states in so many words: "We were perfectly aware that a possible warlike attitude of
+ Austria-Hungary against Servia might bring Russia upon the field and therefore
+ involve us in war. * * * We could not, however, * * * advise our ally to take a
+ yielding attitude not compatible with his dignity." The German Government admits
+ having known the tenor of the Austrian note beforehand, when it was concealed from
+ all the other powers; admits backing it up after it was issued; admits that it knew
+ the note was likely to precipitate war; and admits that, whatever professions it made
+ to the other powers, in private it did not advise Austria to abate one jot of her
+ demands. This, to our minds, is tantamount to admitting that Germany has, together
+ with her unfortunate ally, deliberately provoked the present war.</p>
+ <p>One point we freely admit. Germany would very likely have preferred not to fight
+ Great Britain at this moment. She would have preferred to weaken and humiliate
+ Russia; to make Servia a dependent of Austria; to render France innocuous and Belgium
+ subservient; and then, having established an overwhelming advantage, to settle
+ accounts with Great Britain. Her grievance against us is that we did not allow her to
+ do this.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Britain's Love of Peace.</b></p>
+ <p>So deeply rooted is Great Britain's love of peace, so influential among us are
+ those who have labored through many difficult years to promote good feeling between
+ this country and Germany, that, in spite of our ties of friendship with France, in
+ spite of the manifest danger threatening ourselves, there was still, up to the last
+ moment, a strong desire to preserve British neutrality, if it could be preserved
+ without dishonor. But Germany herself made this impossible.</p>
+ <p>Great Britain, together with France, Russia, Prussia, and Austria, had solemnly
+ guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium. In the preservation of this neutrality our
+ deepest sentiments and our most vital interests are alike involved. Its violation
+ would not only shatter the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page190"
+ id="page190"></a>{190}</span>independence of Belgium itself: it would undermine the
+ whole basis which renders possible the neutrality of any State and the very existence
+ of such States as are much weaker than their neighbors. We acted in 1914 just as we
+ acted in 1870. We sought from both France and Germany assurances that they would
+ respect Belgian neutrality. In 1870 both powers assured us of their good intentions,
+ and both kept their promises. In 1914 France gave immediately, on July 31, the
+ required assurance; Germany refused to answer. When, after this sinister silence,
+ Germany proceeded to break under our eyes the treaty which we and she had both
+ signed, evidently expecting Great Britain to be her timid accomplice, then even to
+ the most peace-loving Englishman hesitation became impossible. Belgium had appealed
+ to Great Britain to keep her word, and she kept it.</p>
+ <p>The German professors appear to think that Germany has in this matter some
+ considerable body of sympathizers in the universities of Great Britain. They are
+ gravely mistaken. Never within our lifetime has this country been so united on any
+ great political issue. We ourselves have a real and deep admiration for German
+ scholarship and science. We have many ties with Germany, ties of comradeship, of
+ respect, and of affection. We grieve profoundly that, under the baleful influence of
+ a military system and its lawless dreams of conquest, she whom we once honored now
+ stands revealed as the common enemy of Europe and of all peoples which respect the
+ law of nations. We must carry on the war on which we have entered. For us, as for
+ Belgium, it is a war of defense, waged for liberty and peace.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Sir CLIFFORD ALLBUTT, Regius Professor of Physics, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>T.W. ALLEN, Reader in Greek, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>E. ARMSTRONG, Pro-Provost of Queen's College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>E.V. ARNOLD, Professor of Latin, University College of North Wales.</p>
+ <p>Sir C.B. BALL, Regius Professor of Surgery, Dublin.</p>
+ <p>Sir THOMAS BARLOW, President of the Royal College of Physicians, London.</p>
+ <p>BERNARD BOSANQUET, formerly Professor of Moral Philosophy, St. Andrews.</p>
+ <p>A.C. BRADLEY, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>W.H. BRAGG, Cavendish Professor of Physics, Leeds.</p>
+ <p>Sir THOMAS BROCK, Membre d'honneur de la Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des Artistes
+ Francais.</p>
+ <p>A.J. BROWN, Professor of Biology and Chemistry of Fermentation, University of
+ Birmingham.</p>
+ <p>JOHN BURNET, Professor of Greek, St. Andrews.</p>
+ <p>J.B. BURY, Regius Professor of Modern History, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir W.W. CHEYNE, Professor of Clinical Surgery, King's College, London, President
+ of the Royal College of Surgeons.</p>
+ <p>J. NORMAN COLLIE, Professor of Organic Chemistry and Director of the Chemical
+ Laboratories, University College, London.</p>
+ <p>F.C. CONYBEARE, Honorary Fellow of University College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir HENRY CRAIK, M.P. for Glasgow and Aberdeen Universities.</p>
+ <p>Sir JAMES CRICHTON-BROWNE, Vice President and Treasurer, Royal Institution.</p>
+ <p>Sir WILLIAM CROOKES, President of the Royal Society.</p>
+ <p>Sir FOSTER CUNLIFFE, Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir FRANCIS DARWIN, late Reader in Botany, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>A.V. DICEY, Fellow of All Souls College and formerly Vinerian Professor of English
+ Law, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir S. DILL, Hon. Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir JAMES DONALDSON, Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of St.
+ Andrews.</p>
+ <p>F.W. DYSON, Astronomer Royal.</p>
+ <p>Sir EDWARD ELGAR.</p>
+ <p>Sir ARTHUR EVANS, Extraordinary Professor of Prehistoric Arch&aelig;ology,
+ Oxford.</p>
+ <p>L.R. FARNELL, Rector of Exeter College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>C.H. FIRTH, Regius Professor of Modern History, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>H.A.L. FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University.</p>
+ <p>J.A. FLEMING, Professor of Electrical Engineering in the University of London.</p>
+ <p>H.S. FOXWELL, Professor of Political Economy in the University of London.</p>
+ <p>Sir EDWARD FRY, Ambassador Extraordinary and First British Plenipotentiary to The
+ Hague Peace Conference in 1907.</p>
+ <p>Sir ARCHIBALD GEIKIE, Past President of the Royal Society.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>{191}</span>W.M. GELDART,
+ Fellow of All Souls and Vinerian Professor of English Law, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir RICKMAN GODLEE, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Surgery, University College,
+ London.</p>
+ <p>B.P. GRENFELL, late Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>E.H. GRIFFITHS, Principal of the University College of South Wales and
+ Monmouthshire.</p>
+ <p>W.H. HADOW, Principal of Armstrong College, Newcastle.</p>
+ <p>J.S. HALDANE, late Reader in Physiology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>MARCUS HARTOG, Professor of Zoology in University College, Cork.</p>
+ <p>F.J. HAVERFIELD, Camden Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>W.A. HERDMAN, Professor of Zoology at Liverpool, General Secretary of the British
+ Association.</p>
+ <p>Sir W.P. HERRINGHAM, Vice Chancellor of the University of London.</p>
+ <p>E.W. HOBSON, Sadleirian Professor of Pure Mathematics, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>D.G. HOGARTH, Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir ALFRED HOPKINSON, late Vice Chancellor of Manchester University.</p>
+ <p>A.S. HUNT, Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>HENRY JACKSON, Regius Professor of Greek, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir THOMAS G. JACKSON, R.A.</p>
+ <p>F.B. JEVONS, Professor of Philosophy, Durham.</p>
+ <p>H.H. JOACHIM, Fellow of Merton College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>J. JOLLY, Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Dublin.</p>
+ <p>COURTNEY KENNY, Downing Professor of the Laws of England, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir F.G. KENYON, Director and Principal Librarian, British Museum.</p>
+ <p>HORACE LAMB, Professor of Mathematics, Manchester University.</p>
+ <p>J.N. LANGLEY, Professor of Physiology, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>WALTER LEAF, Fellow of London University, President of the Hellenic Society.</p>
+ <p>Sir SIDNEY LEE, Editor of the Dictionary of National Biography, Professor of the
+ English Language and Literature in the University of London.</p>
+ <p>Sir OLIVER LODGE, Principal of Birmingham University.</p>
+ <p>Sir DONALD MACALISTER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Glasgow.</p>
+ <p>R.W. MACAN, Master of University College, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir WILLIAM MACEWEN, Professor of Surgery, Glasgow.</p>
+ <p>J.W. MACKAIL, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir PATRICK MANSON.</p>
+ <p>R.R. MARETT, Reader in Social Anthropology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>D.S. MARGOLIOUTH, Laudian Professor of Arabic, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir H.A. MIERS, Principal of the University of London.</p>
+ <p>FREDERICK W. MOTT, Fullerian Professor of Physiology, Royal Institution.</p>
+ <p>LORD MOULTON OF BANK, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary.</p>
+ <p>J.E.H. MURPHY, Professor of Irish, Dublin.</p>
+ <p>GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>J.L. MYRES, Wykeham Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>G.H.F. NUTTALL, Quick Professor of Biology, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir W. OSLER, Regius Professor of Medicine, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir ISAMBARD OWEN, Vice Chancellor of the University of Bristol.</p>
+ <p>Sir WALTER PARRATT, Professor of Music, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir HUBERT PARRY, Director of Royal College of Music.</p>
+ <p>W.H. PERKIN, Waynflete Professor of Chemistry, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>W.M. FLINDERS PETRIE EDWARDS, Professor of Egyptology, University College,
+ London.</p>
+ <p>A.F. POLLARD, Professor of English History, London.</p>
+ <p>Sir F. POLLOCK, formerly Corpus Professor of Jurisprudence, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>EDWARD B. POULTON, Hope Professor of Zoology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir E.J. POYNTER, President of the Royal Academy of Arts.</p>
+ <p>Sir A. QUILLER-COUCH, King Edward VII. Professor of English Literature,
+ Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir WALTER RALEIGH, Professor of English Literature, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir W. RAMSAY, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, London.</p>
+ <p>Lord RAYLEIGH, Past President Royal Society, Nobel Laureate, Chancellor of
+ Cambridge University.</p>
+ <p>Lord REAY, First President British Academy.</p>
+ <p>JAMES REID, Professor of Ancient History, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>WILLIAM RIDGEWAY, Disney Professor of Archaeology, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>T.F. ROBERTS, Principal of the University College of Wales, Aberystwith.</p>
+ <p>J. HOLLAND ROSE, Reader in Modern History, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir RONALD ROSS, formerly Professor of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, Nobel
+ Laureate.</p>
+ <p>M.E. SADLER, Vice Chancellor of Leeds.</p>
+ <p>W. SANDAY, Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>Sir J.E. SANDYS, Public Orator, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id="page192"></a>{192}</span>Sir ERNEST
+ SATOW, Second British Delegate to The Hague Peace Conference in 1907.</p>
+ <p>A.H. SAYCE, Professor of Assyriology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>ARTHUR SCHUSTER, late Professor of Physics, Manchester.</p>
+ <p>D.H. SCOTT, Foreign Secretary, Royal Society.</p>
+ <p>C.S. SHERRINGTON, Waynflete Professor of Physiology, Oxford.</p>
+ <p>GEORGE ADAM SMITH, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Aberdeen.</p>
+ <p>G.C. MOORE SMITH, Professor of English Language and Literature, Sheffield.</p>
+ <p>E.A. SONNENSCHEIN, Professor of Latin and Greek, Birmingham.</p>
+ <p>W.R. SORLEY, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir C.V. STANFORD, Profesor of Music, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>V.H. STANTON, Ely Professor of Divinity, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>J. ARTHUR THOMSON, Regius Professor of Natural History, Aberdeen.</p>
+ <p>Sir J.J. THOMSON, Professor of Experimental Physics, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>T.F. TOUT, Professor of Medi&aelig;val and Modern History, Manchester.</p>
+ <p>Sir W. TURNER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Edinburgh.</p>
+ <p>Sir C. WALDSTEIN, late Reader in Classical Arch&aelig;ology and Slade Professor of
+ Fine Art, Cambridge.</p>
+ <p>Sir J. WOLFE-BARRY.</p>
+ <p>Sir ALMROTH WRIGHT, formerly Professor of Pathology, Netley.</p>
+ <p>C.T. HAGBERG WRIGHT, Librarian, London Library.</p>
+ <p>JOSEPH WRIGHT, Professor of Comparative Philology, Oxford.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>Concerning the German Professors</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Frederic Harrison.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of the London Morning Post</i>:</p>
+ <p>Sir: I was not invited to join the reply of our distinguished scholars and
+ professors, perhaps because it is so many years since I was the colleague of James
+ Bryce as Professor of Jurisprudence to the Inns of Court. And, indeed, I do not care
+ to bandy recriminations with these German defenders of the attack on civilization by
+ the whole imperial, military, and bureaucratic order. It seems to me waste of time
+ and loss of self-respect to notice these pedants.</p>
+ <p>The whole German press and the entire academic class seem to be banded together as
+ an official bureau in order to spread mendacious insults and spiteful slanders. Not a
+ word comes from them to excuse or deny the defiance of public law and the mockery of
+ public faith by the German Emperor, his Ministers, and his armies. These professors
+ seem to exult in serving the new Attila&mdash;rather let us say the new Caligula, for
+ Attila at least was an open soldier and did not skulk under the Red Cross behind
+ barbed wire fences.</p>
+ <p>We have long known that all German academic and scholastic officials are the
+ creatures of the Government, as obedient to orders as any Drill Sergeant. They seem
+ to have sold their consciences for place. Not a word comes from them even of regret
+ for the massacre of civilians on false charges, for the wanton murder of children,
+ for the wholesale rape of women, the showering of bombs upon sleeping towns in sheer
+ cruelty of destruction. The intellectual energies of Kultur seem concentrated on
+ distorting the meaning of our dispatches and the speeches of our statesmen, and in
+ manufacturing for their people and neutrals venomous falsehoods. German Geist today
+ is a huge machine to cram lies upon their own people, and to insinuate lies to the
+ world around. Their system of war is based upon lying at home and abroad, on
+ treachery and terrorism. They think that murdering a few civilians would terrify
+ France into surrender, and will drive England to betray the Allies. Their poor
+ conscripts are told that we kill and torture prisoners; their monuments at home are
+ bedizened with mock laurels; and neutrals are poisoned with wild inventions.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <center>
+ <a href="images/vonharnack.jpg"><img src='images/vonharnack_thumb.jpg' width='253'
+ height='400' alt='ADOLF VON HARNACK. See Page 198' title='ADOLF VON HARNACK' /></a>
+ <a href="images/niemeyer.jpg"><img src='images/niemeyer_thumb.jpg' width='250'
+ height='400' alt='THEODORE NIEMEYER. See Page 206' title='THEODORE NIEMEYER' />
+ </a><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>ADOLF VON HARNACK. See <a href="#page198">Page 198</a>.</i><br />
+ <br />
+ <i>THEODORE NIEMEYER. See <a href="#page206">Page 206</a>.</i><br />
+ </center>
+ <p>For years past their public men, have <span class="pagenum"><a name="page193"
+ id="page193"></a>{193}</span>been tricking our politicians, journalists, and
+ professors to accept them as peaceful leaders of a higher civilization&mdash;- while
+ all the while their soldiers, diplomats, and spies (the three are really but one
+ class) were secretly courting our own royalties and society, studying our naval and
+ military defenses, filling our homes with tens of thousands of reservists having
+ secret orders to spy, to destroy our arsenals and roads, and even planting out bogus
+ industries and laying concrete bases for cannon, to bombard the open towns of
+ friendly nations. We have been living unsuspectingly with a nation of assassins
+ plotting to destroy us. Did these professors of Kultur not know of this elaborate
+ conspiracy of Kaisertum, which unites the stealthy treachery of a Mohawk or a thug to
+ the miracles of modern science? For years past the ideal of Kultur has been to lay
+ down secret mines to destroy their peaceful neighbors. Did these professors of the
+ Fatheland not know this? Then they are unable to grasp the most obvious
+ facts&mdash;the life work of their own masters under their own eyes. And, if they did
+ know it, and must at least know it now, and yet approve and glory in it, they must be
+ beneath contempt. Why argue with such hypocrites?</p>
+ <p>Not a few of us have known and watched this conspiracy for years. I have preached
+ this ever since the advent of Bismarckism and the new Europe that was formed forty
+ years ago. Not a few of us have foretold not only the tremendous attack on the
+ British Empire designed by German sea power but the precise steps of the war upon
+ France, through Belgium, and to be executed by an overwhelming force of sudden shock
+ in the midst of peace. For my part, nothing in this war since July 30 has at all
+ surprised me, unless it be the foul cruelty with which Belgian civilians have been
+ treated. Indeed, in January, 1913, I wrote a warning which reads now like a summary
+ of events that have since happened. I was denounced as a senile alarmist by some who
+ are now the loudest in calling to arms. Alas! too late is their repentance.</p>
+ <p>May I ask why our eminent academicians and scholars who still profess "friendship
+ and admiration" for their German confr&egrave;res never even suspected the huge
+ conspiracy of which civilization has been the victim? Why did they accept the stars
+ and crosses of Caligula-Attila? Why hob-nob with the docile creatures of his
+ chancery, and spread at home and abroad the worship of Geist and Kultur? Are they fit
+ to instruct us about politics, public law, and international relations, when they
+ were so egregiously mistaken, so blind, so befooled, with regard to the most
+ portentous catastrophe in the memory of living men? I am glad that they see their
+ blindness now&mdash;but why this sentimental friendliness for those who hoodwinked
+ them?</p>
+ <p>Surely this should open their eyes to the mountains of pretentious clouds on which
+ the claims of Kultur rest. I am myself a student of German learning, and quite aware
+ of the enormous industry, subtlety, and ingenuity of German scholarship. We owe deep
+ gratitude to the older race of the Savignys, Rankes, Mommsens. Since 1851 I have been
+ five times in Germany on different occasions down to 1900. I read and speak the
+ language, and twice I lived in Germany for months together, even in the house of a
+ distinguished man of science. I study their theology, their sociology, economics,
+ history, and their classics. I am quite aware of the supremacy of German scholars in
+ ancient literature, in many branches of science, in the record of the past in art,
+ manners, and civilization. But to have edited a Greek play or to have discovered a
+ new explosive, a new comet, another microbe, does not qualify a savant to dogmatize
+ on international morals and the hegemony of the world. Sixty years ago in Leipzig the
+ editor of a famous journal undertook to prove to me that Shakespeare was a German.
+ Our poet, he said, was the grandest output of the Teutonic mind; nine-tenths of the
+ Teutonic mind was German-argal, Shakespeare was a German, Q.E.D.</p>
+ <p>With the vast accumulation of solid <span class="pagenum"><a name="page194"
+ id="page194"></a>{194}</span>knowledge of provable facts there is too often in the
+ German mind a sudden bounding up into a cloudland of crude and unproved guesswork. In
+ the logic of Kultur there seems to be a huge gap in the reasoning of the middle
+ terms. A savant unearths a manuscript in Syria, which he deciphers with marvelous
+ industry, learning, and ingenuity. Straightway he cries, "Eureka, behold the original
+ Gospel&mdash;the true Gospel!" and he proceeds to turn Christianity upside down. He
+ may have experimented on cultures of microbes for a generation; and then he calls on
+ earth and heaven to acknowledge the mystery of the self-creation of the universe. We
+ hear much of Treitschke today&mdash;no doubt a man of genius with a gift for
+ research&mdash;but what ferocious pyrotechnics were poured forth by this apostle of
+ mendacious swagger. And as to Nietzsche, he was anticipated by Shakespeare in
+ Timon&mdash;a diseased cynic&mdash;</p>
+ henceforth hated be<br />
+ Of Timon, man and all humanity.<br />
+
+ <p>They seem to think that to have put the critics right about a few lines in
+ Sophocles, or to have discovered a new chemical dye, dispenses the German Superman
+ from being bound to humanity, truthfulness, and honor. Charge them with the
+ mutilation of little girls and the violation of nuns in Belgium, and they reply: Yes!
+ but think of Kant and Hegel! It is treason to philosophy, they say, that a man who
+ has translated Schopenhauer should condemn Germans for burning Malines and making
+ captive women a screen for troops in battle. Kultur, it seems, has its own "higher
+ law," which its professors expound to the decadent nations of Europe.</p>
+ <p>Let us hold no parley with these arrogant sophists. Let all intellectual commerce
+ be suspended until these official professors have unlearned the infernal code of
+ "military necessity" and "world policy" which, to the indignation of the civilized
+ world, they are ordered by the Vicegerent of God at Potsdam to teach to the great
+ Teutonic Super-race. Yours, &amp;c.,</p>
+ <p>FREDERIC HARRISON.</p>
+ <p>Bath, Oct. 29.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Reply From France</b></h2>
+ <h3>By M. Yves Guyot and Prof. Bellet.</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>The following is the text of an open lettert addressed by M. Yves Guyot,
+ Editor-in-Chief of the Journal des Economistes, and M. Bellet, Professor at the
+ Schools of Political Science and Commercial Studies, to Prof. Brentano of the
+ University of Munich, the communication being a reply to the recent German Appeal
+ to Civilized Nations on the subject of the war</i>:</p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>PARIS, Oct. 15, 1914.</p>
+ <p><i>To Prof. Brentano of the University of Munich</i>:</p>
+ <p>Very Learned Professor and Colleague: On reading the Appeal to Civilized Nations,
+ (among which France is evidently not included,) which has just been sent forth by
+ ninety-three persons declaring themselves to be representatives of German science and
+ art, we were not surprised to find Prof. Schmoller's signature. He had already shown
+ his hatred for France by refusing to assist at the gatherings organized, a little
+ more than two years ago, to celebrate the seventieth anniversary of the Paris Society
+ of Political Economy, (gatherings at which we were happy to enjoy your presence and
+ that of your colleague, Mr. Lotz.) In his Rector's speech at the Berlin University,
+ in 1897, he declared that German science had no other object than to celebrate the
+ imperial messages of 1880 and 1890; and he pointed out that every disciple of Adam
+ Smith who was not willing to make it a servant of that policy "should resign his
+ seat." But we <span class="pagenum"><a name="page195"
+ id="page195"></a>{195}</span>felt painful surprise when, at the foot of the said
+ factum, we found your name side by side with his.</p>
+ <p>You and the other representatives of German science and art accuse France, Great
+ Britain, Belgium, and Russia of falsehood. Would you have submitted, on the part of
+ one of your pupils, to so grave an imputation, so lightly bandied? Admitting you to
+ be in absolute ignorance of the documents published since the war declaration, you
+ have certainly been acquainted with the ultimatum pronounced by Austria to Servia. It
+ must have struck you with surprise; for it stands as a unique diplomatic document in
+ all history. Did you not ask yourselves whether the demands of Austria did not go
+ beyond all bounds, seeing that they insisted on the abdication of an independent
+ State? You learned that, in spite of Servia's humble reply, because it contained a
+ reservation, immediately, without discussion, the Ambassador of Austria-Hungary left
+ Belgrade, and that the following day Austria declared war. You do not ignore the
+ steps taken by Great Britain and France, the demand for delay made by Russia, and the
+ reply of the German Chancellor "that none should intervene between Austria and
+ Servia." He elegantly qualified the attitude thus adopted as "localizing the
+ conflict."</p>
+ <p>Is there a single member among those who signed the document of Intellectuals who
+ has been able to believe&mdash;have you been able to believe, Mr. Brentano, with your
+ quick and perspicacious mind?&mdash;that this reply from Berlin did not imply war as
+ a fatal consequence; for any nation accepting it was certain to be treated in future,
+ by Germany, as the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy treated Servia? How, then, knowing the
+ initial pretext of the war, are you able to realize that there was no other relation
+ between this cause and the effect produced than the will of those who made use of it
+ to provoke either a dishonoring humiliation for the countries accepting such a
+ situation, or a general conflagration? How, then, do you, and the signatories of your
+ appeal, dare to state: "It is not true that Germany provoked the war"? You dare to
+ speak of proofs taken from authentic documents. Those published by Great Britain,
+ Russia, and Belgium are known. All agree; and they give clear proof that the
+ Austro-Hungarian ultimatum was pronounced with full complicity of the Berlin
+ Chancellery. They prove, moreover, that the German Ambassador at Petrograd, fearing a
+ withdrawal on the part of Hungary, precipitated events while your Emperor kept
+ himself out of the way. Meanwhile, your General Staff had, in underhanded manner,
+ mobilized a portion of its troops, by individual call, while in France we waited,
+ unable to imagine that the German Government had resolved to engage in European war
+ without motives. In the pocketbooks of your reservists have been found forms calling
+ them to the army long before the end of July. Our friend and colleague,
+ Courcelle-Seneuil, has seen the military book of a German living in Switzerland, at
+ Bex, containing this call.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Bismarckian Loyalty.</b></p>
+ <p>Correspondence of official nature has been stopped at the Cape, which should have
+ reached in full time officers of the German Navy, warning them to prepare for
+ mid-July. Such advance taken by your troops has rendered the task the more difficult
+ for ours. We were very simple, for we believed in the affirmations of your statesmen.
+ You state that these are loyal war methods; so be it. That belongs to the diplomatic
+ rules of loyalty bequeathed by Bismarck to his successors. But to attempt to carry on
+ this falsehood, you have no longer the excuse of its utility. It is clear to all,
+ except, it seems, the representatives of science and art in Germany, who are
+ sufficiently devoid of perspicacity to ignore it.</p>
+ <p>They affirm, moreover, that Germany has not violated the neutrality of Belgium;
+ she merely contented herself with "taking the first step." Beyond the authentic
+ proofs which have been published, we would draw your attention to an undeniable fact.
+ Trusting in the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page196"
+ id="page196"></a>{196}</span>treaty which guaranteed Belgium neutrality&mdash;and at
+ the foot of which figured Germany's signature&mdash;in the promise made a short while
+ ago to the King of the Belgians by your Emperor, we unfortunately left our northern
+ frontier unguarded. You must be aware, professor, that the English did not move until
+ Belgian soil had been effectively violated. It is true that we knew the plan of
+ campaign set forth by Gen. Bernhardi, but we na&iuml;vely believed that, whatever
+ might be the opinion of a General, the Chancellor of the Empire would consider a
+ treaty bearing the imperial signature as something more than a mere "bit of paper."
+ Germany has also been untrue to her signature by violating the treaty of neutrality
+ of Luxembourg. You forgot to state that there also you only "took the first step."
+ Your appeal echoes the German papers, which declare that it was the Belgians, and
+ particularly the women, who "began against your troops." An American paper replied by
+ stating that if it was the Belgian women who attacked German soldiers on Belgian
+ soil, what were the soldiers doing there? The truth is that your troops, obeying
+ their officers, as is proved by papers which have been seized and which you would
+ find quoted in the report presented by the Belgian Commission to President Wilson,
+ have executed orders which seem inspired by the ferocious inscriptions of Assyrian
+ Kings, no doubt exhumed on the Bagdad railway line; and you think it quite natural
+ that massacre and arson should have been perpetrated at Louvain because the civil
+ population fired on your soldiers; but an inquiry made together with the
+ representatives of the United States (whom you deign to consider sufficiently to ask
+ them to represent your defenses) proved that the civil population was unarmed. If you
+ today approve of the burning of the Louvain Library, have you until now approved of
+ the destruction of the library at Alexandria? It is true there was no Deutsch Kultur
+ there. The result of German culture as regards military matters is to place your
+ soldiers on a stratum of civilization anterior to that of the Vandals, who, when
+ taking Hippone, spared the library.</p>
+ <p>In Paris, if one of us passing, on Friday, Oct. 9, in the Rue d'Edimbourg, to an
+ office of the Societe d'Economie Politique, situated at No. 14, had passed near to
+ that address, he might have been murdered by a bomb thrown from one of your Taubes on
+ the civil population of a town whose bombarding had not been notified. Another Taube
+ caused, through the throwing of a bomb, a fire at the Cathedral of Notre Dame. You
+ cannot, to excuse such an assault, invoke the pretext put forward to excuse the
+ destruction of the Cathedral of Rheims. No observer could have caught sight of a
+ German soldier from the top of the towers.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Barbarian Soldiery.</b></p>
+ <p>Your co-signatories and you express indignation because the civilized world
+ describes your soldiers as barbarians. Do you therefore consider such deeds as those
+ specified to be a high expression of civilization? And here is the dilemma: either
+ you are in ignorance of these deeds, then you are indeed very careless, or you
+ approve of them, in which case you must make the defense of them enter into your
+ works on right and ethics. In doing so you would only be following the theories of
+ your military authors who have insisted on the necessity of striking terror into the
+ hearts of the civil population, in order that it may weigh on its Government and its
+ army so strongly that they may be forced to ask for peace. But those of your
+ colleagues who profess psychology must, if they have approved such a theory, confess
+ today that they made a great mistake; for such deeds, far from forcing the people to
+ cowardly action, awaken indignation in all hearts and fire the courage of our
+ soldiers. Nevertheless, your military authors have not stated that theft was a means
+ of assuring victory. And yet the Crown Prince, your Emperor of tomorrow, gathered
+ together at the castle of the Count of Baye articles in precious metals, belonging to
+ a collection, which he had carefully packed up and sent off. Some of your officers'
+ trunks have been found stuffed with <span class="pagenum"><a name="page197"
+ id="page197"></a>{197}</span>goods which would constitute the stock of a second-hand
+ clothes seller. Do you and your co-signatories include in German science and art the
+ science and art of housebreaking? Are the law professors and the economists willing
+ to defend such a manner of acquiring property? And, if so, what becomes of your penal
+ code?</p>
+ <p>You and your co-signatories affirm that the present struggle is directed against
+ "German culture." If such culture teaches that the rights of men include contempt of
+ treaties, contempt of private property, contempt of the lives of non-combatants, you
+ cannot be surprised that the other nations show no desire to preserve it for your
+ benefit and their detriment.</p>
+ <p>It is not by arms but by arguments and facts that economists like us, faithful to
+ the teachings of the physiocrats and of Adam Smith, have sought to protect ourselves
+ against it. On the eve of the war, at the inauguration of Turgot's Monument, we set
+ forth his ideas of liberty and humanity in opposition to the German realpolitik. We
+ hope that the present events will cure those among our professors whom it had
+ contaminated, and that they will cease to constitute themselves accomplices of that,
+ form of Pan-Germanism which they introduced to public opinion and to our legislation.
+ The acts of your diplomatists and of your Generals, and the approbation given them by
+ you and other representatives of German science, are a terrible demonstration, but
+ conclusive, of the dangers and vanity of German culture. You are its true
+ destroyers.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Militarism and Civilization.</b></p>
+ <p>"Without our miltarism," say you, "our civilization would have been annihilated
+ long ago." And you invoke the inheritance of Goethe, Beethoven, Kant. But Goethe,
+ born in the free city of Frankfort, lived at the Court of Charles Augustus, which was
+ a liberal and artistic centre ever threatened by Prussia. But Beethoven was of
+ Flemish origin, and lived in Holland until the age of twenty-four, spending the rest
+ of his life in Vienna, and he has nothing in common with Prussian militarism, so
+ redoubtable for Austria. But Kant, if he was born and lived at K&ouml;nisberg, the
+ true capital of the Prussian Kingdom, welcomed the French Revolution, and when he
+ died in 1804 it was not Prussian militarism which had recommended his writings to the
+ world.</p>
+ <p>But the solidarity which you establish between German militarism and German
+ culture, of which you and your colleagues claim to be the representatives, is a proof
+ of the confusion of German conceptions.</p>
+ <p>To present Goethe, Beethoven, and Kant to the world you surround them with
+ bayonets. In the same manner every tradesman and every merchant throughout Germany
+ has got into the habit of saying: "I have four million bayonets behind me!" Your
+ Emperor said to some tradesmen who complained of bad business: "I must travel!" And
+ he went to Constantinople; he went to Tangier, after the speech at Bremen. In every
+ one of his words, in each of his gestures, he affirmed the subordination of economic
+ civilization to military civilization. He considered that it was his duty to open up
+ markets and assert the value of German products with cannon and sword. Hence his
+ formidable armaments, his perpetual threats which held all nations in a constant
+ state of anxiety.</p>
+ <p>There is the deep and true cause of the war. And it is due entirely to your
+ Emperor and his environment. We readily understand that the greater number of
+ "representatives of German science and art" who signed the appeal are incapable of
+ fathoming this fact; but this is not your case, you who denounced the abuses and
+ consequences of German protectionism, and we remember that at the Antwerp Congress
+ you agreed with us in recognizing its aggressive nature.</p>
+ <p>In conclusion, we beg to express the deep consideration which we feel for your
+ science, hitherto so unerring.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page198" id="page198"></a>{198}</span><b>To
+ Americans In Germany</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Prof. Adolf von Harnack.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Citizens of the United States, ladies and gentlemen: It is my pleasure and my
+ privilege to address to you today a few words.</p>
+ <p>Let me begin with a personal recollection. Ten years ago I was in the United
+ States and I came away with some unforgettable memories. What impression was the
+ strongest? Not the thundering fall of Niagara, not the wonderful entrance into New
+ York Harbor with its skyscrapers, not the tremendous World's Fair of St. Louis in all
+ its proud grandeur, not the splendid universities of Harvard and Columbia or the
+ Congressional Library in Washington&mdash;these are all works of technique or of
+ nature and cannot arouse our deepest admiration and make the deepest impression. What
+ was the deepest impression? It was two-fold: first, the great work of the American
+ Nation, and next, American hospitality.</p>
+ <p>The great work of the American Nation, that is, the nation itself! From the
+ smallest beginning the American Nation has in 200 years developed itself to a world
+ power of more than 100,000,000 souls, and has not only settled but civilized the
+ whole section of the world from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from the great lakes to
+ the West Indies. And not only civilized: everything which has drifted to it has been
+ welded together by this nation with an indescribable power, welded together to the
+ unity of a great, noble nation of educated men&mdash;such a thing as has never before
+ happened in all history. After two or at the most, three generations, all are welded
+ together in the American body and the American spirit, and this without petty rules,
+ without political pressure. In the definite frame of this people every individual
+ character fits in without coercion, becomes American and yet retains its own quality.
+ The world has never witnessed such a spectacle but it is witnessing it continually
+ now. On the one side it hears and sees the fact that every alien after a short time
+ announces, "America is now my Fatherland!" and on the other hand the old country
+ still continues undisturbed the bond between them. Yes, here is at once a national
+ strength and freedom which another could not copy from you very easily.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Spirit of America.</b></p>
+ <p>But, further: Among those who have wandered to your shores are millions of
+ Germans&mdash;several millions! For more than two years&mdash;where shall I begin to
+ relate&mdash;since the days of Steuben and of Carl Schurz&mdash;but how can I name
+ names?&mdash;they have been all received as brothers, bringing their best; and their
+ best was not lost. More I cannot say.</p>
+ <p>Furthermore, what sort was the spirit which received them? Upon each one, without
+ and within, that spirit has imprinted its seal. Concerning this spirit I shall speak
+ later, but for the present I will only say, it is the spirit of common courage and
+ common freedom! And from this unity I saw had developed a tremendous contribution as
+ the work of this nation, a contribution to agriculture, to technology, and, as we of
+ the German universities have known for several decades, an extraordinary contribution
+ to science. And this contribution has been derived from a combination such as we in
+ Europe cannot effect, of the good old traditional wisdom which has been brought down
+ out of the history of Europe and a youthful courage, I might almost say, a childlike
+ spirit. These two combined, this circumspection and at the same time this courage of
+ youth, which I met everywhere and which has stamped itself upon all American work, is
+ what I have admired.</p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>{199}</span>And the
+ second was the American hospitality!</p>
+ <p>Like a warm breeze, this hospitality surrounded me and my friends. Wherever we
+ went we breathed the air of this friendship, indeed, it almost took away our powers
+ of will, so thoroughly did it anticipate every plan and every need. Like parcels of
+ friendship, we were sent from place to place, always the feeling that we had all
+ known each other forever. That was an experience for which all of us&mdash;for who of
+ us Germans who have come over here has not experienced it?&mdash;will be perpetually
+ thankful. That will never be forgotten.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Friendship for Germany.</b></p>
+ <p>But beautiful and noble as that was, your nation has furnished ours with something
+ still more unforgettable. In those horrible days of 1870, when a great number of
+ Germans were shut up in unfortunate Paris, the American Ambassador assumed the care
+ of them, and what America did at that time she is again doing for all of our
+ country&mdash;men who, surprised in the enemy's country by the war, have been
+ detained there. They are intrusted to the special care of the American Ambassador,
+ and we know with as much certainty as though it were an actual fact already that that
+ care will be the best and the most loyal. That, my friends, is true service of
+ friendship, which is not mere convention but such as it is in the Catechism: "Give us
+ our daily bread and good friends." They belong together.</p>
+ <p>But to answer the question why you are our good friends we must reflect a little
+ for the answer which we might have given a few days ago&mdash;"You are our good
+ friends as our blood relations"&mdash;alas! that answer no longer holds. That is
+ over! God grant that in later days we may again be able to say it, but by a
+ circumstance which has torn our very heartstrings it has been proved that blood is
+ not thicker than water. But where then is the deep-lying reason for this friendship?
+ Does it rest in the fact that we have so many Germans over there; that they have been
+ received so cordially; that they have done so much for the building up of America,
+ soul and body, or that we find friends in so many Americans on this side of the
+ water? This is an important consideration, but it is not the ultimate cause we are
+ seeking.</p>
+ <p>My friends, when it is a powerful relationship, imbedded in rock as it were, which
+ is under consideration, then the matter is more than superficial, and that which is
+ at the bottom of this deeper fact, history is at this very moment showing us as she
+ writes in characters of bronze before our eyes; because we have a common spirit which
+ springs from the very depths of our hearts, for that reason are we friends!</p>
+ <p>And what is that spirit? It is the spirit of the deep religious and moral culture
+ which has possessed us through a succession of centuries and out of which this
+ powerful American offshoot has sprung. To this culture belong three things, or,
+ rather, it rests upon three pillars. The first pillar is the recognition of the
+ eternal value of every human soul, consequently the recognition of personality and
+ individuality. These are respected, nourished, striven for. Second is the recognition
+ of the duty at any time to risk this human soul, which is to each one of us so dear,
+ for that great ideal&mdash;"God, freedom, and the Fatherland." The dearer that human
+ soul, that life, is prized by us, Germans and Americans, the more surely do we give
+ it up willingly and joyously when a high cause demands it. And the third pillar is
+ respect for law and therewith the capability for powerful organization in all lines
+ and in all manner of communities.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>A Different Culture.</b></p>
+ <p>But now before my eyes I see rising up against the culture which rests upon these
+ three pillars&mdash;personality, duty to sacrifice all for ideals, law and
+ organization&mdash;another culture, a culture of the horde whose Government is
+ patriarchal, a civilization of the mob which is brought together and held together by
+ despots, the Byzantine&mdash;I must extend it further&mdash;Mongolian-Muscovite
+ culture.</p>
+ <p>My friends, this was once a true cul<span class="pagenum"><a name="page200"
+ id="page200"></a>{200}</span>ture, but it is no longer. This culture was not able to
+ bear the light of the eighteenth century, still less that of the nineteenth, and now,
+ in this twentieth century, it breaks out and threatens us&mdash;this unorganized mob,
+ this mob of Asia; like the sands of the desert it would sweep down over our harvest
+ fields. That we already know; we are already experiencing it. That, too, the
+ Americans know, for every one who has stood upon the ground of our civilization and
+ who with a keen glance regards the present situation knows that the word must be:
+ "Peoples of Europe, save your most hallowed possessions!"</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>"I Cover My Head!"</b></p>
+ <p>This, our culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in large part, yes, almost
+ wholly, intrusted to three peoples: to us, to the Americans, and&mdash;to the
+ English. I will say no more! I cover my head! Two still remain, and must stand all
+ the more firmly together where this culture is menaced. It is a question of our
+ spiritual existence, and Americans will realize that it is also their existence. We
+ have a common culture, and a common duty to protect it!</p>
+ <p>To you, American citizens, we give the holy pledge that we shall offer our last
+ drop of blood in the cause of this culture. May I in addition say to you, since I
+ have made this pledge, that we shall as a matter of course protect those of you here
+ in our land and care for you and do everything for you? If we have made the greater
+ pledge, surely we can manage these trifles.</p>
+ <p>But you, my dear fellow-countrymen, we are all thinking with one mind on what is
+ now going on about us. It is a very grave but a splendid time. Whatever in the last
+ analysis we shall go through, at present there is no longer any one of us who any
+ longer regards life in the r&ocirc;le of a blas&eacute; or critical spectator, but
+ each one of us stands in the very midst of life, and, indeed, in the very midst of a
+ higher life. God has of a sudden brought us out of the wretchedness of the day to a
+ high place to which we have never before spiritually attained. But always where life
+ emerges, a higher life or merely life itself, wherever there is a thirst for life,
+ there is it set close around by death, as at every birth when something new comes to
+ the light of day, and so if the most precious thing is to be gained, then death will
+ stand close by life. But this we also know, that when death and life intertwine in
+ this fashion, the fear of death vanishes away; in the intertwining, life only appears
+ and full of life man goes through death and into death. It brings to my mind an old
+ song, the powerful song of victory of our fathers:</p>
+ It was a famous battle,<br />
+ Fought 'twixt Life and Death;<br />
+ Life came out the victor,<br />
+ Triumphant over Death;<br />
+ Already it was written<br />
+ How one Death killed the other,<br />
+ So making mock of Death!<br />
+
+ <p>Death which is willingly met kills the great death and secures the higher life.
+ Death makes us free. Thus spake Luther.</p>
+ <p>Let me say a few words in closing. Before all of us there stands in time of crisis
+ an image under which are the plain words: "He was faithful unto death, yea, even to
+ death on the cross." Now the time for great faithfulness has come for us, for this
+ obedience for which our neighbors in former times have ridiculed us, saying: "See,
+ these are the faithful Germans, the men who do all on command and are so obedient!"
+ Now they shall see that this great obedience was not mere discipline, but a matter of
+ will. It was and still is discipline, but it is also will. They shall see that this
+ great obedience is not pettiness and death, but power and life.</p>
+ <p>From the east&mdash;I say it once more&mdash;the desert sands are sweeping down
+ upon us; on the west we are opposed by old enemies and treacherous friends. When will
+ the German be able to pray again, confessing:</p>
+ God is the Orient,<br />
+ God is the Occident;<br />
+ Northernmost and Southern lands<br />
+ Rest in peace beneath His hands.<br />
+
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id="page201"></a>{201}</span>We shall hope
+ that God may give us strength to make this true, not only for us but for all
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p>Until then, since we see the very springs of our higher life and our existence
+ threatened, we shout: "Father, protect our springs of life and save us from the
+ Huns."</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>A Reply to Prof. Harnack</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Some British Theologians.</h3>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>Prof. Harnack.</p>
+ <p>Honored Sir: We, the undersigned, a group of theologians who owe more than we can
+ express to you personally and to the great host of German teachers and leaders of
+ thought, have noticed with pain a report of a speech recently delivered by you, in
+ which you are said to have described the conduct of Great Britain in the present war
+ as that of a traitor to civilization.</p>
+ <p>We are quite sure that you could never have been betrayed into such a statement if
+ you had been acquainted with the real motives which actuate the British Nation in the
+ present crisis.</p>
+ <p>Permit us, in the interests of a better understanding now and subsequently, to
+ state to you the grounds on which we, whose obligations to Germany, personal and
+ professional, are simply incalculable, have felt it our duty to support the British
+ Government in its declaration of war against the land and people we love so well.</p>
+ <p>We are not actuated by any preference for France over Germany&mdash;still less by
+ any preference for Russia over Germany. The preference lies entirely the other way.
+ Next to the peoples that speak the English tongue, there is no people in the world
+ that stands so high in our affection and admiration as the people of Germany. Several
+ of us have studied in German universities. Many of us have enjoyed warm personal
+ friendship with your fellow-countrymen. All of us owe an immeasurable debt to German
+ theology, philosophy, and literature. Our sympathies are in matters of the spirit so
+ largely German that nothing but the very strongest reasons could ever lead us to
+ contemplate the possibility of hostile relations between Great Britain and
+ Germany.</p>
+ <p>Nor have we the remotest sympathy with any desire to isolate Germany, or to
+ restrict her legitimate expansion, commercial and colonial. We have borne resolute
+ witness against the endeavor made by foes of Germany to foment anti-German suspicion
+ and ill-will in the minds of our fellow-countrymen.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Sanctity of Treaties.</b></p>
+ <p>But we recognize that all hopes of settled peace between the nations, and indeed
+ of any civilized relations between the nations, rest on the maintenance inviolate of
+ the sanctity of treaty obligations. We can never hope to put law for war if solemn
+ international compacts can be torn up at the will of any power involved. These
+ obligations are felt by us to be the more stringently binding in the case of
+ guaranteed neutrality. For the steady extension of neutralization appears to us to be
+ one of the surest ways of the progressive elimination of war from the face of the
+ earth. All these considerations take on a more imperative cogency when the treaty
+ rights of a small people are threatened by a great world power. We therefore believe
+ that when Germany refused to respect the neutrality of Belgium, which she herself had
+ guaranteed, Great Britain had no option, either in international law or in Christian
+ ethics, but to defend the people of Belgium. The Imperial Chancellor of Germany has
+ himself admitted, on Aug. 4, that the protest of the Luxembourg and Belgian
+ Governments was "just," and that Germany was doing "wrong" and acting "contrary to
+ the dictates of international law." His only <span class="pagenum"><a name="page202"
+ id="page202"></a>{202}</span>excuse was "necessity"&mdash;which recalls our Milton's
+ phrase, "necessity, the tyrant's plea." It has cost us all the deepest pain to find
+ the Germany which we love so intensely committing this act of lawless aggression on a
+ weak people, and a Christian nation becoming a mere army with army ethics. We loathe
+ war of any kind. A war with Germany cuts us to the very quick. But we sincerely
+ believe that Great Britain in this conflict is fighting for conscience, justice,
+ Europe, humanity, and lasting peace.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Dictated Terms.</b></p>
+ <p>This conviction is deepened by the antecedents of the present unhappy war. In
+ allowing her ally Austria to dictate terms to Servia which were quite incompatible
+ with the independence of that little State, Germany gave proof of her disregard for
+ the rights of smaller States. A similar disregard for the sovereign rights of greater
+ States was shown in the demand that Russia should demobilize her forces. It was quite
+ open to Germany to have answered Russia's mobilization with a counter-mobilization
+ without resorting to war. Many other nations have mobilized to defend their frontiers
+ without declaring war. Alike indirectly in regard to Servia and directly in regard to
+ Russia, Germany was indisputably the aggressor. And this policy of lawless aggression
+ became more nakedly manifest in the invasion of Belgium. Great Britain is not bound
+ by any treaty rights to defend either Servia or Russia. But she is bound by the most
+ sacred obligations to defend Belgium, obligations which France undertook to observe.
+ We have been grieved to the heart to see in the successive acts of German policy a
+ disregard of the liberties of States, small or great, which is the very negation of
+ civilization. It is not our country that has incurred the odium of being a traitor to
+ civilization or to the conscience of humanity.</p>
+ <p>Doubtless you read the facts of the situation quite differently. You may think us
+ entirely mistaken. But we desire to assure you, as fellow-Christians and
+ fellow-theologians, that our motives are not open to the charge which has been
+ made.</p>
+ <p>We have been moved to approach you on this matter by our deep reverence for you
+ and our high appreciation of the great services you have rendered to Christendom in
+ general. We trust that you will receive what we have said in the spirit in which it
+ was sent.</p>
+ <p>We have the honor to be,</p>
+ <p>Yours very sincerely,</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>P.J. FORSYTH, M.A., D.D., Aberdeen University. Principal of Hackney College
+ (Divinity School: University of London).</p>
+ <p>HERBERT T. ANDREWS, B.A. Oxon. Professor of New Testament, Exegesis, Introduction
+ and Criticism. New College, London (Divinity School: University of London).</p>
+ <p>J. HERBERT DARLOW, M.A. Cambridge. Literary Superintendent of the British and
+ Foreign Bible Society.</p>
+ <p>JAMES R. GILLIES, M.A. Edinburgh, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of England.
+ Pastor of Hampstead Presbyterian Church, London.</p>
+ <p>R. MACLEOD, Pastor of Frognal Presbyterian Church, London.</p>
+ <p>W.M. MACPHAIL, M.A. Glasgow. General Secretary of the Presbyterian Church of
+ England.</p>
+ <p>RICHARD ROBERTS, Pastor of Crouch Hill Presbyterian Church, London.</p>
+ <p>H.H. SCULLARD, M.A. Cambridge, M.A., D.D. London. Professor of Ecclesiastical
+ History, Christian Ethics, and the History of Religions in New College (Divinity
+ School: University of London).</p>
+ <p>ALEX RAMSAY, M.A., B.D. Pastor of the Highgate Presbyterian Church, London.</p>
+ <p>W.B. SELBIE, M.A., D.D. Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford. Chairman of the
+ Congregational Union of England and Wales.</p>
+ <p>J. HERBERT STEAD, M.A. Glasgow. Warden of the Robert Browning Settlement,
+ London.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>{203}</span><b>Prof.
+ Harnack in Rebuttal</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>BERLIN, Sept. 10, 1914.</p>
+ <p>Gentlemen: The words, "The conduct of Great Britain is that of a traitor to
+ civilization," were not used by me, but you have expressed my general judgment of
+ this conduct correctly. The sentence in question in my speech reads: "This, our
+ culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in large part, yes, almost wholly,
+ intrusted to three peoples: To us, to the Americans, and&mdash;to the English, I will
+ say no more. I cover my head." To my deep sorrow I must, even after your
+ communication, maintain this judgment.</p>
+ <p>You claim that England has drawn and must draw the sword purely for the protection
+ of the small nations of Servia and Belgium and for the sake of an international
+ treaty. In this claim I see at the very least a fearful self-delusion.</p>
+ <p>It is an actual fact that what Servia desired was that her Government should in no
+ wise be mixed up with the shameful crime of Serajevo, and it is also an established
+ fact that for years Servia, with the support of Russia, has attempted by the most
+ despicable means to incite to rebellion the Austrian South Slavs. When Austria
+ finally issued to her a decided ultimatum without making any actual attack on her
+ territory, it was the duty of every civilized land&mdash;England as well&mdash;to
+ keep hands off, for Austria's royal house, Austria's honor, and Austria's existence
+ were attacked. Austria's yielding to Servia would mean the sovereignty of Russia in
+ the eastern half of the Balkans, for Servia is nothing more than a Russian satrapy,
+ and the Balkan federation brought about by Russia had for its ultimate purpose
+ opposition to Austria. This is as well known in England as in Germany. If, gentlemen,
+ in spite of this, you can presume to judge that in this circumstance it was purely a
+ case of protecting the right of a small nation against a large one, I shall find
+ great difficulty in believing in your good faith.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Against Pan-Slavism.</b></p>
+ <p>It was not a question of little Servia but of Austria's battle for life and the
+ struggle of Western culture against Pan-Slavism. Servia is, after all, only an
+ outpost of Russia and as opposed to this nation, Servia's "sovereignty" is less than
+ a mere shadow; in fact it can hardly be protected by England, for in reality it does
+ not exist. For in addition Servia, through the most dastardly murder known to
+ history, struck her name from the list of the nations with which one does business as
+ equals. What would England have done had the Prince of Wales been assassinated by the
+ emissary of a little nation which had continually been inciting the Irish to revolt?
+ Would it have issued a milder ultimatum than Austria's? But of all this you say not a
+ word in your communication, but instead persist on seeing in the situation into which
+ Servia and Russia have brought Austria, only the necessity of an oppressed little
+ country to whose help haste must be made! Thus to judge would be more than blindness,
+ indeed, it would be a crime that cries unto heaven, were it not known that the life
+ problems of other great powers do not exist for Great Britain, because she is only
+ concerned about her own life problems and those of little nations whose support can
+ be useful to her.</p>
+ <p>At bottom Servia is of as little consequence to you as to us. Austria, too, is of
+ no consequence to you; and you realize that Austria had the right to punish Servia.
+ But because Germany, who stands behind Austria, is to be struck; therefore Servia is
+ the guiltless little State which must be spared! What is the result? Great Britain
+ sides with Russia against Germany. What does that mean? That means that Great <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id="page204"></a>{204}</span>Britain has torn down
+ the dike which has protected West Europe and its culture from the desert sands of the
+ Asiatic barbarism of Russia and of Pan-Slavism. Now we Germans are forced to stop up
+ the breach with our bodies. We shall do it amid streams of blood, and we shall hold
+ out there. We must hold out, for we are protecting the labor of thousands of years
+ for all of Europe, and for Great Britain! But that day when Great Britain tore down
+ the dam will never be forgotten in the history of the world, and history's judgment
+ shall read: On that day when Russian-Asiatic power rushed down upon the culture of
+ Europe Great Britain declared that she must side with Russia because "the sovereignty
+ of the murderer-nation Servia had been violated!"</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>As to Neutrality.</b></p>
+ <p>But no, the maintenance of Servians sovereignty is not according to your
+ communication the first, but only the second reason for Great Britain's declaration
+ of war against us. The first reason is our violation of Belgian neutrality; "Germany
+ broke a treaty which she herself had guaranteed." Shall I remind you how Great
+ Britain has disported herself in the matter of treaties and pleasant promises? How
+ about Egypt for example? But I do not need to go into these flagrant and repeated
+ violations of treaty rights, for a still more serious violation of the rights of a
+ people stands today on your books against you; it has been proved that your army is
+ making use of dumdum bullets and thereby turning a decent war into the most bloody
+ butchery. In this Great Britain has severed herself from every right to complain
+ about the violation of the rights of a people.</p>
+ <p>But aside from that&mdash;in your communication you have again emphasized the main
+ point. We did not declare war against Belgium, but we declared that since Russia and
+ France compelled us to wage a war with two fronts (190,000,000 against 68,000,000) we
+ had then to suffer defeat if we could not march through Belgium; that we should do
+ that but that we should carefully keep from harming Belgium in any way and would
+ indemnify all damage incurred&mdash;our hand upon it! Would Great Britain, had she
+ been in our position, have hesitated a moment to do likewise? And would Great Britain
+ have drawn the sword for us if France had violated the neutrality of Belgium by
+ marching through it? You know well enough that both these questions must be answered
+ in the negative.</p>
+ <p>Our Imperial Chancellor has with his characteristic conscientiousness declared
+ that we have on our side committed a certain wrong. I cannot agree with him in this
+ judgment, and I cannot even recognize the commission of a formal wrong, for we were
+ in a situation where formalities no longer obtain, and where moral duties only
+ prevail. When David, in the extremity of his need, took the show-bread from the Table
+ of the Lord, he was in every sense of the word justified, for the letter of the law
+ ceased at that moment to exist. It is as well known to you as to me that there is a
+ law of necessity which breaks iron asunder, to say nothing of treaties.</p>
+ <p>Appreciate our position! Prove to me that Germany has flippantly constructed a law
+ of necessity; prove it to me in this hour, when your country has gone over to our
+ enemies, and we have half the world to fight. You cannot do that; you could not do it
+ on the 4th of August, and consequently you have assumed the most miserable of
+ pretexts, because you wished to destroy us. From your letter, gentlemen, I must
+ believe that you are far from holding this view; but do you believe, and would you
+ really try to make me believe, that your statesmen would have declared war against us
+ only because we were determined to march through Belgium? You could not consider them
+ so foolish and so flippant.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>An Earlier Treachery.</b></p>
+ <p>But I am not yet at an end. It is not we who have first violated the neutrality of
+ Belgium. Belgium, as we feared and as we now, informed by the actual facts, see still
+ more clearly, was for a long time in alliance with France and&mdash;with you.
+ France's airmen were flying over <span class="pagenum"><a name="page205"
+ id="page205"></a>{205}</span>Belgium before we marched in; negotiations with France
+ had already taken place, and in Maubeuge there was found an arsenal full of English
+ munitions which had been stationed there before the declaration of war. This
+ arsenal&mdash;you know where Maubeuge is situated!&mdash;points to agreements which
+ Great Britain had made with France, and to which Belgium was also party. These
+ agreements are before the whole world today, for the chain of evidence is complete
+ and the treacherous plot of Great Britain is revealed. She has encouraged and pledged
+ the Belgians against us, and therefore it is she who must answer for all the misery
+ which has been visited upon that poor country. Had it been our responsibility, not a
+ single hair of a Belgian's head should have been harmed. If, then, the Belgian wrongs
+ like those of Servia are only the flimsiest pretexts for Great Britain's declaration
+ of war against us, there remains, unfortunately, no other reason for this declaration
+ of war save the intention of your statesmen either to destroy us or so to weaken us
+ that Great Britain will rule supreme on the seas and in all distant parts of the
+ world. This intention you personally deny and thus far I must take your word for it.
+ But do you deny it also for your Government? That you cannot do, for the facts have
+ been brought to light; when Great Britain determined to join the coalition of Russia
+ with France, which is ruled by Russia, when it put aside all the differences that
+ stood between her and Russia, when it set upon us not only the hordes of Russia but
+ the scrupulous Japanese, "the yellow peril," and called upon all Europe, when it also
+ sunk in the ocean its duties to European culture&mdash;for all of that there is but
+ one explanation: England believes that the hour for our destruction has struck. Why
+ does she wish to destroy us? Because she will not endure our power, our zeal, our
+ perfection of growth! There is no other explanation!</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>Lifting Humanity.</b></p>
+ <p>We and Great Britain in alliance with America were able in peaceful co-operation
+ to lift humanity to a higher plane, and to lead the world in peace, allowing to each
+ his rights. We Germans, now know no, and have never known any, higher ideal than
+ this. In order to realize this ideal the German Kaiser and the German people have
+ made many sacrifices in the past 43 years. In proportion to the development of our
+ strength, we should be able to lay claim to more territory than we now possess in the
+ world. But we have never attempted to force this claim. We held that the strength of
+ our nation should be in its zeal and in the peaceful fruits of that zeal. Great
+ Britain has begrudged us that; she has been jealous of our powers, jealous of our
+ fleet, jealous of our industries and our commerce, and jealousy is the root of all
+ evil. Jealousy it is which has driven Great Britain into the most fearful war which
+ history knows and the end of which is unforseen.</p>
+ <p>What course is open to you, gentlemen, once you are enlightened as to the policy
+ of your country? In the name of our Christian culture, which your Government has
+ frivolously placed in jeopardy, I can offer you but one counsel: To burden your
+ consciences no longer with Servia and Belgium, which you must protect, but to face
+ about and stop your Government in its headlong course; it may not be too late. As far
+ as we Germans are concerned, our way is clearly indicated, though not so our fate.
+ Should we fall, which God and our strong arm prevent, then there sinks with us to its
+ grave all the higher culture of our part of the world, whose defenders we were called
+ to be; for neither with Russia nor against Russia will Great Britain be able longer
+ to maintain that culture in Europe. Should we conquer&mdash;and victory is for us
+ something more than mere hope&mdash;then shall we feel ourselves responsible, as
+ formerly, for this culture, for the learning and the peace of Europe, and shall put
+ from us any idea of setting up a hegemony in Europe. We shall stand by the one who,
+ together in fraternal union with us, will create and maintain such a peaceful
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p>For the continuation of your cordial <span class="pagenum"><a name="page206"
+ id="page206"></a>{206}</span>attitude toward me I am personally grateful. I would not
+ unnecessarily sever the bond which holds me to the upright Christians and the
+ learning of your country, but at the present moment this bond has no value for
+ me.</p>
+ <p>PROF. VON HARNACK.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>P.S.&mdash;It is in your power now to wage a battle which would be of honor to
+ you. As a fourth great power arrayed against Germany, the lying international press
+ has raised itself up, flooded the world with lies about our splendid and upright
+ army, and slandered everything that is German. We have been almost entirely cut off
+ from any possibility of protecting ourselves against this "beast of the pit." Do not
+ believe the lies, and spread abroad the truth about us. We are today no different
+ than Carlyle pictured us to you. HARNACK.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><b>The Causes of the War</b></h2>
+ <h3>By Theodore Niemeyer</h3>
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p><i>Theodore Niemeyer, Kaiser Wilhelm Exchange Professor at Columbia University
+ for 1914-15, and well-known Professor of Kiel University, has addressed the
+ following letter to the editor of The New Yorker Staats-Zeitung.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>KIEL, 14th August, 1914.</p>
+ <p><i>To the Editor of the New Yorker Staats-Zeitung</i>:</p>
+ <p>Dear Sir: English papers publish a telegram from Mr. Andrew Carnegie, in which the
+ view is expressed that the German Emperor, "in declining to take part In the peace
+ conference proposed by Sir Edward Grey, an advocate of peace," proved unfaithful to
+ that love of peace which he has shown during the past twenty-five years&mdash;that
+ he, on the contrary, has taken up the r&ocirc;le of a disturber of the peace of
+ Europe.</p>
+ <p>To the best of my knowledge, the German press has only referred to this telegram
+ with the simple remark that intelligence of the real state of affairs has evidently
+ not yet reached the ears of the sender of the telegram.</p>
+ <p>This attitude of the German press is in conformity with its firm consciousness of
+ the justice of its cause and its confidence in the ultimate triumph of truth. Both in
+ this consciousness and in this confidence I will not be surpassed by any one, but to
+ observe silence in the face of such accusations is beyond my power. To allow such a
+ misconstruction to pass unchallenged through the world seems to me (and doubtless to
+ many thousands besides me) unbearable.</p>
+ <p>The misunderstanding about the Peace Conference is easily put right. Sir Edward
+ Grey did not propose any peace conference at all, but a conference of the Ambassadors
+ of those four powers which were at that time not directly concerned, namely Germany,
+ England, France, and Italy. These powers were to attempt to exert their influence on
+ Austria-Hungary and Russia in the same way as the Ambassador's Conference (or rather
+ Ambassadorial Reunion) in London had done, in 1912 and 1913, on the Balkan States and
+ Turkey. What the united six powers at that time undertook toward the Balkan States
+ was now to be done by four&mdash;discordant&mdash;powers upon two others who are in a
+ state of highest political tension. To this proposal Germany replied that the
+ apparatus of an Ambassadorial Conference does not work quickly or effectually enough
+ for the emergency of the moment, or to be able to ease the tense political
+ situation.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>The Kaiser's Efforts.</b></p>
+ <p>In place of this, however, the German Emperor undertook to negotiate in person
+ with the Russian and Austrian monarch and was overwhelmed with grief when the leaders
+ of Muscovite policy frustrated all his exertions by completely ignoring his efforts
+ for peace, (made at the express desire of the Czar,) and then in <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>{207}</span>real earnest amassing
+ Russian forces on the German frontier, evidently resolved to force on a war under any
+ circumstances&mdash;even against the will of the Czar.</p>
+ <p>It is here that the clue to all the terrible events of the present day is to be
+ found.</p>
+ <p>The incessant intriguing of the Russian military party for many years past has at
+ last succeeded in drawing first France and then England to their cause, by turning
+ the mistrust, the dread of competition, the hopes of revenge, and the ever-increasing
+ armaments to their use with incomparable skill. The task was facilitated by Germany's
+ industrial up-growth, which&mdash;in willful misconstruction of the truths of the
+ laws of international communities&mdash;has been represented as a calamity for other
+ States.</p>
+ <br />
+
+ <p><b>England's Growing Friendship.</b></p>
+ <p>In quite recent times people in England began to recognize this misconstruction of
+ facts as such. They began to understand that friendship with Germany might be a
+ blessing and that in this way peace would be possible. This, however, meant the
+ possibility of the Muscovite policy being completely frustrated. An Anglo-German
+ understanding seemed already to be shaking the very foundations of the Triple
+ Entente. Russia had been obliged during the two Balkan wars (the London Ambassadorial
+ Conference was in fact the clearing house for this) to make important concessions to
+ the detriment of her prot&eacute;g&eacute;s, Servia and Montenegro, in order to
+ retain the friendship of England, which ardently strove for peace. Now, however, it
+ was highest time for Russia to pocket her gains; for the English people were slowly
+ beginning to realize that in St. Petersburg they were trying to engage England in the
+ cause of Pan-Slavism. The unnatural alliance was becoming more and more unpopular
+ from day to day. How long would it be before Russia lost England's help forever?</p>
+ <p>Before this took place Russia must bring about a European war. The iron, which had
+ been prepared with the help of the English military party, had to be forged, for
+ never again would there be a moment so favorable for the complete destruction of
+ Austria and the humiliation of Germany. Servia was thrust to the front. Russia's
+ Ambassador managed that wonderfully. The fire was set in so skillful a manner that
+ the incendiaries knew in advance there was no possibility of extinguishing it. The
+ conflagration must spread and soon blaze in all corners of Europe.</p>
+ <p>What was the use of a Peace Conference in such circumstances? Conscious of the
+ irresistible consequences of their action the real rulers of Russia sent forward
+ their armies; it was now or never, if the work was to be done with the help of
+ England. And without England perhaps even France would not consent to join.</p>
+ <p>Thus it came about, and thus we have seen the peaceful policy of the German
+ Emperor, which he has upheld for twenty-five years, completely wrecked.</p>
+ <p>We are now fighting not only for our Fatherland, but also for the emancipation of
+ our culture from a menace that has become insupportable.</p>
+ <p>Yours faithfully,</p>
+ <p>TH. NIEMEYER,</p>
+ <p>Kaiser Wilhelm Professor, Columbia University.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 65%;' />
+ <h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="page208" id="page208"></a>{208}</span><b>Comment
+ by Dr. Max Walter</b></h2>
+ <br />
+
+ <p>To the letter addressed by Prof. Th. Niemeyer to the editor of The New Yorker
+ Staats-Zeitung (see No. 237, 3, 2, of Frankfurter Zeitung) I should like to add the
+ following remarks: During my activity as Professor of the Methodics of Foreign
+ Language Teaching at Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, (January-June,
+ 1911,) I was introduced to Mr. Andrew Carnegie, with whom I had a long interview. He
+ expressed his views upon the peace question and arbitration, and spoke for a long
+ time about the German Emperor who had repeatedly received him during his visits to
+ Germany. He expressed his great appreciation of the important services rendered by
+ our Emperor for the maintenance of peace, and declared that he, above all others,
+ deserved the title of the Peace-loving Monarch, (Friedensf&uuml;rst.) To him it was
+ chiefly due that, during the various crises which had repeatedly brought Europe to
+ the brink of war, the disaster had again and again been averted. The German Emperor,
+ he considered, looked upon it as his chief pride that no war should take place during
+ his reign, that Germany should develop and prosper in peaceful emulation with other
+ countries, and his greatest desire was that other nations should recognize
+ ungrudgingly that all Germany did to raise the moral and ethical standard of mankind
+ was for the benefit of all.</p>
+ <p>If now Carnegie has really declared, as this letter maintains, that he considers
+ the German Emperor the "Disturber of Peace," it shows clearly how baleful the
+ influence of the English press has been&mdash;that it could shake such a firm
+ conviction in our Emperor's love of peace. Let us hope that this letter of Prof.
+ Niemeyer's and other explanations to the same effect will induce him to recognize the
+ horrible misrepresentations of English papers and to return to his former
+ conviction.</p>
+ <p>It was on this occasion, too, that Andrew Carnegie indorsed Prof. Burgess's view,
+ that the three nations&mdash;America, Germany, and England&mdash;should unite, and
+ then they would be able to keep the peace of the world. When I expressed my doubts in
+ the real friendship of England, he replied, then America and Germany, at least, must
+ hold together to secure universal peace. Hitherto I have refrained from publishing
+ this interview, but now I consider it my duty to make known the views that Carnegie
+ once held, and to which, if he has really changed them, we may hope he, who has done
+ so much in his noble striving after peace, will return right away.</p>
+ <p>If there should remain the least doubt in Mr. Andrew Carnegie's mind, he has only
+ to read the telegrams exchanged between the Emperor William and the Czar on the one
+ hand, and King George and the Emperor on the other.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+ </body>
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+
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@@ -0,0 +1,14686 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of New York Times, Current History, Vol 1,
+Issue 1, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: New York Times, Current History, Vol 1, Issue 1
+ From the Beginning to March, 1915 With Index
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 5, 2004 [EBook #13635]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEW YORK TIMES, CURRENT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Miranda van de Heijning and the PG
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW YORK TIMES
+
+CURRENT HISTORY
+
+A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
+
+THE EUROPEAN WAR
+
+VOLUME I.
+
+From the Beginning to March, 1915 With Index
+
+[Illustration]
+
+NEW YORK THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY 1915
+
+Copyright 1914, 1915, By The New York Times Company
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ NUMBER I.
+
+ WHAT MEN OF LETTERS SAY
+ Page
+
+ COMMON SENSE ABOUT THE WAR 11
+ _By George Bernard Shaw_
+
+ SHAW'S NONSENSE ABOUT BELGIUM 60
+ _By Arnold Bennett_
+
+ BENNETT STATES THE GERMAN CASE 63
+ _By George Bernard Shaw_
+
+ FLAWS IN SHAW'S LOGIC 65
+ _By Cunninghame Graham_
+
+ EDITORIAL COMMENT ON SHAW 66
+
+ SHAW EMPTY OF GOOD SENSE 68
+ _By Christabel Pankhurst_
+
+ COMMENT BY READING OF SHAW 73
+
+ OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT WILSON 76
+ _By George Bernard Shaw_
+
+ A GERMAN LETTER TO G. BERNARD SHAW 80
+ _By Herbert Eulenberg_
+
+ BRITISH AUTHORS DEFEND ENGLAND'S WAR 82
+ _With Facsimile Signatures_
+
+ THE FOURTH OF AUGUST--EUROPE AT WAR 87
+ _By H.G. Wells_
+
+ IF THE GERMANS RAID ENGLAND 89
+ _By H.G. Wells_
+
+ SIR OLIVER LODGE'S COMMENT 92
+
+ WHAT THE GERMAN CONSCRIPT THINKS 93
+ _By Arnold Bennett_
+
+ FELIX ADLER'S COMMENT 95
+
+ WHEN PEACE IS SERIOUSLY DESIRED 97
+ _By Arnold Bennett_
+
+ BARRIE AT BAY: WHICH WAS BROWN? 100
+ _An Interview on the War_
+
+ A CREDO FOR KEEPING FAITH 102
+ _By John Galsworthy_
+
+ HARD BLOWS, NOT HARD WORDS 103
+ _By Jerome K. Jerome_
+
+ "AS THEY TESTED OUR FATHERS" 106
+ _By Rudyard Kipling_
+
+ KIPLING AND "THE TRUCE OF THE BEAR" 107
+
+ ON THE IMPENDING CRISIS 107
+ _By Norman Angell_
+
+ WHY ENGLAND CAME TO BE IN IT 108
+ _By Gilbert K. Chesterton_
+
+ SOUTH AFRICA'S BOERS AND BRITONS 125
+ _By H. Rider Haggard_
+
+ CAPT. MARK HAGGARD'S DEATH IN BATTLE 128
+ _By H. Rider Haggard_
+
+ AN ANTI-CHRISTIAN WAR 129
+ _By Robert Bridges_
+
+ ENGLISH ARTISTS' PROTEST 130
+
+ TO ARMS! 132
+ _By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle_
+
+ CONAN DOYLE ON BRITISH MILITARISM 140
+
+ THE NEED OF BEING MERCILESS 144
+ _By Maurice Maeterlinck_
+
+ LETTERS TO DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER 146
+ _By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant_
+
+ THE VITAL ENERGIES OF FRANCE 153
+ _By Henri Bergson_
+
+ FRANCE THROUGH ENGLISH EYES 153
+ _With Rene Bazin's Appreciation_
+
+ THE SOLDIER OF 1914 156
+ _By Rene Doumic_
+
+ GERMANY'S CIVILIZED BARBARISM 160
+ _By Emile Boutroux_
+
+ THE GERMAN RELIGION OF DUTY 170
+ _By Gabriele Reuter_
+
+ A LETTER TO GERHART HAUPTMANN 174
+ _By Romain Rolland_
+
+ A REPLY TO ROLLAND 175
+ _By Gerhart Hauptmann_
+
+ ANOTHER REPLY TO ROLLAND 176
+ _By Karl Wolfskehl_
+
+ ARE WE BARBARIANS? 178
+ _By Gerhart Hauptmann_
+
+ TO AMERICANS FROM A GERMAN FRIEND 180
+ _By Ludwig Fulda_
+
+ APPEAL TO THE CIVILIZED WORLD 185
+ _By Professors of Germany_
+
+ APPEAL OF THE GERMAN UNIVERSITIES 187
+
+ REPLY TO THE GERMAN PROFESSORS 188
+ _By British Scholars_
+
+ CONCERNING THE GERMAN PROFESSORS 192
+ _By Frederic Harrison_
+
+ THE REPLY FROM FRANCE 194
+ _By M. Yves Guyot and Prof Bellet_
+
+ TO AMERICANS IN GERMANY 198
+ _By Prof. Adolf von Harnack_
+
+ A REPLY TO PROF. HARNACK 201
+ _By Some British Theologians_
+
+ PROF. HARNACK IN REBUTTAL 203
+
+ THE CAUSES OF THE WAR 206
+ _By Theodore Niemeyer_
+
+ COMMENT BY DR. MAX WALTER 208
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER II.
+
+ WHO BEGAN THE WAR AND WHY?
+
+
+ SPEECHES BY KAISER WILHELM II. 210
+
+ THE MIGHTY FATE OF EUROPE 219
+ _As Interpreted by Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg,
+ German Imperial Chancellor._
+
+ AUSTRIA-HUNGARY'S VERSION OF THE WAR 226
+ _By Kaiser Frawz Josef and Count Berchtold_
+
+ A GERMAN REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE 228
+ _Certified by Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, German ex-Colonial
+ Secretary_
+
+ "TRUTH ABOUT GERMANY" 244
+ _Attested by Thirty-four German Dignitaries_
+
+ SPECULATIONS ABOUT PEACE, SEPTEMBER, 1914 273
+ _Report by James W. Gerard, American Ambassador at Berlin, to
+ President Wilson._
+
+ FIRST WARNINGS OF EUROPE'S PERIL 277
+ _Speeches by British Ministers_
+
+ GREAT BRITAIN'S MOBILIZATION 294
+ _Measures Taken Throughout the Empire Upon the Outbreak of War_
+
+ SUMMONS OF THE NATION TO ARMS 308
+ _British People Roused by Their Leaders_
+
+ TEACHINGS OF GEN. VON BERNHARDI 343
+ _By Viscount Bryce_
+
+ ENTRANCE OF FRANCE INTO THE WAR 350
+ _By President Poincare and Premier Viviani_
+
+ RUSSIA TO HER ENEMY 358
+
+ "THE FACTS ABOUT BELGIUM" 365
+ _Statement Issued by the Belgian Legation at Washington_
+
+ BELGO-BRITISH PLOT ALLEGED BY GERMANY 369
+ _Statement Issued by German Embassy at Washington, Oct. 13._
+
+ ATROCITIES OF THE WAR 374
+
+ BOMBARDMENT OF RHEIMS CATHEDRAL 392
+ _Protest Issued to Neutral Powers from French Foreign Office,
+ Bordeaux, Sept. 21._
+
+ THE SOCIALISTS' PART 397
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER III.
+
+ WHAT AMERICANS SAY TO EUROPE
+
+
+ IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CIVILIZATION 413
+ _Argued by James M. Beck_
+
+ CRITICS DISPUTE MR. BECK 431
+
+ DEFENSE OF THE DUAL ALLIANCE--REPLY 438
+ _By Dr. Edmund von Mach_
+
+ WHAT GLADSTONE SAID ABOUT BELGIUM 448
+ _By George Louis Beer_
+
+ FIGHT TO THE BITTER END 451
+ _An Interview with Andrew Carnegie_
+
+ WOMAN AND WAR--"Shot, Tell His Mother" (Poem) 458
+ _By W.E.P. French, Captain, U.S. Army_
+
+ THE WAY TO PEACE 459
+ _An Interview with Jacob H. Schiff_
+
+ PROF. MATHER ON MR. SCHIFF 464
+
+ THE ELIOT-SCHIFF LETTERS 465
+ _By Jacob H. Schiff and Charles W. Eliot_
+
+ LA CATHEDRALE (Poem Translated by Frances C. Fay) 472
+ _By Edmond Rostand_
+
+ PROBABLE CAUSES AND OUTCOME OF THE WAR 473
+ _Series of Five Letters by Charles W. Eliot,
+ with Related Correspondence_
+
+ THE LORD OF HOSTS (Poem) 501
+ _By Joseph B. Gilder_
+
+ A WAR OF DISHONOR 502
+ _By David Starr Jordan_
+
+ MIGHT OR RIGHT 503
+ _By John Grier Hibben_
+
+ JEANNE D'ARC--1914 (Poem) 506
+ _By Alma Durant Nicholson_
+
+ THE KAISER AND BELGIUM (With controversial letters) 507
+ _By John W. Burgess_
+
+ AMERICA'S PERIL IN JUDGING GERMANY 515
+ _By William M. Sloane_
+
+ POSSIBLE PROFITS FROM WAR 526
+ _Interview with Franklin H. Giddings_
+
+ "TO AMERICANS LEAVING GERMANY" 533
+ _A German Circular_
+
+ GERMAN DECLARATIONS 534
+ _By Rudolf Eucken and Ernst Haeckel_
+
+ THE EUCKEN AND HAECKEL CHARGES 537
+ _By John Warbeke_
+
+ CONCERNING GERMAN CULTURE 541
+ _By Brander Matthews_
+
+ CULTURE VS. KULTUR 543
+ _By Frank Jewett Mather, Jr._
+
+ THE TRESPASS IN BELGIUM 545
+ _By John Grier Hibben_
+
+ APPORTIONING THE BLAME 548
+ _By Arthur v. Briesen_
+
+ PARTING (Poem) 553
+ _By Louise von Wetter_
+
+ FRENCH HATE AND ENGLISH JEALOUSY 554
+ _By Kuno Francke_
+
+ IN DEFENSE OF AUSTRIA 559
+ _By Baron L. Hengelmuller_
+
+ RUSSIAN ATROCITIES 563
+ _By George Haven Putnam_
+
+ "THE UNITED STATES OF EUROPE" 565
+ _Interview with Nicholas Murray Butler_
+
+ A NEW WORLD MAP 571
+ _By Wilhelm Ostwald_
+
+ THE VERDICT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE 573
+ _By Newell Dwight Hillis_
+
+ TIPPERARY (Poem) 581
+ _By John B. Kennedy_
+
+ AS AMERICA SEES THE WAR 582
+ _By Harold Begbie_
+
+ TO MELOS, POMEGRANATE ISLE (Poem) 587
+ _By Grace Harriet Macurdy_
+
+ WHAT AMERICA CAN DO 588
+ _By Lord Channing of Wellingborough_
+
+ TO A COUSIN GERMAN (Poem) 593
+ _By Adeline Adams_
+
+ WHAT THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS MAY BE 594
+ _By Irving Fisher_
+
+ EFFECTS OF WAR ON AMERICA 600
+ _By Roland G. Usher_
+
+ GERMANY OF THE FUTURE 605
+ _Interview with M. de Lapredelle_
+
+ GERMANY THE AGGRESSOR 609
+ _By Albert Sauveur_
+
+ MILITARISM AND CHRISTIANITY 610
+ _By Lyman Abbott_
+
+ VIGIL (Poem) 612
+ _By Hortense Flexner_
+
+ NIETZSCHE AND GERMAN CULTURE 613
+ _By Abraham Solomon_
+
+ BELGIUM'S BITTER NEED 614
+ _By Sir Gilbert Parker_
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER IV.
+
+ THE WAR AT CLOSE QUARTERS
+
+
+ SIR JOHN FRENCH'S OWN STORY 619
+ _Famous Dispatches of the
+ British Commander in Chief to Lord Kitchener_
+
+ STORY OF THE "EYE WITNESS" 650
+ _By Col. E.D. Swinton of the Intelligence
+ Department of the British General Staff_
+
+ THE DAWN OF A NEW DAY (Poem) 678
+ _By Edward Neville Vose_
+
+ THE GERMAN ENTRY INTO BRUSSELS (With Map) 679
+ _By John Boon_
+
+ THE FALL OF ANTWERP 682
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ AS THE FRENCH FELL BACK ON PARIS 689
+ _By G.H. Perris_
+
+ THE RETREAT TO PARIS 691
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ A ZOUAVE'S STORY 704
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ WHEN WAR BURST ON ARRAS 707
+ _By a Special Correspondent_
+
+ THE BATTLES IN BELGIUM (With Map) 711
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ SEEKING WOUNDED ON BATTLE FRONT 714
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ AT THE KAISER'S HEADQUARTERS 718
+ _By Cyril Brown of The New York Times_
+
+ HOW THE BELGIANS FIGHT 725
+ _By a Correspondent of The London Daily News_
+
+ A VISIT TO THE FIRING LINE IN FRANCE 727
+ _By a Correspondent of The New York Times_
+
+ UNBURIED DEAD STREW LORRAINE (With Map) 729
+ _By Philip Gibbs_
+
+ ALONG THE GERMAN LINES NEAR METZ 731
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ THE SLAUGHTER IN ALSACE 736
+ _By John H. Cox_
+
+ RENNENKAMPF ON THE RUSSIAN BORDER 738
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ THE FIRST FIGHT AT LODZ (With Map) 740
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ THE FIRST INVASION OF SERBIA (With Map) 742
+ _By a Correspondent of The London Standard_
+
+ THE ATTACK ON TSING-TAU 745
+ _By Jefferson Jones_
+
+ THE GERMAN ATTACK ON TAHITI 748
+ _As Told by Miss Geni La France, an Eyewitness_
+
+ THE BLOODLESS CAPTURE OF GERMAN SAMOA 749
+ _By Malcolm Ross, F.R.G.S._
+
+ HOW THE CRESSY SANK 752
+ _By Edgar Rowan_
+
+ GERMAN STORY OF THE HELIGOLAND FIGHT 754
+ _By a Special Correspondent of The New York Times_
+
+ THE SINKING OF THE CRESSY AND THE HOGUE 755
+ _By the Senior Surviving Officers,
+ Commander Bertram W.L. Nicholson and
+ Commander Reginald A. Norton_
+
+ THE SINKING OF THE HAWKE 757
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ THE EMDEN'S LAST FIGHT 758
+ _By the Cable Operator at Cocos Islands_
+
+ CROWDS SEE THE NIGER SINK 760
+ _By a Correspondent of The London
+ Daily Chronicle_
+
+ LIEUTENANT WEDDIGEN'S OWN STORY 762
+ _By Herbert B. Swope and Capt. Lieut. Otto
+ Weddigen_
+
+ THE SOLILOQUY OF AN OLD SOLDIER (Poem) 764
+ _By O.C.A. Child_
+
+ THE EFFECTS OF WAR IN FOUR COUNTRIES 765
+ _By Irvin S. Cobb_
+
+ HOW PARIS DROPPED GAYETY 767
+ _By Anne Rittenhouse_
+
+ PARIS IN OCTOBER 770
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ FRANCE AND ENGLAND AS SEEN IN WAR TIME 772
+ _Interview with F. Hopkinson Smith_
+
+ THE HELPLESS VICTIMS 776
+ _By Mrs. Nina Larrey Duryee_
+
+ A NEW RUSSIA MEETS GERMANY 777
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ BELGIAN CITIES GERMANIZED 780
+ _By Cyril Brown of The New York Times_
+
+ THE BELGIAN RUIN 786
+ _By J.H. Whitehouse, M.P._
+
+ THE WOUNDED SERB 788
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ SPY ORGANIZATION IN ENGLAND 790
+ _British Home Office Communication_
+
+ CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 793
+
+ THE MEN OF THE EMDEN (Poem) 816
+ _By Thomas R. Ybarra_
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER V.
+
+ THE NEW RUSSIA SPEAKS
+
+
+ AN APPEAL BY RUSSIAN AUTHORS, ARTISTS AND ACTORS 817
+ _With Their Signatures_
+
+ RUSSIA IN LITERATURE 819
+ _By British Men of Letters_
+
+ RUSSIA AND EUROPE'S WAR 821
+ _By Paul Vinogradoff_
+
+ RUSSIAN APPEAL FOR THE POLES 825
+ _By A. Konovalov of the Russian Duma_
+
+ I AM FOR PEACE (Poem) 826
+ _By Lurana Sheldon_
+
+ UNITED RUSSIA 827
+ _By Peter Struve_
+
+ PRINCE TRUBETSKOI'S APPEAL TO RUSSIANS 830
+ _To Help the Polish Victims of War_
+
+ HOW PROHIBITION CAME TO RUSSIA 831
+ _An Interview with the Reformer Tchelisheff_
+
+ INFLUENCE OF THE WAR UPON RUSSIAN INDUSTRY 834
+ _By the Russian Ministry of Commerce_
+
+ DECLARATION OF THE RUSSIAN INDUSTRIAL INTERESTS 835
+
+ A RUSSIAN FINANCIAL AUTHORITY ON THE WAR 836
+ _By Prof. Migoulin_
+
+ PROPOSED INTERNAL LOANS OF RUSSIA 837
+ (_Prof. Migoulin's Plan_)
+
+ HOW RUSSIAN MANUFACTURERS FEEL 838
+ _Digested from Russkia Vedomosti_
+
+ NEW SOURCES OF REVENUE NEEDED 839
+ _By A. Sokolov_
+
+ OUR RUSSIAN ALLY 840
+ _By Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace_
+
+ CONFISCATION OF GERMAN PATENTS 849
+ _By the Russian Ministry of Commerce_
+
+ A RUSSIAN INCOME TAX 850
+ _Proposed by the Ministry of Finance_
+
+ TOOLS OF THE RUSSIAN JUGGERNAUT 851
+ _By M.J. Bonn_
+
+ FATE OF THE JEWS IN POLAND 854
+ _By Georg Brandes_
+
+ COMMERCIAL TREATIES AFTER THE WAR 863
+ _By P. Maslov_
+
+ PHOTOGRAPHIC REVIEW OF THE WAR 865
+ _48 War Pictures Printed in Rotogravure_
+
+ PATRIOTISM AND ENDURANCE 913
+ _The Pastoral Letter of Cardinal D.J. Mercier,
+ Archbishop of Malines_
+
+ APPEAL TO AMERICA FOR BELGIUM (Poem) 924
+ _By Thomas Hardy_
+
+ WITH THE GERMAN ARMY 925
+ _By Cyril Brown_
+
+ STORY OF THE MAN WHO FIRED ON RHEIMS CATHEDRAL 928
+
+ RICHARD HARDING DAVIS'S COMMENT 931
+
+ THE GERMAN AIRMEN 932
+
+ GERMAN GENERALS TALK OF THE WAR 934
+
+ SWIFT REVERSAL TO BARBARISM 939
+ _By Vance Thompson_
+
+ CIVIL LIFE IN BERLIN 943
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ BELGIAN BOY TELLS STORY OF AERSCHOT 945
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ THE NEUTRALS (Poem) 948
+ _By Beatrice Barry_
+
+ FIFTEEN MINUTES ON THE YSER 949
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ SEEING NIEUPORT UNDER SHELL FIRE 951
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ RAID ON SCARBOROUGH SEEN FROM A WINDOW 954
+ _By Ruth Kauffmann_
+
+ HOW THE BARONESS HID HER HUSBAND ON A VESSEL 956
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ WARSAW SWAMPED WITH REFUGEES 957
+ _By H.W. Bodkinson_
+
+ AFTER THE RUSSIAN ADVANCE IN GALICIA 958
+ _From The London Times_
+
+ OFFICER IN BATTLE HAD LITTLE FEELING 959
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ THE BATTLE OF NEW YEAR'S DAY 961
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ BASS'S STORY 963
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ THE WASTE OF GERMAN LIVES 964
+ _By Perceval Gibbon_
+
+ THE FLIGHT INTO SWITZERLAND 966
+ _By Ethel Therese Hugh_
+
+ ONCE FAIR BELGRADE IS A SKELETON CITY 969
+ _From The New York Times_
+
+ LETTERS AND DIARIES 971
+ _A Group of Soldiers' Letters_
+
+ "CHANT OF HATE AGAINST ENGLAND" 984
+ _How Ernst Lissauer's Lines were
+ "Sung to Pieces" in Germany_
+
+ ANSWERING THE "CHANT OF HATE" 988
+ _By Beatrice M. Barry_
+
+ ENGLAND CAUSED THE WAR 989
+ _By T. von Bethmann-Hollweg, German
+ Imperial Chancellor_
+
+ A SONG OF THE SIEGE GUN (Poem) 992
+ _By Katharine Drayton Mayrant Simons, Jr._
+
+ WHY ENGLAND FIGHTS GERMANY 993
+ _By Hilaire Belloc_
+
+ AT THE VILLA ACHILLEION, CORFU (Poem) 999
+ _By H.T. Sudduth_
+
+ GERMANY'S STRATEGIC RAILWAYS (With Map) 1000
+ _By Walter Littlefield_
+
+ GLORY OF WAR (Poem) 1004
+ _By Adeline Adams_
+
+ CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 1007
+
+
+
+
+ NUMBER VI.
+
+ THE CALDRON OF THE BALKANS
+
+
+ HOW TURKEY WENT TO WAR 1025
+
+ SERBIA AND HER NEIGHBORS 1036
+
+ LITTLE MONTENEGRO SPEAKS 1043
+
+ BULGARIA'S ATTITUDE 1044
+
+ GREECE'S WATCHFUL WAITING 1050
+
+ WHERE RUMANIA STANDS IN THE CRISIS 1054
+
+ EXIT ALBANIA? 1062
+
+ THE WAR IN THE BALKANS 1068
+ _By A.T. Polyzoides_
+
+ THE EUROPEAN WAR AS SEEN BY CARTOONISTS 1073
+
+ GERMANY VS. BELGIUM 1101
+ _Case of the Secret Military Documents
+ Presented by Both Sides_
+
+ THE BIG AND THE GREAT (Poem) 1114
+ _By William Archer_
+
+ "FROM THE BODY OF THIS DEATH" (Poem) 1119
+ _By Sidney Low_
+
+ "A SCRAP OF PAPER" 1120
+ _By Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg
+ and Sir Edward Grey_
+
+ THE KAISER AT DONCHERY 1125
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ HAIL! A HYMN TO BELGIUM (Music by F.H. Cowen) 1126
+ _By John Galsworthy_
+
+ HOLLAND'S FUTURE (With Map) 1128
+ _By H.G. Wells_
+
+ FRENCH OFFICIAL REPORT ON GERMAN ATROCITIES 1133
+
+ A FRENCH MAYOR'S PUNISHMENT 1163
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ WE WILL FIGHT TO THE END 1164
+ _By Premier Viviani of France_
+
+ _NUITS BLANCHES_ 1166
+ _By H.S. Haskins_
+
+ UNCONQUERED FRANCE 1167
+ _From the Bulletin Francais_
+
+ FOUR MONTHS OF WAR (With Map) 1169
+ _From the Bulletin des Armees_
+
+ LONG LIVE THE ALLIES! 1174
+ _By Claude Monet_
+
+ UNITED STATES FAIR TO ALL 1175
+ _By William J. Bryan,
+ American Secretary of State_
+
+ THE HOUSE WITH SEALED DOORS (Poem) 1183
+ _By Edith M. Thomas_
+
+ SEIZURES OF AMERICAN CARGOES 1184
+ _By William J. Bryan,
+ American Secretary of State_
+
+ GERMAN CROWN PRINCE TO AMERICA 1187
+ _By The Associated Press_
+
+ THE OFFICIAL BRITISH EXPLANATION 1188
+ _By Sir Edward Grey_
+
+ ITALY AND THE WAR (With Map) 1192
+ _By William Roscoe Thayer_
+
+ HE HEARD THE BUGLES CALLING (Poem) 1198
+ _By Carey C.D. Briggs_
+
+ GERMAN SOLDIERS WRITE HOME 1199
+
+ WAR CORRESPONDENCE 1207
+
+ THE BROKEN ROSE (TO KING ALBERT) 1210
+ _By Annie Vivanti Chartres_
+
+ THE HEROIC LANGUAGE (Poem) 1216
+ _By Alice Meynell_
+
+ CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 1224
+
+ TO HIS MAJESTY KING ALBERT (Poem) 1228
+ _By William Watson_
+
+[Illustration: GEORGE BERNARD SHAW]
+
+[Illustration: ARNOLD BENNETT. _See Page_ 60]
+
+
+
+
+"Common Sense About the War"
+
+By George Bernard Shaw.
+
+
+I.
+
+ "_Let a European war break out--the war, perhaps, between the
+ Triple Alliance and the Triple Entente, which so many journalists
+ and politicians in England and Germany contemplate with criminal
+ levity. If the combatants prove to be equally balanced, it may,
+ after the first battles, smoulder on for thirty years. What will be
+ the population of London, or Manchester, or Chemnitz, or Bremen, or
+ Milan, at the end of it_?" ("The Great Society," by Graham Wallas.
+ June, 1914.)
+
+ (_Copyright, 1914, By The New York Times Company._)
+
+
+The time has now come to pluck up courage and begin to talk and write
+soberly about the war. At first the mere horror of it stunned the more
+thoughtful of us; and even now only those who are not in actual contact
+with or bereaved relation to its heartbreaking wreckage can think sanely
+about it, or endure to hear others discuss it coolly. As to the
+thoughtless, well, not for a moment dare I suggest that for the first
+few weeks they were all scared out of their wits; for I know too well
+that the British civilian does not allow his perfect courage to be
+questioned; only experienced soldiers and foreigners are allowed the
+infirmity of fear. But they certainly were--shall I say a little upset?
+They felt in that solemn hour that England was lost if only one single
+traitor in their midst let slip the truth about anything in the
+universe. It was a perilous time for me. I do not hold my tongue easily;
+and my inborn dramatic faculty and professional habit as a playwright
+prevent me from taking a one-sided view even when the most probable
+result of taking a many-sided one is prompt lynching. Besides, until
+Home Rule emerges from its present suspended animation, I shall retain
+my Irish capacity for criticising England with something of the
+detachment of a foreigner, and perhaps with a certain slightly malicious
+taste for taking the conceit out of her. Lord Kitchener made a mistake
+the other day in rebuking the Irish volunteers for not rallying faster
+to the defense of "their country." They do not regard it as their
+country yet. He should have asked them to come forward as usual and help
+poor old England through a stiff fight. Then it would have been all
+right.
+
+Having thus frankly confessed my bias, which you can allow for as a
+rifleman allows for the wind, I give my views for what they are worth.
+They will be of some use; because, however blinded I may be by prejudice
+or perversity, my prejudices in this matter are not those which blind
+the British patriot, and therefore I am fairly sure to see some things
+that have not yet struck him.
+
+And first, I do not see this war as one which has welded Governments and
+peoples into complete and sympathetic solidarity as against the common
+enemy. I see the people of England united in a fierce detestation and
+defiance of the views and acts of Prussian Junkerism. And I see the
+German people stirred to the depths by a similar antipathy to English
+Junkerism, and anger at the apparent treachery and duplicity of the
+attack made on them by us in their extremest peril from France and
+Russia. I see both nations duped, but alas! not quite unwillingly duped,
+by their Junkers and Militarists into wreaking on one another the wrath
+they should have spent in destroying Junkerism and Militarism in their
+own country. And I see the Junkers and Militarists of England and
+Germany jumping at the chance they have longed for in vain for many
+years of smashing one another and establishing their own oligarchy as
+the dominant military power in the world. No doubt the heroic remedy for
+this tragic misunderstanding is that both armies should shoot their
+officers and go home to gather in their harvests in the villages and
+make a revolution in the towns; and though this is not at present a
+practicable solution, it must be frankly mentioned, because it or
+something like it is always a possibility in a defeated conscript army
+if its commanders push it beyond human endurance when its eyes are
+opening to the fact that in murdering its neighbours it is biting off
+its nose to vex its face, besides riveting the intolerable yoke of
+Militarism and Junkerism more tightly than ever on its own neck. But
+there is no chance--or, as our Junkers would put it, no danger--of our
+soldiers yielding to such an ecstasy of common sense. They have enlisted
+voluntarily; they are not defeated nor likely to be; their
+communications are intact and their meals reasonably punctual; they are
+as pugnacious as their officers; and in fighting Prussia they are
+fighting a more deliberate, conscious, tyrannical, personally insolent,
+and dangerous Militarism than their own. Still, even for a voluntary
+professional army, that possibility exists, just as for the civilian
+there is a limit beyond which taxation, bankruptcy, privation, terror,
+and inconvenience cannot be pushed without revolution or a social
+dissolution more ruinous than submission to conquest. I mention all
+this, not to make myself wantonly disagreeable, but because military
+persons, thinking naturally that there is nothing like leather, are now
+talking of this war as likely to become a permanent institution like the
+Chamber of Horrors at Madame Tussaud's, forgetting, I think, that the
+rate of consumption maintained by modern military operations is much
+greater relatively to the highest possible rate of production
+maintainable under the restrictions of war time than it has ever been
+before.
+
+
+*The Day of Judgment.*
+
+The European settlement at the end of the war will be effected, let us
+hope, not by a regimental mess of fire-eaters sitting around an up-ended
+drum in a vanquished Berlin or Vienna, but by some sort of Congress in
+which all the Powers (including, very importantly, the United States of
+America) will be represented. Now I foresee a certain danger of our
+being taken by surprise at that Congress, and making ourselves
+unnecessarily difficult and unreasonable, by presenting ourselves to it
+in the character of Injured Innocence. We shall not be accepted in that
+character. Such a Congress will most certainly regard us as being, next
+to the Prussians (if it makes even that exception), the most quarrelsome
+people in the universe. I am quite conscious of the surprise and scandal
+this anticipation may cause among my more highminded (_hochnaesig_, the
+Germans call it) readers. Let me therefore break it gently by
+expatiating for a while on the subject of Junkerism and Militarism
+generally, and on the history of the literary propaganda of war between
+England and Potsdam which has been going on openly for the last forty
+years on both sides. I beg the patience of my readers during this
+painful operation. If it becomes unbearable, they can always put the
+paper down and relieve themselves by calling the Kaiser Attila and Mr.
+Keir Hardie a traitor twenty times or so. Then they will feel, I hope,
+refreshed enough to resume. For, after all, abusing the Kaiser or Keir
+Hardie or me will not hurt the Germans, whereas a clearer view of the
+political situation will certainly help us. Besides, I do not believe
+that the trueborn Englishman in his secret soul relishes the pose of
+Injured Innocence any more than I do myself. He puts it on only because
+he is told that it is respectable.
+
+
+*Junkers All.*
+
+What is a Junker? Is it a German officer of twenty-three, with offensive
+manners, and a habit of cutting down innocent civilians with his sabre?
+Sometimes; but not at all exclusively that or anything like that. Let us
+resort to the dictionary. I turn to the _Encyclopaedisches Woerterbuch_
+of Muret Sanders. Excuse its quaint German-English.
+
+*Junker* = Young nobleman, younker, lording, country squire, country
+gentleman, squirearch. *Junkerberrschaft* = squirearchy, landocracy.
+*Junkerleben* = life of a country gentleman, (_figuratively_) a jolly
+life. *Junkerpartei* = country party. *Junkerwirtschaft* = doings of the
+country party.
+
+Thus we see that the Junker is by no means peculiar to Prussia. We may
+claim to produce the article in a perfection that may well make Germany
+despair of ever surpassing us in that line. Sir Edward Grey is a Junker
+from his topmost hair to the tips of his toes; and Sir Edward is a
+charming man, incapable of cutting down even an Opposition front
+bencher, or of telling a German he intends to have him shot. Lord Cromer
+is a Junker. Mr. Winston Churchill is an odd and not disagreeable
+compound of Junker and Yankee: his frank anti-German pugnacity is
+enormously more popular than the moral babble (Milton's phrase) of his
+sanctimonious colleagues. He is a bumptious and jolly Junker, just as
+Lord Curzon is an uppish Junker. I need not string out the list. In
+these islands the Junker is literally all over the shop.
+
+It is very difficult for anyone who is not either a Junker or a
+successful barrister to get into an English Cabinet, no matter which
+party is in power, or to avoid resigning when we strike up the drum. The
+Foreign Office is a Junker Club. Our governing classes are
+overwhelmingly Junker: all who are not Junkers are riff-raff whose only
+claim to their position is the possession of ability of some sort:
+mostly ability to make money. And, of course, the Kaiser is a Junker,
+though less true-blue than the Crown Prince, and much less autocratic
+than Sir Edward Grey, who, without consulting us, sends us to war by a
+word to an ambassador and pledges all our wealth to his foreign allies
+by a stroke of his pen.
+
+
+*What Is a Militarist?*
+
+Now that we know what a Junker is, let us have a look at the
+Militarists. A Militarist is a person who believes that all real power
+is the power to kill, and that Providence is on the side of the big
+battalions. The most famous Militarist at present, thanks to the zeal
+with which we have bought and quoted his book, is General Friedrich von
+Bernhardi. But we cannot allow the General to take precedence of our own
+writers as a Militarist propagandist. I am old enough to remember the
+beginning of the anti-German phase of that very ancient propaganda in
+England. The Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left Europe very much
+taken aback. Up to that date nobody was afraid of Prussia, though
+everybody was a little afraid of France; and we were keeping "buffer
+States" between ourselves and Russia in the east. Germany had indeed
+beaten Denmark; but then Denmark was a little State, and was abandoned
+in her hour of need by those who should have helped her, to the great
+indignation of Ibsen. Germany had also beaten Austria; but somehow
+everybody seems able to beat Austria, though nobody seems able to draw
+the moral that defeats do not matter as much as the Militarists think,
+Austria being as important as ever. Suddenly Germany beat France right
+down into the dust, by the exercise of an organized efficiency in war of
+which nobody up to then had any conception. There was not a State in
+Europe that did not say to itself: "Good Heavens! what would happen if
+she attacked _us_?" We in England thought of our old-fashioned army and
+our old-fashioned commander George Ranger (of Cambridge), and our War
+Office with its Crimean tradition of imbecility; and we shook in our
+shoes. But we were not such fools as to leave it at that. We soon
+produced the first page of the Bernhardian literature: an anonymous
+booklet entitled _The Battle of Dorking_. It was not the first page of
+English Militarist literature: you have only to turn back to the burst
+of glorification of war which heralded the silly Crimean campaign
+(Tennyson's _Maud_ is a surviving sample) to find paeans to Mars which
+would have made Treitschke blush (perhaps they did); but it was the
+first page in which it was assumed as a matter of course that Germany
+and not France or Russia was England's natural enemy. _The Battle of
+Dorking_ had an enormous sale; and the wildest guesses were current as
+to its authorship. And its moral was "To arms; or the Germans will
+besiege London as they besieged Paris." From that time until the
+present, the British propaganda of war with Germany has never ceased.
+The lead given by _The Battle of Dorking_ was taken up by articles in
+the daily press and the magazines. Later on came the Jingo fever
+(anti-Russian, by the way; but let us not mention that just now),
+Stead's _Truth About the Navy_, Mr. Spenser Wilkinson, the suppression
+of the Channel Tunnel, Mr. Robert Blatchford, Mr. Garvin, Admiral Maxse,
+Mr. Newbolt, Mr. Rudyard Kipling, _The National Review_, Lord Roberts,
+the Navy League, the imposition of an Imperialist Foreign Secretary on
+the Liberal Cabinet, Mr. Wells's _War in the Air_ (well worth re-reading
+just now), and the Dreadnoughts. Throughout all these agitations the
+enemy, the villain of the piece, the White Peril, was Prussia and her
+millions of German conscripts. At first, in _The Battle of Dorking_
+phase, the note was mainly defensive. But from the moment when the
+Kaiser began to copy our Armada policy by building a big fleet, the
+anti-German agitation became openly aggressive; and the cry that the
+German fleet or ours must sink, and that a war between England and
+Germany was bound to come some day, speedily ceased to be merely a cry
+with our Militarists and became an axiom with them. And what our
+Militarists said our Junkers echoed; and our Junker diplomatists played
+for. The story of how they manoeuvred to hem Germany and Austria in with
+an Anglo-Franco-Russian combination will be found told with soldierly
+directness and with the proud candor of a man who can see things from
+his own side only in the article by Lord Roberts in the current number
+of _The Hibbert Journal_ (October, 1914). There you shall see also,
+after the usual nonsense about Nietzsche, the vision of "British
+administrators bearing the White Man's Burden," of "young men, fresh
+from the public schools of Britain, coming eagerly forward to carry on
+the high traditions of Imperial Britain in each new dependency which
+comes under our care," of "our fitness as an Imperial race," of "a great
+task committed to us by Providence," of "the will to conquer that has
+never failed us," of our task of "assuming control of one-fifth of the
+earth's surface and the care of one in five of all the inhabitants of
+the world." Not a suggestion that the inhabitants of the world are
+perhaps able to take care of themselves. Not even a passing recollection
+when that White Man's Burden is in question that the men outside the
+British Empire, and even inside the German Empire, are by no means
+exclusively black. Only the _sancta simplicitas_ that glories in "the
+proud position of England," the "sympathy, tolerance, prudence and
+benevolence of our rule" in the east (as shown, the Kaiser is no doubt
+sarcastically remarking, in the Delhi sedition trial), the chivalrous
+feeling that it is our highest duty to save the world from the horrible
+misfortune of being governed by anybody but those young men fresh from
+the public schools of Britain. Change the words Britain and British to
+Germany and German, and the Kaiser will sign the article with
+enthusiasm. _His_ opinion, _his_ attitude (subject to that merely verbal
+change) word for word.
+
+
+*Six of One: Half-a-Dozen of The Other.*
+
+Now, please observe that I do not say that the agitation was
+unreasonable. I myself steadily advocated the formation of a formidable
+armament, and ridiculed the notion that, we, who are wasting hundreds of
+millions annually on idlers and wasters, could not easily afford double,
+treble, quadruple our military and naval expenditure. I advocated the
+compulsion of every man to serve his country, both in war and peace. The
+idlers and wasters perceiving dimly that I meant the cost to come out of
+their pockets and meant to use the admission that riches should not
+exempt a man from military service as an illustration of how absurd it
+is to allow them to exempt him from civil service, did not embrace my
+advocacy with enthusiasm; so I must reaffirm it now lest it should be
+supposed that I am condemning those whose proceedings I am describing.
+Though often horribly wrong in principle, they were quite right in
+practice as far as they went. But they must stand to their guns now that
+the guns are going off. They must not pretend that they were harmless
+Radical lovers of peace, and that the propaganda of Militarism and of
+inevitable war between England and Germany is a Prussian infamy for
+which the Kaiser must be severely punished. That is not fair, not true,
+not gentlemanly. We began it; and if they met us half-way, as they
+certainly did, it is not for us to reproach them. When the German
+fire-eaters drank to The Day (of Armageddon) they were drinking to the
+day of which our Navy League fire-eaters had first said "It's bound to
+come." Therefore, let us have no more nonsense about the Prussian Wolf
+and the British Lamb, the Prussian Machiavelli and the English
+Evangelist. We cannot shout for years that we are boys of the bulldog
+breed, and then suddenly pose as gazelles. No. When Europe and America
+come to settle the treaty that will end this business (for America is
+concerned in it as much as we are), they will not deal with us as the
+lovable and innocent victims of a treacherous tyrant and a savage
+soldiery. They will have to consider how these two incorrigibly
+pugnacious and inveterately snobbish peoples, who have snarled at one
+another for forty years with bristling hair and grinning fangs, and are
+now rolling over with their teeth in one another's throats, are to be
+tamed into trusty watch-dogs of the peace of the world. I am sorry to
+spoil the saintly image with a halo which the British Jingo journalist
+sees just now when he looks in the glass; but it must be done if we are
+to behave reasonably in the imminent day of reckoning.
+
+And now back to Friedrich von Bernhardi.
+
+
+*General Von Bernhardi.*
+
+Like many soldier-authors, Friedrich is very readable; and he maintains
+the good and formidable part of the Bismarck tradition: that is, he is
+not a humbug. He looks facts in the face; he deceives neither himself
+nor his readers; and if he were to tell lies--as he would no doubt do as
+stoutly as any British, French, or Russian officer if his country's
+safety were at stake--he would know that he was telling them. Which last
+we think very bad taste on his part, if not downright wickedness.
+
+It is true that he cites Frederick the Great as an exemplary master of
+war and of _Weltpolitik_. But his chief praise in this department is
+reserved for England. It is from our foreign policy, he says, that he
+has learnt what our journalists denounce as "the doctrine of the bully,
+of the materialist, of the man with gross ideals: a doctrine of
+diabolical evil." He frankly accepts that doctrine from us (as if our
+poor, honest muddle-heads had ever formulated anything so intellectual
+as a doctrine), and blames us for nothing but for allowing the United
+States to achieve their solidarity and become formidable to us when we
+might have divided them by backing up the South in the Civil War. He
+shows in the clearest way that if Germany does not smash England,
+England will smash Germany by springing at her the moment she can catch
+her at a disadvantage. In a word he prophesies that we, his great
+masters in _Realpolitik_, will do precisely what our Junkers have just
+made us do, It is we who have carried out the Bernhardi programme: it is
+Germany who has neglected it. He warned Germany to make an alliance with
+Italy, Austria, Turkey, and America, before undertaking the subjugation,
+first of France, then of England. But a prophet is not without honour
+save in his own country; and Germany has allowed herself to be caught
+with no ally but Austria between France and Russia, and thereby given
+the English Junkers their opportunity. They have seized it with a
+punctuality that must flatter Von Bernhardi, even though the compliment
+be at the expense of his own country. The Kaiser did not give them
+credit for being keener Junkers than his own. It was an unpleasant,
+indeed an infuriating surprise. All that a Kaiser could do without
+unbearable ignominy to induce them to keep their bulldogs off and give
+him fair play with his two redoubtable foes, he did. But they laughed
+Frederick the Great's laugh and hurled all our forces at him, as he
+might have done to us, on Bernhardian principles, if he had caught us at
+the same disadvantage. Officially, the war is Junker-cut-Junker,
+militarist-cut-Militarist; and we must fight it out, not
+_Heuchler_-cut-Hypocrite, but hammer and tongs.
+
+
+*Militarist Myopia.*
+
+Unofficially, it is quite another matter. Democracy, even
+Social-Democracy, though as hostile to British Junkers as to German
+ones, and under no illusion as to the obsolescence and colossal
+stupidity of modern war, need not lack enthusiasm for the combat, which
+may serve their own ends better than those of their political opponents.
+For Bernhardi the Brilliant and our own very dull Militarists are alike
+mad: the war will not do any of the things for which they rushed into
+it. It is much more likely to do the things they most dread and
+deprecate: in fact, it has already swept them into the very kind of
+organization they founded an Anti-Socialist League to suppress. To shew
+how mad they are, let us suppose the war carries out their western
+program to the last item. Suppose France rises from the war victorious,
+happy and glorious, with Alsace and Lorraine regained, Rheims cathedral
+repaired in the best modern trade style, and a prodigious indemnity in
+her pocket! Suppose we tow the German fleet into Portsmouth, and leave
+Hohenzollern metaphorically under the heel of Romanoff and actually in a
+comfortable villa in Chislehurst, the hero of all its tea parties and
+the judge of all its gymkhanas! Well, cry the Militarists, suppose it by
+all means: could we desire anything better? Now I happen to have a
+somewhat active imagination; and it flatly refuses to stop at this
+convenient point. I must go on supposing. Suppose France, with its
+military prestige raised once more to the Napoleonic point, spends its
+indemnity in building an invincible Armada, stronger and nearer to us
+than the German one we are now out to destroy! Suppose Sir Edward Grey
+remonstrates, and Monsieur Delcasse replies, "Russia and France have
+humbled one Imperial Bully, and are prepared to humble another. I have
+not forgotten Fashoda. Stop us if you can; or turn, if you like, for
+help to the Germany we have smashed and disarmed!" Of what use will all
+this bloodshed be then, with the old situation reproduced in an
+aggravated form, the enemy closer to our shores, a raid far more
+feasible, the tradition of "natural enmity" to steel the foe, and
+Waterloo to be wiped out like Sedan? A child in arms should be able to
+see that this idiotic notion of relaxing the military pressure on us by
+smashing this or that particular Power is like trying to alter the
+pressure of the ocean by dipping up a bucket of water from the North Sea
+and pouring it into the Bay of Biscay.
+
+I purposely omit more easterly supposings as to what victorious Russia
+might do. But a noble emancipation of Poland and Finland at her own
+expense, and of Bosnia and Harzegovina at Austria's, might easily
+suggest to our nervous Militarists that a passion for the freedom of
+Egypt and India might seize her, and remind her that we were Japan's
+ally in the day of Russia's humiliation in Manchuria. So there at once
+is your Balance of Power problem in Asia enormously aggravated by
+throwing Germany out of the anti-Russian scale and grinding her to
+powder. Even in North Africa--but enough is enough. You can _durchhauen_
+your way out of the frying pan, but only into the fire. Better take
+Nietzsche's brave advice, and make it your point of honour to "live
+dangerously." History shews that it is often the way to live long.
+
+
+*Learning Nothing: Forgetting Everything.*
+
+But let me test the Militarist theory, not by a hypothetical future, but
+by the accomplished and irrevocable past. Is it true that nations must
+conquer or go under, and that military conquest means prosperity and
+power for the victor and annihilation for the vanquished? I have already
+alluded in passing to the fact that Austria has been beaten repeatedly:
+by France, by Italy, by Germany, almost by everybody who has thought it
+worth while to have a whack at her; and yet she is one of the Great
+Powers; and her alliance has been sought by invincible Germany. France
+was beaten by Germany in 1870 with a completeness that seemed
+impossible; yet France has since enlarged her territory whilst Germany
+is still pleading in vain for a place in the sun. Russia was beaten by
+the Japanese in Manchuria on a scale that made an end forever of the old
+notion that the West is the natural military superior of the East; yet
+it is the terror of Russia that has driven Germany into her present
+desperate onslaught on France; and it is the Russian alliance on which
+France and England are depending for their assurance of ultimate
+success. We ourselves confess that the military efficiency with which we
+have so astonished the Germans is the effect, not of Waterloo and
+Inkerman, but of the drubbing we got from the Boers, who we aid probably
+have beaten us if we had been anything like their own size. Greece has
+lately distinguished herself in war within a few years by a most
+disgraceful beating of the Turks. It would be easy to multiply instances
+from remoter history: for example, the effect on England's position of
+the repeated defeats of our troops by the French under Luxembourg in the
+Balance of Power War at the end of the seventeenth century differed
+surprisingly little, if at all, from the effect of our subsequent
+victories under Marlborough. And the inference from the Militarist
+theory that the States which at present count for nothing as military
+Powers necessarily count for nothing at all is absurd on the face of it.
+Monaco seems to be, on the whole, the most prosperous and comfortable
+State in Europe.
+
+In short, Militarism must be classed as one of the most inconsiderately
+foolish of the bogus "sciences" which the last half century has produced
+in such profusion, and which have the common characteristic of revolting
+all sane souls, and being stared out of countenance by the broad facts
+of human experience. The only rule of thumb that can be hazarded on the
+strength of actual practice is that wars to maintain or upset the
+Balance of Power between States, called by inaccurate people Balance of
+Power wars, and by accurate people Jealousy of Power wars, never
+establish the desired peaceful and secure equilibrium. They may exercise
+pugnacity, gratify spite, assuage a wound to national pride, or enhance
+or dim a military reputation; but that is all. And the reason is, as I
+shall shew very conclusively later on, that there is only one way in
+which one nation can really disable another, and that is a way which no
+civilized nation dare even discuss.
+
+*Are We Hypocrites?*
+
+And now I proceed from general considerations to the diplomatic history
+of the present case, as I must in order to make our moral position
+clear. But first, lest I should lose all credit by the startling
+incompatibility between the familiar personal character of our statesmen
+and the proceedings for which they are officially responsible, I must
+say a word about the peculiar psychology of English statesmanship, not
+only for the benefit of my English readers (who do not know that it is
+peculiar just as they do not know that water has any taste because it is
+always in their mouths), but as a plea for a more charitable
+construction from the wider world.
+
+We know by report, however unjust it may seem to us, that there is an
+opinion abroad, even in the quarters most friendly to us, that our
+excellent qualities are marred by an incorrigible hypocrisy. To France
+we have always been Perfidious Albion. In Germany, at this moment, that
+epithet would be scorned as far too flattering to us. Victor Hugo
+explained the relative unpopularity of _Measure for Measure_ among
+Shakespeare's plays on the ground that the character of the hypocrite
+Angelo was a too faithful dramatization of our national character.
+Pecksniff is not considered so exceptional an English gentleman in
+America as he is in England.
+
+Now we have not acquired this reputation for nothing. The world has no
+greater interest in branding England with this particular vice of
+hypocrisy than in branding France with it; yet the world does not cite
+Tartuffe as a typical Frenchman as it cites Angelo and Pecksniff as
+typical Englishmen. We may protest against it as indignantly as the
+Prussian soldiers protest against their equally universal reputation for
+ferocity in plunder and pillage, sack and rapine; but there is something
+in it. If you judge an English statesman, by his conscious intentions,
+his professions, and his personal charm, you will often find him an
+amiable, upright, humane, anxiously truthful man. If you judge him, as a
+foreigner must, solely on the official acts for which he is responsible,
+and which he has to defend in the House of Commons for the sake of his
+party, you will often be driven to conclude that this estimable
+gentleman is, in point of being an unscrupulous superprig and fool,
+worse than Caesar Borgia and General Von Bernhardi rolled into one, and
+in foreign affairs a Bismarck in everything except commanding ability,
+blunt common sense, and freedom from illusion as to the nature and
+object of his own diplomacy. And the permanent officials in whose hands
+he is will probably deserve all that and something to spare. Thus you
+will get that amazing contrast that confronts us now between the
+Machiavellian Sir Edward Grey of the Berlin newspapers and the amiable
+and popular Sir Edward Grey we know in England. In England we are all
+prepared to face any World Congress and say, "We know that Sir Edward
+Grey is an honest English gentleman, who meant well as a true patriot
+and friend of peace; we are quite sure that what he did was fair and
+right; and we will not listen to any nonsense to the contrary." The
+Congress will reply, "We know nothing about Sir Edward Grey except what
+he did; and as there is no secret and no question as to what he did, the
+whole story being recorded by himself, we must hold England responsible
+for his conduct, whilst taking your word for the fact, which has no
+importance for us, that his conduct has nothing to do with his
+character."
+
+
+*Our Intellectual Laziness.*
+
+The general truth of the situation is, as I have spent so much of my
+life in trying to make the English understand, that we are cursed with a
+fatal intellectual laziness, an evil inheritance from the time when our
+monopoly of coal and iron made it possible for us to become rich and
+powerful without thinking or knowing how; a laziness which is becoming
+highly dangerous to us now that our monopoly is gone or superseded by
+new sources of mechanical energy. We got rich by pursuing our own
+immediate advantage instinctively; that is, with a natural childish
+selfishness; and when any question of our justification arose, we found
+it easy to silence it with any sort of plausible twaddle (provided it
+flattered us, and did not imply any trouble or sacrifice) provided by
+our curates at L70 a year, or our journalists at a penny a line, or
+commercial moralists with axes to grind. In the end we became fatheaded,
+and not only lost all intellectual consciousness of what we were doing,
+and with it all power of objective self-criticism, but stacked up a
+lumber of pious praises for ourselves which not only satisfied our
+corrupted and half atrophied consciences, but gave us a sense that there
+is something extraordinarily ungentlemanly and politically dangerous in
+bringing these pious phrases to the test of conduct. We carried Luther's
+doctrine of Justification by Faith to the insane point of believing that
+as long as a man says what we have agreed to accept as the right thing
+it does not matter in the least what he actually does. In fact, we do
+not clearly see why a man need introduce the subject of morals at all,
+unless there is something questionable to be whitewashed. The
+unprejudiced foreigner calls this hypocrisy: that is why we call him
+prejudiced. But I, who have been a poor man in a poor country,
+understand the foreigner better.
+
+Now from the general to the particular. In describing the course of the
+diplomatic negotiations by which our Foreign Office achieved its design
+of at last settling accounts with Germany at the most favourable moment
+from the Militarist point of view, I shall have to exhibit our Secretary
+of State for Foreign Affairs as behaving almost exactly as we have
+accused the Kaiser of behaving. Yet I see him throughout as an honest
+gentleman, "perplexed in the extreme," meaning well, revolted at the
+last moment by the horror of war, clinging to the hope that in some
+vague way he could persuade everybody to be reasonable if they would
+only come and talk to him as they did when the big Powers were kept out
+of the Balkan war, but hopelessly destitute of a positive policy of any
+kind, and therefore unable to resist those who had positive business in
+hand. And do not for a moment imagine that I think that the conscious
+Sir Edward Grey was Othello, and the subconscious, Iago. I do think that
+the Foreign Office, of which Sir Edward is merely the figure head, was
+as deliberately and consciously bent on a long deferred Militarist war
+with Germany as the Admiralty was; and that is saying a good deal. If
+Sir Edward Grey did not know what he wanted, Mr. Winston Churchill was
+in no such perplexity. He was not an "ist" of any sort, but a
+straightforward holder of the popular opinion that if you are threatened
+you should hit out, unless you are afraid to. Had he had the conduct of
+the affair he might quite possibly have averted the war (and thereby
+greatly disappointed himself and the British public) by simply
+frightening the Kaiser. As it was, he had arranged for the co-operation
+of the French and British fleets; was spoiling for the fight; and must
+have restrained himself with great difficulty from taking off his coat
+in public whilst Mr. Asquith and Sir Edward Grey were giving the country
+the assurances which were misunderstood to mean that we were not bound
+to go to war, and not more likely to do so than usual. But though Sir
+Edward did not clear up the misunderstanding, I think he went to war
+with the heavy heart of a Junker Liberal (such centaurs exist) and not
+with the exultation of a Junker Jingo.
+
+I may now, without more than the irreducible minimum of injustice to Sir
+Edward Grey, proceed to tell the story of the diplomatic negotiations as
+they will appear to the Congress which, I am assuming, will settle the
+terms on which Europe is to live more or less happily ever after.
+
+*Diplomatic History of the War.*
+
+The evidence of how the Junker diplomatists of our Foreign Office let us
+in for the war is in the White Paper, Miscellaneous No. 6 (1914),
+containing correspondence respecting the European crisis, and since
+reissued, with a later White Paper and some extra matter, as a penny
+bluebook in miniature. In these much-cited and little-read documents we
+see the Junkers of all the nations, the men who have been saying for
+years "It's bound to come," and clamouring in England for compulsory
+military service and expeditionary forces, momentarily staggered and not
+a little frightened by the sudden realization that it has come at last.
+They rush round from foreign office to embassy, and from embassy to
+palace, twittering "This is awful. Can't you stop it? Won't you be
+reasonable? Think of the consequences," etc., etc. One man among them
+keeps his head and looks the facts in the face. That man is Sazonoff,
+the Russian Secretary for Foreign Affairs. He keeps steadily trying to
+make Sir Edward Grey face the inevitable. He says and reiterates, in
+effect, "You know very well that you cannot keep out of a European war.
+You know you are pledged to fight Germany if Germany attacks France. You
+know that your arrangments for the fight are actually made; that already
+the British army is commanded by a Franco-British Council of War; that
+there is no possible honourable retreat for you. You know that this old
+man in Austria, who would have been superannuated years ago if he had
+been an exciseman, is resolved to make war on Servia, and sent that
+silly forty-eight hours ultimatum when we were all out of town so that
+he could begin fighting before we could get back to sit on his head. You
+know that he has the Jingo mob of Vienna behind him. You know that if he
+makes war, Russia must mobilize. You know that France is bound to come
+in with us as you are with France. You know that the moment we mobilize,
+Germany, the old man's ally, will have only one desperate chance of
+victory, and that is to overwhelm our ally, France, with one superb rush
+of her millions, and then sweep back and meet us on the Vistula. You
+know that nothing can stop this except Germany remonstrating with
+Austria, and insisting on the Servian case being dealt with by an
+international tribunal and not by war. You know that Germany dares not
+do this, because her alliance with Austria is her defence against the
+Franco-Russian alliance, and that she does not want to do it in any
+case, because the Kaiser naturally has a strong class prejudice against
+the blowing up of Royal personages by irresponsible revolutionists, and
+thinks nothing too bad for Servia after the assassination of the
+Archduke. There is just one chance of avoiding Armageddon: a slender
+one, but worth trying. You averted war in the Algeciras crisis, and
+again in the Agadir crisis, by saying you would fight. Try it again. The
+Kaiser is stiffnecked because he does not believe you are going to fight
+this time. Well, convince him that you are. The odds against him will
+then be so terrible that he may not dare to support the Austrian
+ultimatum to Servia at such a price. And if Austria is thus forced to
+proceed judicially against Servia, we Russians will be satisfied; and
+there will be no war."
+
+Sir Edward could not see it. He is a member of a Liberal Government, in
+a country where there is no political career for the man who does not
+put his party's tenure of office before every other consideration. What
+would _The Daily News_ and _The Manchester Guardian_ have said had he,
+Bismarck-like, said bluntly: "If war once breaks out, the old score
+between England and Prussia will be settled, not by ambassadors' tea
+parties and Areopaguses, but by blood and iron?" In vain did Sazonoff
+repeat, "But if you are going to fight, as you know you are, why not say
+so?" Sir Edward, being Sir Edward and not Winston Churchill or Lloyd
+George, could not admit that he was going to fight. He might have
+forestalled the dying Pope and his noble Christian "I bless peace" by a
+noble, if heathen, "I fight war." Instead, he persuaded us all that he
+was under no obligation whatever to fight. He persuaded Germany that he
+had not the slightest serious intention of fighting. Sir Owen Seaman
+wrote in _Punch_ an amusing and witty No-Intervention poem. Sporting
+Liberals offered any odds that there would be no war for England. And
+Germany, confident that with Austria's help she could break France with
+one hand and Russia with the other if England held aloof, let Austria
+throw the match into the magazine.
+
+
+*The Battery Unmasked.*
+
+Then the Foreign Office, always acting through its amiable and popular
+but confused instrument Sir Edward, unmasked the Junker-Militarist
+battery. He suddenly announced that England must take a hand in the war,
+though he did not yet tell the English people so, it being against the
+diplomatic tradition to tell them anything until it is too late for them
+to object. But he told the German Ambassador, Prince Lichnowsky, caught
+in a death trap, pleaded desperately for peace with Great Britain. Would
+we promise to spare Germany if Belgium were left untouched? No. Would we
+say on what conditions we would spare Germany? No. Not if the Germans
+promised not to annex French territory? No. Not even if they promised
+not to touch the French colonies? No. Was there no way out? Sir Edward
+Grey was frank. He admitted there was just one chance; that Liberal
+opinion might not stand the war if the neutrality of Belgium were not
+violated. And he provided against that chance by committing England to
+the war the day before he let the cat out of the bag in Parliament.
+
+All this is recorded in the language of diplomacy in the White Paper on
+or between the lines. That language is not so straightforward as my
+language; but at the crucial points it is clear enough. Sazonoff's tone
+is politely diplomatic in No. 6; but in No. 17 he lets himself go. "I do
+not believe that Germany really wants war; but her attitude is decided
+by yours. If you take your stand firmly with France and Russia there
+will be no war. If you fail them now, rivers of blood will flow, and you
+will in the end be dragged into war." He was precisely right; but he did
+not realize that war was exactly what our Junkers wanted. They did not
+dare to tell themselves so; and naturally they did not dare to tell him
+so. And perhaps his own interest in war was too strong to make him
+regret the rejection of his honest advice. To break up the Austrian
+Empire and achieve for Russia the Slav Caliphate of South-East Europe
+whilst defeating Prussia with the help of France and of Russia's old
+enemy and Prussia's old ally England, was a temptation so enormous that
+Sazonoff, in resisting it so far as to shew Sir Edward Grey frankly the
+only chance of preventing it, proved himself the most genuine
+humanitarian in the diplomatic world.
+
+
+*Number 123.*
+
+The decisive communication between Sir Edward Grey and Prince Lichnowsky
+is recorded in the famous No. 123. With the rather childish subsequent
+attempt to minimize No. 123 on the ground that the Prince was merely an
+amiable nincompoop who did not really represent his fiendish sovereign,
+neither I nor any other serious person need be concerned. What is beyond
+all controversy is that after that conversation Prince Lichnowsky could
+do nothing but tell the Kaiser that the _Entente_, having at last got
+his imperial head in chancery, was not going to let him off on any
+terms, and that it was now a fight to a finish between the British and
+German empires. Then the Kaiser said: "We are Germans. God help us!"
+When a crowd of foolish students came cheering for the war under his
+windows, he bade them go to the churches and pray. His telegrams to the
+Tsar (the omission of which from the penny bluebook is, to say the
+least, not chivalrous) were dignified and pathetic. And when the
+Germans, taking a line from the poet they call "unser Shakespeare,"
+said: "Come the four quarters of the world in arms and we shall shock
+them," it was, from the romantic militarist point of view, fine. What
+Junker-led men could do they have since done to make that thrasonical
+brag good. But there is no getting over the fact that, in Tommy Atkins's
+phrase, they had asked for it. Their Junkers, like ours, had drunk to
+The Day; and they should not have let us choose it after riling us for
+so many years. And that is why Sir Edward had a great surprise when he
+at last owned up in Parliament.
+
+
+*How the Nation Took It.*
+
+The moment he said that we could not "stand aside with our arms folded"
+and see our friend and neighbour France "bombarded and battered," the
+whole nation rose to applaud him. All the Foreign Office distrust of
+public opinion, the concealment of the Anglo-French plan of campaign,
+the disguise of the _Entente_ in a quaker's hat, the duping of the
+British public and the Kaiser with one and the same prevarication, had
+been totally unnecessary and unpopular, like most of these ingenuities
+which diplomatists think subtle and Machiavellian. The British Public
+had all along been behind Mr. Winston Churchill. It had wanted Sir
+Edward to do just what Sazonoff wanted him to do, and what I, in the
+columns of _The Daily News_ proposed he should do nine months ago (I
+must really be allowed to claim that I am not merely wise after the
+event), which was to arm to the teeth regardless of an expense which to
+us would have been a mere fleabite, and tell Germany that if she, laid a
+finger on France we would unite with France to defeat her, offering her
+at the same time as consolation for that threat, the assurance that we
+would do as much to France if she wantonly broke the peace in the like
+fashion by attacking Germany. No unofficial Englishman worth his salt
+wanted to snivel hypocritically about our love of peace and our respect
+for treaties and our solemn acceptance of a painful duty, and all the
+rest of the nauseous mixture of school-master's twaddle, parish magazine
+cant, and cinematograph melodrama with which we were deluged. We were
+perfectly ready to knock the Kaiser's head off just to teach him that if
+he thought he was going to ride roughshod over Europe, including our new
+friends the French, and the plucky little Belgians, he was reckoning
+without old England. And in this pugnacious but perfectly
+straightforward and human attitude the nation needed no excuses because
+the nation honestly did not know that we were taking the Kaiser at a
+disadvantage, or that the Franco-Russian alliance had been just as much
+a menace to peace as the Austro-German one. But the Foreign Office knew
+that very well, and therefore began to manufacture superfluous,
+disingenuous, and rather sickening excuses at a great rate. The nation
+had a clean conscience, and was really innocent of any aggressive
+strategy: the Foreign Office was redhanded, and did not want to be found
+out. Hence its sermons.
+
+
+*Mr. H.G. Wells Hoists the Country's Flag.*
+
+It was Mr. H.G. Wells who at the critical moment spoke with the nation's
+voice. When he uttered his electric outburst of wrath against "this
+drilling, trampling foolery in the heart of Europe" he gave expression
+to the pent-up exasperation of years of smouldering revolt against swank
+and domineer, guff and bugaboo, calling itself blood and iron, and
+mailed fist, and God and conscience and anything else that sounded
+superb. Like Nietzsche, we were "fed up" with the Kaiser's imprisonments
+of democratic journalists for _Majestaetsbeleidigung_ (monarch
+disparagement), with his ancestors, and his mission, and his gospel of
+submission and obedience for poor men, and of authority, tempered by
+duelling, for rich men. The world had become sore-headed, and desired
+intensely that they who clatter the sword shall perish by the sword.
+Nobody cared twopence about treaties: indeed, it was not for us, who had
+seen the treaty of Berlin torn up by the brazen seizure of Bosnia and
+Herzegovina by Austria in 1909, and taken that lying down, as Russia
+did, to talk about the sacredness of treaties, even if the wastepaper
+baskets of the Foreign Offices were not full of torn up "scraps of
+paper," and a very good thing too; for General von Bernhardi's
+assumption that circumstances alter treaties is not a page from
+Machiavelli: it is a platitude from the law books. The man in the street
+understood little or nothing about Servia or Russia or any of the cards
+with which the diplomatists were playing their perpetual game of Beggar
+my Neighbour. We were rasped beyond endurance by Prussian Militarism and
+its contempt for us and for human happiness and common sense; and we
+just rose at it and went for it. We have set out to smash the Kaiser
+exactly as we set out to smash the Mahdi. Mr. Wells never mentioned a
+treaty. He said, in effect: "There stands the monster all freedom-loving
+men hate; and at last we are going to fight it." And the public, bored
+by the diplomatists, said: "Now you're talking!" We did not stop to ask
+our consciences whether the Prussian assumption that the dominion of the
+civilized earth belongs to German culture is really any more bumptious
+than the English assumption that the dominion of the sea belongs to
+British commerce. And in our island security we were as little able as
+ever to realize the terrible military danger of Germany's geographical
+position between France and England on her west flank and Russia on her
+east: all three leagued for her destruction; and how unreasonable it was
+to ask Germany to lose the fraction of a second (much less Sir Maurice
+de Runsen's naive "a few days' delay") in dashing at her Western foe
+when she could obtain no pledge as to Western intentions. "We are now in
+a state of necessity; and Necessity knows no law," said the Imperial
+Chancellor in the Reichstag. "It is a matter of life and death to us,"
+said the German Minister for Foreign Affairs to our Ambassador in
+Berlin, who had suddenly developed an extraordinary sense of the
+sacredness of the Treaty of London, dated 1839, and still, as it
+happened, inviolate among the torn fragments of many subsequent and
+similar "scraps of paper." Our Ambassador seems to have been of Sir
+Maurice's opinion that there could be no such tearing hurry. The Germans
+could enter France through the line of forts between Verdun and Toul if
+they were really too flustered to wait a few days on the chance of Sir
+Edward Grey's persuasive conversation and charming character softening
+Russia and bringing Austria to conviction of sin. Thereupon the Imperial
+Chancellor, not being quite an angel, asked whether we had counted the
+cost of crossing the path of an Empire fighting for its life (for these
+Militarist statesmen do really believe that nations can be killed by
+cannon shot). That was a threat; and as we cared nothing about Germany's
+peril, and wouldn't stand being threatened any more by a Power of which
+we now had the inside grip, the fat remained in the fire, blazing more
+fiercely than ever. There was only one end possible to such a clash of
+high tempers, national egotisms, and reciprocal ignorances.
+
+
+*Delicate Position of Mr. Asquith.*
+
+It seemed a splendid chance for the Government to place itself at the
+head of the nation. But no British Government within my recollection has
+ever understood the nation. Mr. Asquith, true to the Gladstonian
+tradition (hardly just to Gladstone, by the way) that a Liberal Prime
+Minister should know nothing concerning foreign politics and care less,
+and calmly insensible to the real nature of the popular explosion, fell
+back on 1839, picking up the obvious barrister's point about the
+violation of the neutrality of Belgium, and tried the equally obvious
+barrister's claptrap about "an infamous proposal" on the jury. He
+assured us that nobody could have done more for peace than Sir Edward
+Grey, though the rush to smash the Kaiser was the most popular thing Sir
+Edward had ever done.
+
+Besides, there was another difficulty. Mr. Asquith himself, though
+serenely persuaded that he is a Liberal statesman, is, in effect, very
+much what the Kaiser would have been if he had been a Yorkshireman and a
+lawyer, instead of being only half English and the other half
+Hohenzollern, and an anointed emperor to boot. As far as popular
+liberties are concerned, history will make no distinction between Mr.
+Asquith and Metternich. He is forced to keep on the safe academic ground
+of Belgium by the very obvious consideration that if he began to talk of
+the Kaiser's imprisonments of editors and democratic agitators and so
+forth, a Homeric laughter, punctuated with cries of, "How about
+Denshawai?" "What price Tom Mann?" "Votes for women!" "Been in India
+lately?" "Make McKenna Kaiser," "Or dear old Herbert Gladstone," etc.,
+etc., would promptly spoil that pose. The plain fact is that, Militarism
+apart, Germany is in many ways more democratic in practice than England;
+indeed the Kaiser has been openly reviled as a coward by his Junkers
+because he falls short of Mr. Asquith in calm indifference to Liberal
+principles and blank ignorance of working-class sympathies, opinions,
+and interests.
+
+Mr. Asquith had also to distract public attention from the fact that
+three official members of his Government, all men of unquestioned and
+conspicuous patriotism and intellectual honesty, walked straight out
+into private life on the declaration of war. One of them, Mr. John
+Burns, did so at an enormous personal sacrifice, and has since
+maintained a grim silence far more eloquent than the famous speech
+Germany invented for him. It is not generally believed that these three
+statesmen were actuated by a passion for the violation of Belgian
+neutrality.
+
+On the whole, it was impossible for the Government to seize its grand
+chance and put itself at the head of the popular movement that responded
+to Sir Edward Grey's declaration: the very simple reason being that the
+Government does not represent the nation, and is in its sympathies just
+as much a Junker government as the Kaiser's. And so, what the Government
+cannot do has to be done by unofficial persons with clean and brilliant
+anti-Junker records like Mr. Wells, Mr. Arnold Bennett, Mr. Neil Lyons,
+and Mr. Jerome K. Jerome. Neither Mr. Asquith nor Sir Edward Grey can
+grasp, as these real spokesmen of their time do, the fact that we just
+simply want to put an end to Potsdamnation, both at home and abroad.
+Both of them probably think Potsdam a very fine and enviable
+institution, and want England to out-Potsdam Potsdam and to monopolize
+the command of the seas; a monstrous aspiration. We, I take it, want to
+guarantee that command of the sea which is the common heritage of
+mankind to the tiniest State and the humblest fisherman that depends on
+the sea for a livelihood. We want the North Sea to be as safe for
+everybody, English or German, as Portland Place.
+
+
+*The Need for Recrimination.*
+
+And now somebody who would rather I had not said all this (having
+probably talked dreadful nonsense about Belgium and so forth for a month
+past) is sure to ask: "Why all this recrimination? What is done is done.
+Is it not now the duty of every Englishman to sink all differences in
+the face of the common peril?" etc., etc. To all such prayers to be
+shielded from that terrible thing, the truth, I must reply that history
+consists mainly of recrimination, and that I am writing history because
+an accurate knowledge of what has occurred is not only indispensable to
+any sort of reasonable behaviour on our part in the face of Europe when
+the inevitable day of settlement comes, but because it has a practical
+bearing on the most perilously urgent and immediate business before us:
+the business of the appeal to the nation for recruits and for enormous
+sums of money. It has to decide the question whether that appeal shall
+be addressed frankly to our love of freedom, and our tradition (none the
+less noble and moving because it is so hard to reconcile with the
+diplomatic facts) that England is a guardian of the world's liberty, and
+not to bad law about an obsolete treaty, and cant about the diabolical
+personal disposition of the Kaiser, and the wounded propriety of a
+peace-loving England, and all the rest of the slosh and tosh that has
+been making John Bull sick for months past. No doubt at first, when we
+were all clasping one another's hands very hard and begging one another
+not to be afraid, almost anything was excusable. Even the war notes of
+Mr. Garvin, which stood out as the notes of a gentleman amid a welter of
+scurrilous rubbish and a rather blackguardly _Punch_ cartoon mocking the
+agony of Berlin (_Punch_ having turned its non-interventionist coat very
+promptly), had sometimes to run: "We know absolutely nothing of what is
+happening at the front, except that the heroism of the British troops
+will thrill the ages to the last syllable of recorded time," or words to
+that effect. But now it is time to pull ourselves together; to feel our
+muscle; to realize the value of our strength and pluck; and to tell the
+truth unashamed like men of courage and character, not to shirk it like
+the official apologists of a Foreign Office plot.
+
+
+*What Germany Should Have Done.*
+
+And first, as I despise critics who put people in the wrong without
+being able to set them right, I shall, before I go any further with my
+criticism of our official position, do the Government and the Foreign
+Office the service of finding a correct official position for them; for
+I admit that the popular position, though sound as far as it goes, is
+too crude for official use. This correct official position can be found
+only by considering what Germany should have done, and might have done
+had she not been, like our own Junkers, so fascinated by the Militarist
+craze, and obsessed by the chronic Militarist panic, that she was "in
+too great hurry to bid the devil good morning." The matter is simple
+enough: she should have entrusted the security of her western frontier
+to the public opinion of the west of Europe and to America, and fought
+Russia, if attacked, with her rear not otherwise defended. The
+Militarist theory is that we, France and England, would have immediately
+sprung at her from behind; but that is just how the Militarist theory
+gets its votaries into trouble by assuming that Europe is a chess board.
+Europe is not a chess board; but a populous continent in which only a
+very few people are engaged in military chess; and even those few have
+many other things to consider besides capturing their adversary's king.
+Not only would it have been impossible for England to have attacked
+Germany under such circumstances; but if France had done so England
+could not have assisted her, and might even have been compelled by
+public opinion to intervene by way of a joint protest from England and
+America, or even by arms, on her behalf if she were murderously pressed
+on both flanks. Even our Militarists and diplomatists would have had
+reasons for such an intervention. An aggressive Franco-Russian hegemony,
+if it crushed Germany, would be quite as disagreeable to us as a German
+one. Thus Germany would at worst have been fighting Russia and France
+with the sympathy of all the other Powers, and a chance of active
+assistance from some of them, especially those who share her hostility
+to the Russian Government. Had France not attacked her--and though I am
+as ignorant of the terms of the Franco-Russian alliance as Sir Edward
+Grey is strangely content to be, I cannot see how the French Government
+could have justified to its own people a fearfully dangerous attack on
+Germany had Russia been the aggressor--Germany would have secured fair
+play for her fight with Russia. But even the fight with Russia was not
+inevitable. The ultimatum to Servia was the escapade of a dotard: a
+worse crime than the assassination that provoked it. There is no reason
+to doubt the conclusion in Sir Maurice de Bunsen's despatch (No. 161)
+that it could have been got over, and that Russia and Austria would have
+thought better of fighting and come to terms. Peace was really on the
+cards; and the sane game was to play for it.
+
+
+*The Achilles Heel of Militarism.*
+
+Instead, Germany flew at France's throat, and by incidentally invading
+Belgium gave us the excuse our Militarists wanted to attack her with the
+full sympathy of the nation. Why did she do this stupid thing? Not
+because of the counsels of General von Bernhardi. On the contrary, he
+had warned her expressly against allowing herself to be caught between
+Russia and a Franco-British combination until she had formed a
+counterbalancing alliance with America, Italy, and Turkey. And he had
+most certainly not encouraged her to depend on England sparing her: on
+the contrary, he could not sufficiently admire the wily ruthlessness
+with which England watches her opportunity and springs at her foe when
+the foe is down. (He little knew, poor man, how much he was flattering
+our capacity for Realpolitik!) But he had reckoned without his creed's
+fatal and fundamental weakness, which is, that as Junker-Militarism
+promotes only stupid people and snobs, and suppresses genuine realists
+as if they were snakes, it always turns out when a crisis arrives that
+"the silly people don't know their own silly business." The Kaiser and
+his ministers made an appalling mess of their job. They were inflamed by
+Bernhardi; but they did not understand him. They swallowed his flattery,
+but did not take in his strategy or his warnings. They knew that when
+the moment came to face the Franco-Russian alliance, they were to make a
+magnificient dash at France and sweep her pieces off the great chess
+board before the Russians had time to mobilize; and then return and
+crush Russia, leaving the conquest of England for another day. This was
+honestly as much as their heads could hold at one time; and they were
+helplessly unable to consider whether the other conditions postulated by
+Bernhardi were present, or indeed, in the excitement of their
+schoolboyish imaginations, to remember whether he had postulated any at
+all. And so they made their dash and put themselves in the wrong at
+every point morally, besides making victory humanly impossible for
+themselves militarily. That is the nemesis of Militarism: the Militarist
+is thrown into a big game which he is too stupid to be able to play
+successfully. Philip of Spain tried it 300 years ago; and the ruin he
+brought on his empire has lasted to this day. He was so stupid that
+though he believed himself to be the chosen instrument of God (as sure a
+sign of a hopeless fool in a man who cannot see that every other man is
+equally an instrument of that Power as it is a guarantee of wisdom and
+goodwill in the man who respects his neighbor as himself) he attempted
+to fight Drake on the assumption that a cannon was a weapon that no real
+gentleman and good Catholic would condescend to handle. Louis XIV. tried
+again two centuries ago, and, being a more frivolous fool, got beaten by
+Marlborough and sent his great-grandson from the throne to the
+guillotine. Napoleon tried it 100 years ago. He was more dangerous,
+because he had prodigious personal ability and technical military skill;
+and he started with the magnificent credential of the French Revolution.
+All that carried him farther than the Spanish bigot or the French fop;
+but he, too, accreted fools and knaves, and ended defeated in St. Helena
+after pandering for twenty years to the appetite of idiots for glory and
+bloodshed; waging war as "a great game"; and finding in a field strewn
+with corpses "un beau spectacle." In short, as strong a magnet to fools
+as the others, though so much abler.
+
+
+*Our Own True Position*.
+
+Now comes the question, in what position did this result of a mad theory
+and a hopelessly incompetent application of it on the part of Potsdam
+place our own Government? It left us quite clearly in the position of
+the responsible policeman of the west. There was nobody else in Europe
+strong enough to chain "the mad dog." Belgium and Holland, Norway and
+Sweden, Denmark and Switzerland could hardly have been expected to take
+that duty on themselves, even if Norway and Sweden had not good reason
+to be anti-Russian, and the Dutch capitalists were not half convinced
+that their commercial prosperity would be greater under German than
+under native rule. It will not be contended that Spain could have done
+anything; and as to Italy, it was doubtful whether she did not consider
+herself still a member of the Triple Alliance. It was evidently England
+or nobody. For England to have refrained, from hurling herself into the
+fray, horse, foot, and artillery, was impossible from every point of
+view. From the democratic point of view it would have meant an
+acceptance of the pretension of which Potsdam, by attacking the French
+Republic, had made itself the champion: that is, the pretension of the
+Junker class to dispose of the world on Militarist lines at the expense
+of the lives and limbs of the masses. From the international Socialist
+point of view, it would have been the acceptance of the extreme
+nationalist view that the people of other countries are foreigners, and
+that it does not concern us if they choose to cut one another's throats.
+Our Militarist Junkers cried "If we let Germany conquer France it will
+be our turn next." Our romantic Junkers added "and serve us right too:
+what man will pity us when the hour strikes for us, if we skulk now?"
+Even the wise, who loathe war, and regard it as such a dishonour and
+disgrace in itself that all its laurels cannot hide its brand of Cain,
+had to admit that police duty is necessary and that war must be made on
+such war as the Germans had made by attacking France in an avowed
+attempt to substitute a hegemony of cannon for the comity of nations.
+There was no alternative. Had the Foreign Office been the International
+Socialist Bureau, had Sir Edward Grey been Jaures, had Mr. Ramsay
+MacDonald been Prime Minister, had Russia been Germany's ally instead of
+ours, the result would still have been the same: we must have drawn the
+sword to save France and smash Potsdam as we smashed and always must
+smash Philip, Louis, Napoleon, _et hoc genus omne_.
+
+The case for our action is thus as complete as any _casus belli_ is ever
+likely to be. In fact its double character as both a democratic and
+military (if not Militarist) case makes it too complete; for it enables
+our Junkers to claim it entirely for themselves, and to fake it with
+pseudo-legal justifications which destroy nine-tenths of our credit, the
+military and legal cases being hardly a tenth of the whole: indeed, they
+would not by themselves justify the slaughter of a single Pomeranian
+grenadier. For instance, take the Militarist view that we must fight
+Potsdam because if the Kaiser is victorious, it will be our turn next!
+Well: are we not prepared to fight always when our turn comes? Why
+should not we also depend on our navy, on the extreme improbability of
+Germany, however triumphant, making two such terrible calls on her
+people in the same generation as a war involves, on the sympathy of the
+defeated, and on the support of American and European public opinion
+when our turn comes, if there is nothing at stake now but the difference
+between defeat and victory in an otherwise indifferent military
+campaign? If the welfare of the world does not suffer any more by an
+English than by a German defeat who cares whether we are defeated or
+not? As mere competitors in a race of armaments and an Olympic game
+conducted with ball cartridge, or as plaintiffs in a technical case of
+international law (already decided against us in 1870, by the way, when
+Gladstone had to resort to a new treaty made _ad hoc_ and lapsing at the
+end of the war) we might as well be beaten as not, for all the harm that
+will ensue to anyone but ourselves, or even to ourselves apart from our
+national vanity. It is as the special constables of European life that
+we are important, and can send our men to the trenches with the
+assurance that they are fighting in a worthy cause. In short, the Junker
+case is not worth twopence: the Democratic case, the Socialist case, the
+International case is worth all it threatens to cost.
+
+
+*The German Defence to Our Indictment.*
+
+What is the German reply to this case? Or rather, how would the Germans
+reply to it if their official Militarist and Kaiserist panjandrums had
+the wit to find the effective reply? Undoubtedly they would say that our
+Social-Democratic professions are all very fine, but that our conversion
+to them is suspiciously sudden and recent. They would remark that it is
+a little difficult for a nation in deadly peril to trust its existence
+to a foreign public opinion which has not only never been expressed by
+the people who really control England's foreign policy, but is flatly
+opposed to all their known views and prejudices. They would ask why,
+instead of making an _Entente_ with France and Russia and refusing to
+give Germany any assurance concerning its object except that we would
+not pledge ourselves to remain neutral if the Franco-Russian _Entente_
+fell on Germany, we did not say straight out in 1912 (when they put the
+question flatly to us), and again last July when Sazonoff urged us so
+strongly to shew our hand, that if Germany attacked France we should
+fight her, Russia or no Russia (a far less irritating and provocative
+attitude), although we knew full well that an attack on France through
+Belgium would be part of the German program if the Russian peril became
+acute. They would point out that if our own Secretary for Foreign
+Affairs openly disclaimed any knowledge of the terms of the
+Franco-Russian alliance, it was hard for a German to believe that they
+were wholly fit for publication. In short, they would say "If you were
+so jolly wise and well intentioned before the event, why did not your
+Foreign Minister and your ambassadors in Berlin and Vienna and St.
+Petersburg--we beg pardon, Petrograd--invite us to keep the peace and
+rely on western public opinion instead of refusing us every pledge
+except the hostile one to co-operate with France against us in the North
+Sea, and making it only too plain to us that your policy was a Junker
+policy as much as ours, and that we had nothing to hope from your
+goodwill? What evidence had we that you were playing any other game than
+this Militarist chess of our own, which you now so piously renounce, but
+which none of you except a handful of Socialists whom you despise and
+Syndicalists whom you imprison on Militarist pretexts has opposed for
+years past, though it has been all over your Militarist anti-German
+platforms and papers and magazines? Are your Social-Democratic
+principles sincere, or are they only a dagger you keep up your sleeve to
+stab us in the back when our two most formidable foes are trying to
+garotte us? If so, where does your moral superiority come in, hypocrites
+that you are? If not, why, we repeat, did you not make them known to all
+the world, instead of making an ambush for us by your senseless
+silence?"
+
+I see no reply to that except a frank confession that we did not know
+our own minds; that we came to a knowledge of them only when Germany's
+attack on France forced us to make them up at last; that though
+doubtless a chronic state of perfect lucidity and long prevision on our
+part would have been highly convenient, yet there is a good deal to be
+said for the policy of not fording a stream until you come to it; and
+that in any case we must entirely decline to admit that we are more
+likely than other people to do the wrong thing when circumstances at
+last oblige us to think and act. Also that the discussion is idle on the
+shewing of the German case itself; for whether the Germans assumed us to
+be unscrupulous Militarists or conscientious Democrats they were bound
+to come to the same conclusion: namely, that we should attack them if
+they attacked France; consequently their assumption that we would not
+interfere must have been based on the belief that we are simply
+"contemptible," which is the sort of mistake people have to pay for in
+this wicked world.
+
+On the whole, we can hector our way in the Prussian manner out of that
+discussion well enough, provided we hold our own in the field. But the
+Prussian manner hardly satisfies the conscience. True, the fact that our
+diplomatists were not able to discover the right course for Germany does
+not excuse Germany for being unable to find it for herself. Not that it
+was more her business than ours: it was a European question, and should
+have been solved by the united counsels of all the ambassadors and
+Foreign Offices and chanceries. Indeed it could not have been stably
+solved without certain assurances from them. But it was, to say the
+least, as much Germany's business as anyone else's, and terribly urgent
+for her: "a matter of life and death," the Imperial Chancellor thought.
+Still, it is not for us to claim moral superiority to Germany. It was
+for us a matter of the life and death of many Englishmen; and these
+Englishmen are dead because our diplomatists were as blind as the
+Prussians. The war is a failure for secret Junker diplomacy, ours no
+less than the enemy's. Those of us who have still to die must be
+inspired, not by devotion to the diplomatists, but, like the Socialist
+hero of old on the barricade, by the vision of "human solidarity." And
+if he purchases victory for that holy cause with his blood, I submit
+that we cannot decently allow the Foreign Office to hang up his martyr's
+palm over the War Office Mantelpiece.
+
+
+*The First Penalty of Disingenuousness.*
+
+The Foreign Office, however, can at lease shift its ground, and declare
+for the good cause instead of belittling it with quibbling excuses. For
+see what the first effect of the nonsense about Belgium has been! It
+carried with it the inevitable conclusion that when the last German was
+cleared off Belgian soil, peace-loving England, her reluctant work in
+this shocking war done, would calmly retire from the conflict, and leave
+her Allies to finish the deal with Potsdam. Accordingly, after Mr.
+Asquith's oration at the Mansion House, the Allies very properly
+insisted on our signing a solemn treaty between the parties that they
+must all stand together to the very end. A pitifully thin attempt has
+been made to represent that the mistrusted party was France, and that
+the Kaiser was trying to buy her off. All one can say to that is that
+the people who believe that any French Government dare face the French
+people now with anything less than Alsace and Lorraine as the price of
+peace, or that an undefeated and indeed masterfully advancing German
+Kaiser (as he seemed then) dare offer France such a price, would believe
+anything. Of course we had to sign; but if the Prime Minister had not
+been prevented by his own past from taking the popular line, we should
+not have been suspected of a possible backing-out when the demands of
+our sanctimoniousness were satisfied. He would have known that we are
+not vindicating a treaty which by accident remains among the fragments
+of treaties of Paris, of Prague, of Berlin, of all sorts of places and
+dates, as the only European treaty that has hitherto escaped flat
+violation: we are supporting the war as a war on war, on military
+coercion, on domineering, on bullying, on brute force, on military law,
+on caste insolence, on what Mrs. Fawcett called insensable deviltry
+(only to find the papers explaining apologetically that she, as a lady,
+had of course been alluding to war made by foreigners, not by England).
+Some of us, remembering the things we have ourselves said and done, may
+doubt whether Satan can cast out Satan; but as the job is not exactly
+one for an unfallen angel, we may as well let him have a try.
+
+
+*The Blank Cheque.*
+
+In the meantime behold us again hopelessly outwitted by Eastern
+diplomacy as a direct consequence of this ill-starred outburst of
+hypocrisy about treaties! Everybody has said over and over again that
+this war is the most tremendous war ever waged. Nobody has said that
+this new treaty is the most tremendous blank cheque we have ever been
+forced to sign by our Parliamentary party trick of striking moral
+attitudes. It is true that Mr. J.A. Hobson realised the situation at
+once, and was allowed to utter a little croak in a corner; but where was
+the trumpet note of warning that should have rung throughout the whole
+Press? Just consider what the blank cheque means. France's draft on it
+may stop at the cost of recovering Alsace and Lorraine. We shall have to
+be content with a few scraps of German colony and the heavy-weight
+championship. But Russia? When will she say "Hold! Enough!" Suppose she
+wants not only Poland, but Baltic Prussia? Suppose she wants
+Constantinople as her port of access to the unfrozen seas, in addition
+to the dismemberment of Austria? Suppose she has the brilliant idea of
+annexing all Prussia, for which there is really something to be said by
+ethnographical map-makers, Militarist madmen, and Pan-Slavist
+megalomaniacs? It may be a reasonable order; but it is a large one; and
+the fact that we should have been committed to it without the knowledge
+of Parliament, without discussion, without warning, without any sort of
+appeal to public opinion or democratic sanction, by a stroke of Sir
+Edward Grey's pen within five weeks of his having committed us in the
+same fashion to an appalling European war, shews how completely the
+Foreign Office has thrown away all pretence of being any less absolute
+than the Kaiser himself. It simply offers _carte blanche_ to the armies
+of the Allies without a word to the nation until the cheque is signed.
+The only limit there is to the obligation is the certainty that the
+cheque will be dishonoured the moment the draft on it becomes too heavy.
+And that may furnish a virtuous pretext for another war between the
+Allies themselves. In any case no treaty can save each Ally from the
+brute necessity of surrendering and paying up if beaten, whether the
+defeat is shared by the others or not. Did I not say that the sooner we
+made up our minds to the terms of the treaty of peace, so that we might
+know what we were fighting for, and how far we were bound to go, the
+better? Instead of which we sign a ridiculous "scrap of paper" to save
+ourselves the intolerable fatigue of thought.
+
+
+*Belgium Crucified Between the European Powers.*
+
+And now, before I leave the subject of Belgium, what have we done for
+Belgium? Have we saved her soil from invasion? Were we at her side with
+half a million men when the avalanche fell on her? Or were we safe in
+our own country praising her heroism in paragraphs which all contrived
+to convey an idea that the Belgian soldier is about four feet high, but
+immensely plucky for his size? Alas, when the Belgian soldier cried:
+"Where are the English?" the reply was "a mass of concrete as large as a
+big room," blown into the air by a German siege gun, falling back and
+crushing him into the earth we had not succeeded in saving from the
+worst of the horrors of war. We have not protected Belgium: Belgium has
+protected us at the cost of being conquered by Germany. It is now our
+sacred duty to drive the Germans out of Belgium. Meanwhile we might at
+least rescue her refugees by a generous grant of public money from the
+caprices of private charity. We need not press our offer to lend her
+money: German capitalists will do that for her with the greatest
+pleasure when the war is over. I think the Government realizes that now;
+for I note the after-thought that a loan from us need not bear interest.
+
+Now that we begin to see where we really are, what practical morals can
+we draw?
+
+
+*Unpreparedness the Price of Secrecy.*
+
+First, that our autocratic foreign policy, in which the Secretary for
+Foreign Affairs is always a Junker, and makes war and concludes war
+without consulting the nation, or confiding in it, or even refraining
+from deceiving it as to his intentions, leads inevitably to a disastrous
+combination of war and unpreparedness for war. Wars are planned which
+require huge expeditionary armies trained and equipped for war. But as
+such preparation could not be concealed from the public, it is simply
+deferred until the war is actually declared and begun, at the most
+frightful risk of such an annihilation of our little peace army as we
+escaped by the skin of our teeth at Mons and Cambrai. The military
+experts tell us that it takes four months to make an infantry and six to
+make a cavalry soldier. And our way of getting an army able to fight the
+German army is to declare war on Germany just as if we had such an army,
+and then trust to the appalling resultant peril and disaster to drive us
+into wholesale enlistment, voluntary or (better still from the Junker
+point of view) compulsory. It seems to me that a nation which tolerates
+such insensate methods and outrageous risks must shortly perish from
+sheer lunacy. And it is all pure superstition: the retaining of the
+methods of Edward the First in the reign of George the Fifth. I
+therefore suggest that the first lesson of the war is that the Secretary
+of State for Foreign Affairs be reduced to the level of a simple Prime
+Minister, or even of a constitutional monarch, powerless to fire a
+single shot or sign a treaty without the authority of the House of
+Commons, all diplomatic business being conducted in a blaze of
+publicity, and the present regulation which exacts the qualification of
+a private income of at least L400 a year for a position in the
+Diplomatic Service replaced by a new regulation that at least half the
+staff shall consist of persons who have never dined out at the houses of
+hosts of higher rank than unfashionable solicitors or doctors.
+
+In these recommendations I am not forgetting that an effective check on
+diplomacy is not easy to devise, and that high personal character and
+class disinterestedness (the latter at present unattainable) on the part
+of our diplomatists will be as vital as ever. I well know that diplomacy
+is carried on at present not only by official correspondence meant for
+possible publication and subject to an inspection which is in some
+degree a responsible inspection, but by private letters which the King
+himself has no right to read. I know that even in the United States,
+where treaties and declarations of war must be made by Parliament, it is
+nevertheless possible for the President to bring about a situation in
+which Congress, like our House of Commons in the present instance, has
+no alternative but to declare war. But though complete security is
+impracticable, it does not follow that no precautions should be taken,
+or that a democratic tradition is no safer than a feudal tradition. A
+far graver doubt is raised by the susceptibility of the masses to war
+fever, and the appalling danger of a daily deluge of cheap newspapers
+written by nameless men and women whose scandalously low payment is a
+guarantee of their ignorance and their servility to the financial
+department, controlled by a moneyed class which not only curries favour
+with the military caste for social reasons, but has large direct
+interests in war as a method of raising the price of money, the only
+commodity the moneyed class has to sell. But I am quite unable to see
+that our Junkers are less susceptible to the influence of the Press than
+the people educated by public elementary schools. On the contrary, our
+Democrats are more fool-proof than our Plutocrats; and the ravings our
+Junkers send to the papers for nothing in war time would be dear at a
+halfpenny a line. Plutocracy makes for war because it offers prizes to
+Plutocrats: Socialism makes for peace because the interests it serves
+are international. So, as the Socialist side is the democratic side, we
+had better democratize our diplomacy if we desire peace.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+*RECRUITING.*
+
+
+And now as to the question of recruiting. This is pressing, because it
+is not enough for the Allies to win: we and not Russia must be the
+decisive factor in the victory, or Germany will not be fairly beaten,
+and we shall be only rescued _proteges_ of Russia instead of the
+saviours of Western Europe. We must have the best army in Europe; and we
+shall not get it under existing arrangements. We are passing out of the
+first phase of the war fever, in which men flock to the colours by
+instinct, by romantic desire for adventure, by the determination not, as
+Wagner put it, "to let their lives be governed by fear of the end," by
+simple destitution through unemployment, by rancour and pugnacity
+excited by the inventions of the Press, by a sense of duty inculcated in
+platform orations which would not stand half an hour's discussion, by
+the incitements and taunts of elderly non-combatants and maidens with a
+taste for mischief, and by the verses of poets jumping at the cheapest
+chance in their underpaid profession. The difficulty begins when all the
+men susceptible to these inducements are enlisted, and we have to draw
+on the solid, sceptical, sensible residuum who know the value of their
+lives and services and liberties, and will not give them except on
+substantial and honourable conditions. These Ironsides know that it is
+one thing to fight for your country, and quite another to let your wife
+and children starve to save our rich idlers from a rise in the supertax.
+They also know that it is one thing to wipe out the Prussian drill
+sergeant and snob officer as the enemies of manhood and honour, and
+another to let that sacred mission be made an excuse for subjecting us
+to exactly the same tyranny in England. They have not forgotten the "On
+the knee" episode, nor the floggings in our military prisons, nor the
+scandalous imprisonment of Tom Mann, nor the warnings as to military law
+and barrack life contained even in Robert Blatchford's testimony that
+the army made a man of him.
+
+
+*What the Labour Party Owes to the Army.*
+
+And here is where the Labour Party should come in. The Labour Party's
+business is to abolish the Militarist soldier, who is only a quaint
+survival of the King's footman (himself a still quainter survival of the
+medieval baron's retainer), and substitute for him a trained combatant
+with full civil rights, receiving the Trade Union rate of wages proper
+to a skilled worker at a dangerous trade. It must co-operate with the
+Trade Unions in fixing this moral minimum wage for the citizen soldier,
+and in obtaining for him a guarantee that the wage shall continue until
+he obtains civil employment on standard terms at the conclusion of the
+war. It must make impossible the scandal of a monstrously rich peer (his
+riches, the automatic result of ground land-landlordism, having "no
+damned nonsense of merit about them") proclaiming the official weekly
+allowance for the child of the British soldier in the trenches. That
+allowance is eighteenpence, being less than one third of the standard
+allowance for an illegitimate child under an affiliation order. And the
+Labour Party must deprive the German bullet of its present double effect
+in killing an Englishman in France and simultaneously reducing his
+widow's subsistence from a guinea a week to five shillings. Until this
+is done we are simply provoking Providence to destroy us.
+
+I wish I could say that it is hardly necessary to add that Trade
+Unionism must be instituted in the Army, so that there shall be
+accredited secretaries in the field to act as a competent medium of
+communication between the men on service and the political
+representatives of their class at the War Office (for I shall propose
+this representative innovation presently). It will shock our colonels;
+but I know of no bodies of men for whom repeated and violent shocking is
+more needed and more likely to prove salutary than the regimental masses
+of the British army. One rather pleasant shock in store for them is the
+discovery that an officer and a gentleman, whose sole professional
+interest is the honour and welfare of his country, and who is bound to
+the mystical equality of life-and-death duty for all alike, will get on
+much more easily with a Trade Union secretary than a commercial employer
+whose aim is simply private profit and who regards every penny added to
+the wages of his employees as a penny taken off his own income. Howbeit,
+whether the colonels like it or not--that is, whether they have become
+accustomed to it or not--it has to come, and its protection from Junker
+prejudice is another duty of the Labour Party. The Party as a purely
+political body must demand that the defender of his country shall retain
+his full civil rights unimpaired; that, the unnecessary, mischievous,
+dishonourable and tyrannical slave code called military law, which at
+its most savagely stern point produced only Wellington's complaint that
+"it is impossible to get a command obeyed in the British Army," be
+carted away to the rubbish heap of exploded superstitions; and that if
+Englishmen are not to be allowed to serve their country in the field as
+freely as they do in the numerous civil industries in which neglect and
+indiscipline are as dangerous as they are in war, their leaders and
+Parliamentary representatives will not recommend them to serve at all.
+In wartime these things may not matter: discipline either goes by the
+board or keeps itself under the pressure of the enemy's cannon; and
+bullying sergeants and insolent officers have something else to do than
+to provoke men they dislike into striking them and then reporting them
+for two years' hard labour without trial by jury. In battle such
+officers are between two fires. But soldiers are not always, or even
+often, at war; and the dishonour of abdicating dearly-bought rights and
+liberties is a stain both on war and peace. Now is the time to get rid
+of that stain. If any officer cannot command men without it, as
+civilians and police inspectors do, that officer has mistaken his
+profession and had better come home.
+
+
+*Obsolete Tests in the Army.*
+
+Another matter needs to be dealt with at the same time. There are
+immense numbers of atheists in this country; and though most of them,
+like the Kaiser, regard themselves as devout Christians, the best are
+intellectually honest enough to object to profess beliefs they do not
+hold, especially in the solemn act of dedicating themselves to death in
+the service of their country. Army form E 501 A (September, 1912)
+secured to these the
+
+[Illustration: JOHN GALSWORTHY. (_Photo by E.O. Hoppe_.) _See Page_
+102]
+
+[Illustration: RUDYARD KIPLING _(Photo by E.O. Hoppe_.) _See Page_ 106]
+
+benefit of the Bradlaugh Affirmation Act of 1888, as the enlisting
+soldier said simply "I, So and So, do make Oath, &c." But recruits are
+now confronted with another form (E 501, June, 1914) running "I, So and
+So, swear by Almighty God, &c." On September 1st, at Lord Kitchener's
+call, a civil servant obtained leave to enlist and had the oath put to
+him, in this form by the attesting officer. He offered to swear in the
+1912 form. This was refused; and we accordingly lost a recruit of just
+that sturdily conscientious temper which has made the most formidable
+soldiers known to history. I am bound to add, however, that the
+attesting officer, on being told that the oath would be a blasphemous
+farce to the conscience of the recruit, made no difficulty about that,
+and was quite willing to accept him if he, on his part, would oblige by
+professing what he did not believe. Thus a Ghoorka's religious
+conscience is respected: an Englishman's is insulted and outraged.
+
+But, indeed, all these oaths are obstructive and useless superstitions.
+No recruit will hesitate to pledge his word of honour to fight to the
+death for his country or for a cause with which he sympathizes; and that
+is all we require. There is no need to drag in Almighty God and no need
+to drag in the King. Many an Irishman, many a colonial Republican, many
+an American volunteer who would fight against the Prussian monarchy
+shoulder to shoulder with the French Republicans with a will, would
+rather not pretend to do it out of devotion to the British throne. To
+vanquish Prussia in this war we need the active aid or the sympathy of
+every Republican in the world. America, for instance, sympathizes with
+England, but classes the King with the Kaiser as an obsolete
+institution. Besides, even from the courtly point of view the situation
+is a delicate one. Why emphasize the fact that, formally speaking, the
+war is between two grandsons of Albert the Good, that thoroughbred
+German whose London monument is so much grander than Cromwell's?
+
+The Labour Party should also set its face firmly against the abandonment
+of Red Cross work and finance, or the support of soldiers' families, or
+the patrolling of the streets, to amateurs who regard the war as a
+wholesome patriotic exercise, or as the latest amusement in the way of
+charity bazaars, or as a fountain of self-righteousness. Civil
+volunteering is needed urgently enough: one of the difficulties of war
+is that it creates in certain departments a demand so abnormal that no
+peace establishment can cope with it. But the volunteers should be
+disciplined and paid: we are not so poor that we need spunge on anyone.
+And in hospital and medical service war ought not at present to cost
+more than peace would if the victims of our commercial system were
+properly tended, and our Public Health service adequately extended and
+manned. We should therefore treat our Red Cross department as if it were
+destined to become a permanent service. No charity and no amateur
+anarchy and incompetence should be tolerated. As to allowing that
+admirable detective agency for the defence of the West End against
+begging letter writers, the Charity Organization Society to touch the
+soldier's home, the very suggestion is an outrage. The C.O.S., the Poor
+Law, and the charitable amateur, whether of the patronizing or prying or
+gushing variety, must be kept as far from the army and its folk as if
+they were German spies. The business of our fashionable amateurs is to
+pay Income Tax and Supertax. This time they will have to pay through the
+nose, vigorously wrung for that purpose by the House of Commons; so they
+had better set their own houses in order and leave the business of the
+war to be officially and responsibly dealt with and paid for at full
+standard rates.
+
+
+*Wanted: Labour Representation in the War Office.*
+
+But parliamentary activity is not sufficient. There must be a more
+direct contact between representative Labour and the Army, because
+Parliament can only remedy grievances, and that not before years of
+delay and agitation elapse. Even then the grievances are not dealt with
+on their merits; for under our party system, which is the most
+abominable engine for the perversion and final destruction of all
+political conscience ever devized by man, the House of Commons never
+votes on any question but whether the Government shall remain in office
+or give the Opposition a turn, no matter what the pretext for the
+division may be. Only in such emergencies as the present, when the
+Government is forced to beg the Labour members to help them to recruit,
+is there a chance of making reasonable conditions for the soldier.
+
+
+*The Four Inoculations.*
+
+It is therefore necessary that the War Office should have working class
+representatives on all committees and councils which issue notices to
+the public. There is at present, it would seem, not a single person in
+authority there who has the faintest notion of what the immense majority
+of possible British recruits are thinking about. The results have been
+beyond description ludicrous and dangerous. Every proclamation is
+urgently worded so as to reassure recruits with L5,000 a year and repel
+recruits with a pound a week. On the very day when the popular Lord
+Kitchener, dropping even the _et rex meus_ of Wolsey, frankly asked the
+nation for 100,000 men for his army, and when it was a matter of life
+and death that every encouragement should be held out to working men to
+enlist, the War Office decided that this was the psychological moment to
+remind everybody that soldiers on active service often die of typhoid
+fever, and to press inoculation on the recruits pending the officially
+longed-for hour when Sir Almroth Wright's demand for compulsion can be
+complied with. I say nothing here about the efficacy of inoculation.
+Efficacious or not, Sir Almroth Wright himself bases his demand for
+compulsion on the ground that it is hopeless to expect the whole army to
+submit to it voluntarily. That being so, it seems to me that when men
+are hesitating on the threshold of the recruiting station, only a German
+spy or our War Office (always worth ten thousand men to our enemies)
+would seize that moment to catch the nervous postulant by the sleeve and
+say, "Have you thought of the danger of dysentery?" The fact that the
+working class forced the Government, very much against its doctor-ridden
+will, to abolish compulsory vaccination, shews the extent to which its
+households loathe and dread these vaccines (so called, but totally
+unconnected with cows or Jenner) which, as they are continually reminded
+by energetic anti-inoculation propagandists in largely circulated
+journals and pamphlets, not to mention ghastly photographs of disfigured
+children, sometimes produce worse effects than the diseases they are
+supposed to prevent. Indifferent or careless recruits are easily induced
+to submit to inoculation by little privileges during the ensuing
+indisposition or by small money bribes; and careful ones are
+proselytized by Sir Almroth's statistics; but on the whole both
+inoculation and amateur medical statistics are regarded with suspicion
+by the poor; and the fact that revaccination is compulsory in the
+regular army, and that the moral pressure applied to secure both typhoid
+inoculation and vaccination both in the regular army and the
+Territorials is such as only a few stalwarts are able to resist, is
+deeply resented. At present the inoculation mania has reached the pitch
+of proposing no less than four separate inoculations: revaccination,
+typhoid, cholera, and--Sir Almroth's last staggerer--inoculation against
+wounds! When the War Office and its medical advisers have been
+successfully inoculated against political lunacy, it will be time enough
+to discuss such extravagances. Meanwhile, the sooner the War Office
+issues a proclamation that no recruit will be either compelled or
+importuned to submit to any sort of inoculation whatever against his
+will, the better for the recruiting, and the worse for the enemy.
+
+
+*The War Office Bait of Starvation.*
+
+But this blunder was a joke compared to the next exploit of the War
+Office. It suddenly began to placard the country with frantic assurances
+to its five-thousand-a-year friends that they would be "discharged with
+all possible speed THE MINUTE THE WAR IS OVER." Only considerations of
+space restrained them, I presume, from adding "LAWN TENNIS, SHOOTING,
+AND ALL THE DELIGHTS OF FASHIONABLE LIFE CAN BE RESUMED IMMEDIATELY ON
+THE FIRING OF THE LAST SHOT." Now what does this mean to the wage
+worker? Simply that the moment he is no longer wanted in the trenches he
+will be flung back into the labour market to sink or swim without an
+hour's respite. If we had had a Labour representative or two to help in
+drawing up these silly placards--I am almost tempted to say if we had
+had any human being of any class with half the brains of a rabbit
+there--the placards would have contained a solemn promise that no single
+man should be discharged at the conclusion of the war, save at his own
+request, until a job had been found for him in civil life. I ask the
+heavens, with a shudder, do these class-blinded people in authority
+really intend to take a million men out of their employment; turn them
+into soldiers; and then at one blow hurl them back, utterly unprovided
+for, into the streets?
+
+But a War Office capable of placarding Lord Roberts's declaration that
+the men who are enlisting are doing "what all able-bodied men in the
+kingdom should do" is clearly ignorant enough for anything. I do not
+blame Lord Roberts for his oratorical flourish: we have all said things
+just as absurd on the platform in moments of enthusiasm. But the
+officials who reproduced it in cold blood would have us believe that
+soldiers live on air; that ammunition drops from heaven like manna; and
+that an army could hold the field for twenty-four hours without the
+support of a still more numerous body of civilians working hard to
+support it. Sane men gasp at such placards and ask angrily, "What sort
+of fools do you take us for?" I have in my hand a copy of _The Torquay
+Times_ containing a hospitable invitation to soldiers' wives to call at
+the War Office, Whitehall, S.W., if they desire "assistance and
+explanation of their case." The return fare from Torquay to London is
+thirty shillings and sixpence third class; but the War Office no doubt
+assumes that all soldiers' wives keep motor cars. Still, let us be just
+even to the War Office. It did _not_ ask the soldiers' wives for forms
+of authorization to pay the separation allowance to their bankers every
+six months. It actually offered the money monthly!
+
+
+*Delusive Promises.*
+
+The middle and upper classes are nearly as bad as the War Office. They
+talk of keeping every man's place open for him until the end of the war.
+Obviously this is flatly impossible. Some places can be kept, and no
+doubt are being kept. Some functions are suspended by the war and cannot
+be resumed until the troops return to civil life and resume them.
+Employers are so hardened to the daily commercial necessity for
+discharging men without a thought as to what is to become of them that
+they are quite ready to undertake to sack the replacers when the troops
+come back. Also the return of peace may be followed by a revival of
+trade in which employment may not be hard to find, even by discharged
+soldiers, who are always passed over in the labour market in favour of
+civilians, as those well know who have the task of trying to find places
+for them. But these considerations do not justify an attempt to persuade
+recruits that they can go off soldiering for months--they are told by
+Lord Kitchener that it will probably be for years--and then come back
+and walk to their benches or into their offices and pick up their work
+as if they had left only the night before. The very people who are
+promising this are raising the cry "business as usual" in the same
+breath. How can business be carried on as usual, or carried on at all,
+on unoccupied office stools and at counters with no men behind them?
+Such rubbish is an insult to the recruit's intelligence. These promises
+of keeping places open were made to the men who enlisted for South
+Africa, and were of course broken, as a promise to supply green cheese
+by quarrying the moon would have been broken. New employees must be
+found to do the work of the men who are in the field; and these new ones
+will not all be thrown into the street when the war is over to make room
+for discharged soldiers, even if a good many of these soldiers are not
+disqualified by their new training and habits for their old employment.
+I repeat, there is only one assurance that can be given to the recruits
+without grossly and transparently deluding them; and that is that they
+shall not be discharged, except at their own request, until civil
+employment is available for them.
+
+
+*Funking Controversy.*
+
+This is not the only instance of the way in which, under the first scare
+of the war, we shut our eyes and opened our mouths to every folly. For
+example, there was a cry for the suspension of all controversy in the
+face of the national danger. Now the only way to suspend controversial
+questions during a period of intense activity in the very departments in
+which the controversy has arisen is to allow them all to be begged.
+Perhaps I should not object if they were all begged in favour of my own
+side, as, for instance, the question of Socialism was begged in favour
+of Socialism when the Government took control of the railways; bought up
+all the raw sugar; regulated prices; guaranteed the banks; suspended the
+operation of private contracts; and did all the things it had been
+declaring utterly and eternally Utopian and imposible when Socialists
+advocated them. But it is now proposed to suspend all popular liberties
+and constitutional safeguards; to muzzle the Press, and actually to have
+no contests at bye-elections! This is more than a little too much. We
+have submitted to have our letters, our telegrams, our newspapers
+censored, our dividends delayed, our trains cut off, our horses and even
+our houses commandeered, our streets darkened, our restaurants closed,
+and ourselves shot dead on the public highways if we were slow to
+realize that some excited person bawling in the distance was a sentry
+challenging us. But that we are to be politically gagged and enslaved as
+well; that the able-bodied soldier in the trenches, who depends on the
+able-minded civilian at home to guard the liberties of his country and
+protect him from carelesness or abuse of power by the authorities whom
+he must blindly and dumbly obey, is to be betrayed the moment his back
+is turned to his fellow-citizens and his face to the foe, is not
+patriotism: it is the paralysis of mortal funk: it is the worst kind of
+cowardice in the face of the enemy. Let us hear no more of it, but
+contest our elections like men, and regain the ancient political
+prestige of England at home as our expeditionary force has regained it
+abroad.
+
+The Labour Party, then, need have no hesitation in raising all the
+standing controversies between Democracy and Junkerism in their acutest
+form, and taking advantage of the war emergency to press them to a
+series of parliamentary victories for Labour, whether in negotiations
+with the Government whips, in divisions on the floor of the House, or in
+strenuously contested bye-elections. No doubt our Junkers will try to
+disarm their opponents by representing that it would be in the last
+degree unfair, un-English, and ungentlemanly on the part of the Labour
+members to seize any tactical advantage in parliamentary warfare, and
+most treacherous and unpatriotic to attack their country (meaning the
+Junker Party) when it is at war. Some Labour members will be easily
+enough gulled in this way: it would be laughable, if the consequences
+were not so tragic, to see how our parliamentary beginners from the
+working class succumb to the charm of the Junker appeal. The Junkers
+themselves are not to be coaxed in this manner: it is no use offering
+tracts to a missionary, as the poor Kaiser found when he tried it on.
+The Labour Party will soon learn the value of these polite
+demonstrations that it is always its duty not to hamper the governing
+classes in their very difficult and delicate and dangerous task of
+safeguarding the interests of this great empire: in short, to let itself
+be gammoned by elegant phrases and by adroit practisings on its personal
+good-nature, its inveterate proletarian sentimentality, and its secret
+misgivings as to the correctness of its manners. The Junkers have
+already taken the fullest advantage of the war to paralyze democracy. If
+the Labour members do not take a vigorous counter-offensive, and fight
+every parliamentary trench to the last division, the Labour Movement
+will be rushed back as precipitately as General von Kluck rushed the
+Allies back from Namur to the gates of Paris. In truth, the importance
+of the war to the immense majority of Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Germans
+lies in the possibility that when Junkers fall out common men may come
+by their own.
+
+
+
+
+*III.*
+
+*THE TERMS OF PEACE.*
+
+
+*Natural Limits to Duration of the War.*
+
+
+So much for the recruiting. Now for the terms of peace. It is time to
+take that subject in hand; for Lord Kitchener's notion that we are going
+to settle down to years of war as we did a century ago is soldierly, but
+not sensible. It is, of course, physically possible for us to continue
+for twenty years digging trenches and shelling German troops and shoving
+German armies back when they are not shoving us, whilst old women pull
+turnips and tend goats in the fire zones across which soldiers run to
+shelter. But we cannot afford to withdraw a million male adults who have
+passed a strictish health test from the work of parentage for several
+years unless we intend to breed our next generation from parents with
+short sight, varicose veins, rotten teeth, and deranged internal organs.
+Soldiers do not think of these things: "theirs not to reason why: theirs
+but to do and die"; but sensible civilians have to. And even soldiers
+know that you cannot make ammunition as fast as you can burn it, nor
+produce men and horses as instantaneously as you can kill them by
+machinery. It would be well, indeed, if our papers, instead of writing
+of ten-inch shells, would speak of L1,000 shells, and regimental bands
+occasionally finish the National Anthem and the Brabanconne and the
+Marseillaise with the old strain, "That's the way the money goes: Pop
+goes the Ten Inch." It is easy to rebuke Mr. Norman Angell and Herr
+Bloch for their sordid references to the cost of war; and Mr. H.G. Wells
+is profoundly right in pointing out that the fact that war does not pay
+commercially is greatly to its credit, as no high human activity ever
+does pay commercially. But modern war does not even pay its way. Already
+our men have "pumped lead" into retreating Germans who had no lead left
+to pump back again; and sooner or later, if we go on indefinitely, we
+shall have to finish the job with our fists, and congratulate ourselves
+that both Georges Carpentier and Bombardier Wells are on our side. This
+war will stop when Germany throws up the sponge, which will happen long
+before she is utterly exhausted, but not before we ourselves shall be
+glad enough of a rest. Nations are like bees: they cannot kill except at
+the cost of their own lives.
+
+The question of terms will raise a fierce controversy. At the extremes
+of our public opinion we have two temperaments, first, our gentlemen,
+our sportsmen, our daredevils, our _preux chevaliers_. To these the
+notion of reviling your enemy when he is up; kicking him when he is
+knocked down by somebody else; and gouging out his eyes, cutting out his
+tongue, hewing off his right arm, and stealing all his money, is
+abhorrent and cowardly. These gallants say, "It is not enough that we
+can fight Germany to-day. We can fight her any day and every day. Let
+her come again and again and yet again. We will fight her one to three;
+and if she comes on ten to one, as she did at Mons, we will mill on the
+retreat, and drive her back again when we have worn her down to our
+weight. If her fleet will not come out to fight us because we have too
+many ships, we will send all the odds in our favour back to Portsmouth
+and fight ship to ship in the North Sea, and let the bravest and best
+win." That is how gallant fighters talk, and how Drake is popularly
+(though erroneously) supposed to have tackled the Armada.
+
+
+*The Ignoble Attitude of Cruel Panic.*
+
+But we are not all _preux chevaliers._ We have at the other extremity
+the people who are craving for loot and vengeance, who clamour for the
+humiliation and torture of the enemy, who rave against the village
+burnings and shootings by the Prussians in one column and exult in the
+same proceedings by the Russians in another, who demand that German
+prisoners of war shall be treated as criminals, who depict our Indian
+troops as savage cutthroats because they like to think of their enemies
+being mauled in the spirit of the Indian Mutiny, who shriek that the
+Kaiser must be sent to Devil's Island because St. Helena is too good for
+him, and who declare that Germany must be so maimed and trodden into the
+dust that she will not be able to raise her head again for a century.
+Let us call these people by their own favourite name, Huns, even at the
+risk of being unjust to the real Huns. And let us send as many of them
+to the trenches as we can possibly induce to go, in the hope that they
+may presently join the lists of the missing. Still, as they rather cling
+to our soil, they will have to be reckoned with when the settlement
+comes. But they will not count for much then. Most of them will be
+heartily ashamed of what they said in those first three or four weeks of
+blue funk (I am too timid myself not to make allowances for that most
+distressing and universal, but fortunately transient effect of war); and
+most of those who are not will be ashamed to bear malice publicly.
+
+
+*The Commercial Attitude.*
+
+Far more weighty in the matter will be the intermediate sections. First,
+our commercial main body, which thinks that chivalry is not business,
+and that rancour is childish, but cannot see why we should not make the
+Germans pay damages and supply us with some capital to set the City
+going again, forgetting that when France did that after 1871 for Berlin,
+Berlin was set going so effectually that it went headlong to a colossal
+financial smash, whilst the French peasant who had provided the capital
+from his old stocking throve soberly on the interest at the expense of
+less vital classes. Unfortunately Germany has set the example of this
+kind of looting. Prussian generals, like Napoleon's marshals, have
+always been shameless brigands, keeping up the seventeenth and
+eighteenth century tradition of making cities bribe them to refrain from
+sack and pillage and even billeting, and being quite incapable of the
+magnificence of the great Conde (or was it Turenne?), who refused a
+payment offered by a city on the ground that he had not intended to
+march through it. Blucher's fury when Wellington would not allow him to
+plunder Paris, and his exclamation when he saw London "What a city to
+loot!" is still regarded as fair soldiering; and the blackmail levied
+recently by the Prussian generals on the Belgian and French towns they
+have occupied must, I suppose, be let pass as ransom, not as ordinary
+criminal looting. But if the penalty of looting be thus spared, the
+Germans can hardly complain if they are themselves held to ransom when
+the fortunes of war go against them. Liege and Lille and Antwerp and the
+rest must be paid their money back with interest; and there will be a
+big builder's bill at Rheims. But we should ourselves refrain strictly
+from blackmail. We should sell neither our blood nor our mercy. If we
+sell either we are as much brigands as Blucher.
+
+
+*Vindictive Damages.*
+
+And we must not let ourselves be tempted to soil our hands under pretext
+of vindictive damages. The man who thinks that all the money in Germany
+could pay for the life of a single British drummer boy ought to be shot
+merely as an expression of the feeling that he is unfit to live. We
+stake our blood as the Germans stake theirs; and in that _ganz
+besonderes Saft_ alone should we [missing text]r accept payment. We had
+better **[missing text]y to the Kaiser at the end of the **[missing
+text] "Scoundrel: you can never replace **[missing text] Louvain
+library, nor the sculpture of Rheims; and it follows logically that you
+shall empty your pockets into ours." Much better say: "God forgive us
+all!" If we cannot rise to this, and must soil our hands with plunder,
+at least let us call it plunder, and not profane our language and our
+souls by giving it fine names.
+
+
+*Our Annihilationists.*
+
+Then we shall have the Militarists, who will want to have Germany "bled
+to the white," dismembered and maimed, so that she may never do it
+again. Well, that is quite simple, if you are Militarist enough to do
+it. Loading Germany with debt will not do it. Towing her fleet into
+Portsmouth or sinking it will not do it. Annexing provinces and colonies
+will not do it. The effective method is far shorter and more practical.
+What has made Germany formidable in this war? Obviously her
+overwhelmingly superior numbers. That was how she rushed us back almost
+to the gates of Paris. The organization, the readiness, the sixteen-inch
+howitzer helped; but it was the multitudinous _Kanonenfutter_ that
+nearly snowed us under. The British soldier at Cambrai and Le Cateau
+killed and killed until his rifle was too hot to hold and his hand was
+paralyzed with slayer's cramp; but still they came and came.
+
+
+*Why Not Kill the German Women?*
+
+Well, there is no obscurity about that problem. Those Germans who took
+but an instant to kill had taken the travail of a woman for
+three-quarters of a year to breed, and eighteen years to ripen for the
+slaughter. All we have to do is to kill, say, 75 per cent, of all the
+women in Germany under 60. Then we may leave Germany her fleet and her
+money, and say "Much good may they do you." Why not, if you are really
+going in to be what you, never having read "this Neech they talk of,"
+call a Nietzschean Superman? War is not an affair of sentiment. Some of
+our newspapers complain that the Germans kill the wounded and fire on
+field hospitals and Red Cross Ambulances. These same newspapers fill
+their columns with exultant accounts of how our wounded think nothing of
+modern bullet wounds and hope to be back at the front in a week, which I
+take to be the most direct incitement to the Germans to kill the wounded
+that could be devized. It is no use being virtuously indignant: "stone
+dead hath no fellow" is an English proverb, not a German one. Even the
+killing of prisoners is an Agincourt tradition. Now it is not more
+cowardly to kill a woman than to kill a wounded man. And there is only
+one reason why it is a greater crime to kill a woman than a man, and why
+women have to be spared and protected when men are exposed and
+sacrificed. That reason is that the destruction of the women is the
+destruction of the community. Men are comparatively of no account: kill
+90 per cent, of the German men, and the remaining 10 per cent. can
+repeople her. But kill the women, and _Delenda est Carthago_. Now this
+is exactly what our Militarists want to happen to Germany. Therefore the
+objection to killing women becomes in this case the reason for doing it.
+Why not? No reply is possible from the Militarist, disable-your-enemy
+point of view. If disablement is your will, there is your way, and the
+only effectual way. We really must not call the Kaiser and Von Bernhardi
+disciples of the mythical Neech when they have either overlooked or
+shrunk from such a glaring "biological necessity." A pair of puling
+pious sentimentalists if you like. But Supermen! Nonsense. O, my brother
+journalists, if you revile the Prussians, call them sheep led by snobs,
+call them beggars on horseback, call them sausage eaters, depict them in
+the good old English fashion in spectacles and comforter, seedy overcoat
+buttoned over paunchy figure, playing the contrabass tuba in a street
+band; but do not flatter them with the heroic title of Superman, and
+hold up as magnificent villainies worthy of Milton's Lucifer these
+common crimes of violence and raid and lust that any drunken blackguard
+can commit when the police are away, and that no mere multiplication can
+dignify. As to Nietzsche, with his Polish hatred of Prussia (who
+heartily reciprocated the sentiment), when did he ever tell the Germans
+to allow themselves to be driven like sheep to the slaughter in millions
+by mischievous dolts who, being for the most part incapable of reading
+ten sentences of a philosophic treatise without falling asleep, allow
+journalists as illiterate as themselves to persuade them that he got his
+great reputation by writing a cheap gospel for bullies? Strictly between
+ourselves, we also are an illiterate people; but we may at least hold
+our tongues about matters we don't understand, and not say in the face
+of Europe that the English believe that the composer of Parsifal was a
+Militarist Prussian (he was an exiled revolutionist); that Nietzsche was
+a diciple of Wagner (Nietzsche preferred the music of Bizet, a
+Frenchman); and that the Kaiser is a disciple of Nietzsche, who would
+have laughed his childish pietism to scorn.
+
+
+*The Simple Answer.*
+
+Nietzsche would certainly have agreed that we must kill the German women
+if we mean business when we talk of destroying Germany. But he would
+also have answered my Why not?, which is more than any consistent
+Militarist can. Indeed, it needs no philosopher to give the answer. The
+first ordinary anti-Militarist human person you meet will tell you that
+it would be too horrible; that life would be unbearable if people did
+such things. And he would be quite right; so please let us hear no more
+of kicking your enemy when he is down so that he may be unable to rise
+for a whole century. We may be unable to resist the temptation to loot
+Germany more or less if we conquer her. We are already actively engaged
+in piracy against her, stealing her ships and selling them in our prize
+courts, instead of honestly detaining them until the war is over and
+keeping a strict account of them. When gentlemen rise in the House of
+Commons and say that they owe Germans money and do not intend to pay it,
+one must face the fact that there will be a strong popular demand for
+plunder. War, after all, is simply a letting loose of organized murder,
+theft, and piracy on a foe; and I have no doubt the average Englishman
+will say to me what Falstaff said to Pistol concerning his share in the
+price of the stolen fan: "Reason, you rogue, reason: do you think I'll
+endanger my soul _gratis_?" To which I reply, "If you can't resist the
+booty, take it frankly, and know yourself for half patriot, half
+brigand; but don't talk nonsense about disablement. Cromwell tried it in
+Ireland. He had better have tried Home Rule. And what Cromwell could not
+do to Ireland we cannot do to Germany."
+
+
+*The Sensible People.*
+
+Finally we come to the only body of opinion in which there is any hope
+of civilization: the opinion of the people who are bent, not on
+gallantry nor revenge nor plunder nor pride nor panic nor glory nor any
+of the invidiousnesses of patriotism, but on the problem of how to so
+redraw the map of Europe and reform its political constitutions that
+this abominable crime and atrocious nuisance, a European war, shall not
+easily occur again. The map is very important; for the open sores which
+have at last suppurated and burst after having made the world uneasy for
+years, were produced by altering the colour of Alsace and Lorraine and
+of Bosnia and Herzegovina on the map. And the new map must be settled,
+not by conquest, but by consent of the people immediately concerned. One
+of the broken treaties of Europe which has been mentioned less
+frequently of late than the Belgian treaty is the treaty of Prague, by
+which a plebiscite was to have been taken on the subject of the
+nationality of Schleswig and Holstein. That plebiscite has never been
+taken. It may have to be taken, with other plebiscites, before this war
+is settled.
+
+
+*German Unity Inviolable.*
+
+But here let me warn those who are hoping for a disintegrated Germany
+like that which Thackeray ridiculed, that their hopes are vain. The
+southern Germans, the, friendliest, most easy-going people in the world
+(as far as I know the world) dislike the Prussians far more heartily
+than we do; but they know that they are respected and strong and big as
+part of United Germany, and that they were weak and despised and petty
+as separate kingdoms. Germany will hold together. No doubt the Germans
+may reasonably say to the Prussian drill sergeant and his master
+Hohenzollern, "A nice mess you have made of your job after all we have
+endured from you because we believed you could make us invincible. We
+thought that if you were hard masters you were at any rate good
+grenadiers; but here are these piffling little Belgians and these
+Russians who were beaten by the Japanese, and these English who made
+such a poor show against a handful of Boer farmers, fighting and
+organizing just as well as you. So, as the French and English are
+organized as a republic and an extremely limited monarchy, we will try
+how that sort of constitution will suit us." But they will not break up:
+on the contrary, they are much more likely to extend the German
+community by incorporating German Austria. And as this would raise the
+question whether Hohenzollern or Hapsburg should rule the roost, the
+simplest solution would be to get rid of them both, and take the sooner
+or later inevitable step into the democratic republican form of
+Government to which Europe is visibly tending, though "this king
+business," as my American correspondents call it, has certain
+conveniences when it is limited and combined with an aristocracy also
+limited by primogeniture and politically controlled by a commonalty into
+which all but the eldest brothers in the aristocratic families fall,
+thus making the German segregation of the _adel_ class impossible. Such
+a monarchy, especially when the monarch is a woman, as in Holland today,
+and in England under Victoria, is a fairly acceptable working substitute
+for a formal republic in old civilizations with inveterate monarchical
+traditions, absurd as it is in new and essentially democratic States. At
+any rate, it is conceivable that the western allies might demand the
+introduction of some such political constitution in Germany and Austria
+as a guarantee; for though the demand would not please Russia, some of
+Russia's demands will not please us; and there must be some give and
+take in the business.
+
+
+*Limits of Constitutional Interference.*
+
+Let us consider this possibility for a moment. First, it must be firmly
+postulated that civilized nations cannot have their political
+constitutions imposed on them from without if the object of the
+arrangement is peace and stability. If a victorious Germany were to
+attempt to impose the Prussian constitution on France and England, they
+would submit to it just as Ireland submitted to Dublin Castle, which, to
+say the least, would not be a millennial settlement. Profoundly as we
+are convinced that our Government of India is far better than any native
+Indian government could be (the assumption that "natives" could govern
+at all being made for the sake of argument with due reluctance), it is
+quite certain that until it becomes as voluntary as the parliamentary
+government of Australia, and has been modified accordingly, it will
+remain an artificial, precarious, and continually threatening political
+structure. Nevertheless, we need not go to the opposite extreme and
+conclude that a political constitution must fit a country so accurately
+that it must be home-made to measure. Europe has a stock of ready-made
+constitutions, both Monarchical and Republican, which will fit any
+western European nation comfortably enough. We are at present
+considerably bothered by the number of Germans who, though their own
+country and constitution is less than a day's journey away, settle here
+and marry Englishwomen without feeling that our constitution is
+unbearable. Englishmen are never tired of declaring that "they do things
+better abroad" (as a matter of fact they often do), and that the ways of
+Prussia are smarter than the ways of Paddington. It is therefore quite
+possible that a reach-me-down constitution proposed, not by the
+conquerors, but by an international congress with no interest to serve
+but the interests of peace, might prove acceptable enough to a nation
+thoroughly disgusted with its tyrants.
+
+
+*Physician: Heal Thyself.*
+
+Now a congress which undertook the Liberalization of Germany would
+certainly not stop there. If we invite a congress to press for a
+democratization of the German constitution, we must consent to the
+democratization of our own. If we send the Kaiser to St. Helena (or
+whatever the title of the Chiselhurst villa may be) we must send Sir
+Edward Grey there, too. For if on the morrow of the peace we may all
+begin to plot and plan one another's destruction over again in the
+secrecy of our Foreign Office, so that in spite of Parliament and free
+democratic institutions the Foreign Secretary may at any moment step
+down from the Foreign Office to the House of Commons and say, "I
+arranged yesterday with the ambassador from Cocagne that England is to
+join his country in fighting Brobdingnag; so vote me a couple of hundred
+millions, and off with you to the trenches," we shall be just where we
+were before as far as any likelihood of putting an end to war is
+concerned. The congress will certainly ask us to pledge ourselves that
+if we shake the mailed fist at all we shall shake it publicly, and that
+though we may keep our sword ready (let me interject in passing that
+disarmament is all nonsense: nobody is going to disarm after this
+experience) it shall be drawn by the representatives of the nation, and
+not by Junker diplomatists who despise and distrust the nation, and have
+planned war behind its back for years. Indeed they will probably demur
+to its being drawn even by the representative of the nation until the
+occasion has been submitted to the judgment of the representatives of
+the world, or such beginnings of a world representative body as may be
+possible. That is the true _Weltpolitik_.
+
+
+*The Hegemony of Peace.*
+
+For the main business of the settlement, if it is to have any serious
+business at all, must be the establishment of a Hegemony of Peace, as
+desired by all who are really capable of high civilization, and
+formulated by me in the daily Press in a vain attempt to avert this
+mischief whilst it was brewing. Nobody took the smallest public notice
+of me; so I made a lady in a play say "Not bloody likely," and instantly
+became famous beyond the Kaiser, beyond the Tsar, beyond Sir Edward
+Grey, beyond Shakespeare and Homer and President Wilson, the papers
+occupying themselves with me for a whole week just as they are now
+occupying themselves with the war, and one paper actually devoting a
+special edition to a single word in my play, which is more than it has
+done for the Treaty of London (1839). I concluded then that this was a
+country which really could not be taken seriously. But the habits of a
+lifetime are not so easily broken; and I am not afraid to produce
+another dead silence by renewing my good advice, as I can easily recover
+my popularity by putting still more shocking expressions into my next
+play, especially now that events have shewn that I was right on the
+point of foreign policy.
+
+
+*East Is East; and West Is West.*
+
+I repeat, then, that there should be a definite understanding that
+whatever may happen or not happen further east, England, France, and
+Germany solemnly pledge themselves to maintain the internal peace of the
+west of Europe, and renounce absolutely all alliances and engagements
+that bind them to join any Power outside the combination in military
+operations, whether offensive or defensive, against one inside it. We
+must get rid of the monstrous situation that produced the present war.
+France made an alliance with Russia as a defence against Germany.
+Germany made an alliance with Austria as a defence against Russia.
+England joined the Franco-Russian alliance as a defence against Germany
+and Austria. The result was that Germany became involved in a quarrel
+between Austria and Russia. Having no quarrel with France, and only a
+second-hand quarrel with Russia, she was, nevertheless, forced to attack
+France in order to disable her before she could strike Germany from
+behind when Germany was fighting France's ally, Russia. And this attack
+on France forced England to come to the rescue of England's ally,
+France. Not one of the three nations (as distinguished from their tiny
+Junker-Militarist cliques) wanted to fight; for England had nothing to
+gain and Germany had everything to lose, whilst France had given up hope
+of her Alsace-Lorraine _revanche_, and would certainly not have hazarded
+a war for it. Yet because Russia, who has a great deal to gain by
+victory and nothing except military prestige to lose by defeat, had a
+quarrel with Austria over Servia, she has been able to set all three
+western friends and neighbours shedding "rivers of blood" from one
+another's throats; an outrageous absurdity. Fifty years ago the notion
+of England helping Russia and Japan to destroy Germany would have seemed
+as suicidal as Canada helping the Apaches to destroy the United States
+of America; and though we now think much better of the Japanese (and
+also, by the way, of the Apaches), that does not make us any the more
+patient with the man who burns down his own street because he admires
+the domestic architecture of Yokohama, especially when the fire
+presently spreads to the cathedral of Rheims. It is bad enough that we
+should have betrayed oriental Persia to oriental Russia as we did (and
+get nothing for our pains but what we deserved); but when it comes to
+sacrificing occidental Germany to her as well, we are sharpening a knife
+for our own occidental throat. The Russian Government is the open enemy
+of every liberty we boast of. Charles I.'s unsuccessful attempt to
+arrest five members of the House of Commons for disagreeing with him is
+ancient history here: it occurred 272 years ago; but the Tsar's
+successful attempt to arrest thirty members of the Duma and to punish
+them as dangerous criminals is a fact of to-day. Under Russian
+government people whose worst crime is to find _The Daily News_ a
+congenial newspaper are hanged, flogged, or sent to Siberia as a matter
+of daily routine; so that before 1906 even the articles in _The Times_
+on such events as the assassinations of Bobrikoff and the Grand Duke
+were simply polite paraphrases of "Serve him right." It may be asked why
+our newspapers have since ceased to report examples of Russia's
+disregard of the political principles we are supposed to stand for. The
+answer is simple. It was in 1906 that we began to lend Russia money, and
+Russia began to advertise in _The Times_. Since then she has been
+welcome to flog and hang her H.G. Wellses and Lloyd Georges by the dozen
+without a word of remonstrance from our plutocratic Press, provided the
+interest is paid punctually. Russia has been embraced in the large
+charity of cosmopolitan capital, the only charity that does not begin at
+home.
+
+
+*The Russian Russians and Their Prussian Tsars.*
+
+And here I must save my face with my personal friends who are either
+Russians or discoverers of the soul of the Russian people. I hereby
+declare to Sasha Kropotkin and Cunninghame Graham that my heart is with
+their Russia, the Russia of Tolstoy and Turgenieff and Dostoieffsky, of
+Gorki and Tchekoff, of the Moscow Art Theatre and the Drury Lane Ballet,
+of Peter Kropotkin and all the great humanitarians, great artists, and
+charming people whom their very North German Tsars exile and imprison
+and flog and generally do what in them lies to suppress and abolish. For
+the sake of Russian Russia, I am prepared to strain every point in
+Prussian Russia's favour. I grant that the Nihilists, much as we loved
+them, were futile romantic people who could have done nothing if
+Alexander II. had abdicated and offered them the task of governing
+Russia instead of persecuting them and being finally blown to bits by
+them. I grant that the manners of the Fins to the Russians are described
+as insufferable both by the Swedes and the Russians, and that we never
+listened to the Russian side of that story. I am ready to grant Gilbert
+Murray's plea that the recent rate of democratic advance has been
+greater in Russia than anywhere else in Europe, though it does remind me
+a little of the bygone days when the Socialists, scoring 20 votes at one
+general election and forty at the next, were able to demonstrate that
+their gain of 100 per cent. was immensely in excess of the wretched two
+or three per cent. that was the best the Unionists or Liberals could
+shew. I am willing to forget how short a time it is since Sir Henry
+Campbell-Bannerman said: "The Duma is dead: long live the Duma!" and
+since we refused to allow the Tsar to land in England when his ship was
+within gangway's length of our shore, on which occasion I myself held up
+the Anglo-Russian agreement for the partition of Persia to the
+execration of a crowd in Trafalgar Square, whilst our Metropolitan
+Police snatched the _l'sarbeleidigend_ English newspapers from the
+sellers and tore them up precisely in the Cossack manner. I have an
+enormous relish for the art of Russia; I perceive a spirit in Russia
+which is the natural antidote to Potsdamnation; and I like most of the
+Russians I know quite unaffectedly. I could find it in my heart to
+reproach the Kaiser for making war on the Russia of these delightful
+people, just as I like to think that at this very moment good Germans
+may be asking him how he can bring himself to discharge shrapnel at the
+England of Bernard Shaw and Cunninghame Graham. History may not forgive
+him for it; but the practical point at the moment is that he does it,
+and no doubt attributes the perfidy of England to the popularity of our
+works. And as we have to take the Kaiser as we find him, and not as the
+Hohenzollern legend glorifies him, I have to take the Tsar as I find
+him. When we fight the Kaiser we are not fighting Bach and Wagner and
+Strauss, to whom we have just joyfully surrendered without a blow at the
+battle of Queen's Hall, but all the forces in Germany that made things
+hard for Wagner and Strauss. And when we fight for the Tsar we are not
+fighting for Tolstoy and Gorki, but for the forces that Tolstoy
+thundered against all his life and that would have destroyed him had he
+not been himself a highly connected Junker as well as a revolutionary
+Christian. And if I doubt whether the Tsar would feel comfortable as a
+member of a Democratic League of Peace, I am not doubting the good
+intent of Kropotkin: I am facing the record of Kropotkin's imperial
+jailer, and standing on the proud fact that England is the only country
+in Europe, not excepting even France, in which Kropotkin has been
+allowed to live a free man, and had his birthday celebrated by public
+meetings all over the country, and his articles welcomed by the leading
+review. In point of fact, it is largely on Kropotkin's account that I
+regard the Tsar as a gentleman of slightly different views to President
+Wilson, and hate the infamous tyranny of which he is the figurehead as I
+hate the devil. And I know that practically all our disinterested and
+thoughtful supporters of the war feel deeply uneasy about the Russian
+alliance. At all events, I should be trifling grossly with the facts of
+the situation if I pretended that the most absolute autocracy in Europe,
+commanding an inexhaustible army in an invincible country with a
+dominion stretching from the Baltic to the Pacific, may not, if it
+achieves a military success against the most dreaded military Power in
+Europe, be stirred to ambitions far more formidable to western liberty
+and human welfare than those of which Germany is now finding out the
+vanity after worrying herself and everyone else with them for forty
+years. When all is said that can be said for Russia, the fact remains
+that a forcibly Russianized German province would be just such another
+open sore in Europe as Alsace-Lorraine, Poland, Macedonia or Ireland. It
+is useless to dream of guarantees: if Russia undertook to govern
+democratically she would not be able to redeem her promise: she would do
+better with primitive Communism. Her city populations may be as capable
+of Democracy as our own (it is, alas! not saying much); but the
+overwhelming mass of peasants to whom the Tsar is a personal God will
+for a long time to come make his bureaucracy irresistible. As against
+Russian civilization German and Austrian civilization is our
+civilization: there is no getting over that. A constitutional kingship
+of Poland and a sort of Caliphate of the Slavs in remapped southeastern
+Europe, with that access to warm sea water which is Russia's common
+human right, valid against all Balances of Power and Keys to India and
+the like, must be her reward for her share in the war, even if we have
+to nationalize Constantinople to secure it to her. But it cannot be too
+frankly said at the outset that any attempt to settle Europe on the
+basis of the present hemming in of a consolidated Germany and German
+Austria by a hostile combination of Russia and the extreme states
+against it, would go to pieces by its own inherent absurdity, just as it
+has already exploded most destructively by its own instability. Until
+Russia becomes a federation of several separate democratic States, and
+the Tsar is either promoted to the honourable position of hereditary
+President or else totally abolished, the eastern boundary of the League
+of Peace must be the eastern boundary of Swedish, German, and Italian
+civilization; and Poland must stand between it and the quite different
+and for the moment unassimilable, civilization of Russia, whose
+friendship we could not really keep on any other terms, as a closer
+alliance would embarrass her as much as it would embarrass us.
+Meanwhile, we must trust to the march of Democracy to de-Russianize
+Berlin and de-Prussianize Petrograd, and to put the nagaikas of the
+Cossacks and the riding-whips with which Junker officers slash German
+privates, and the forty tolerated homosexual brothels of Berlin, and all
+the other psychopathic symptoms of overfeeding and inculcated insolence
+and sham virility in their proper place, which I take to be the dustbin.
+
+
+*Driving Capital Out of the Country*.
+
+But I must here warn everyone concerned that the most formidable
+opposition to the break-up of these unnatural alliances between east and
+west, between Democracy and Autocracy, between the twentieth century and
+the Dark Ages, will not come from the Balancers of Power. They are not
+really Balance of Power alliances: in fact, they are tending to an
+enormous overbalance of power in favor of the east as against the west
+and in favor of Militarist Autocracy as against Democracy. They are at
+root absolutely unpatriotic, even absolutely conscienceless products of
+commercial finance; and the Balance of Power theories are only the
+attempts of our diplomats to put a public spirited face on the
+operations of private cupidity. This is not the first time nor the
+second that I have had to urge that the greatest danger to us in the
+sphere of foreign politics is the tendency of capital to run away from
+civilization: the one running downhill to hell as naturally as the other
+struggles uphill to the Celestial City. The Englishman is allowed to
+produce the subsistence of himself and his family only on condition that
+he produces the subsistence of the capitalist and his retainers as well;
+and lo! he finds more and more that these retainers are not Englishmen,
+but Russians, South Americans, Kaffirs, Persians, or yellow or black
+barbarians armed for his destruction (not to mention Prussians and
+Austrians), and that the treaties made by our diplomatists have less and
+less to do with the security of the nation or the balance of power or
+any other public business, and more and more with capitalist
+opportunities of making big dividends out of slavish labour. For
+instance, the Anglo-Russian agreement is not a national treaty: it is
+the memorandum of a commercial agreement settling what parts of Persia
+are to be exploited by the Russian and English capitalists respectively;
+the capitalists, always against State interference for the benefit of
+the people, being very strongly in favor of it for coercing strikers at
+home and keeping foreign rivals off their grass abroad. And the absurd
+part of it is that when the State has thus arranged for our capitalists
+to exploit certain parts of Persia, and for their sakes to protect the
+parliamentary liberties of the part left to Russia, they discovered
+that, after all, the most profitable game was to lend Russia the money
+to exploit with, and to facilitate the operation by allowing her to
+destroy the Persian parliament in the face of our own exhortation to it
+to keep the flag flying, which we accordingly did without a blush. The
+French capitalists had dragged France into an alliance with Russia long
+before this; but the French Republic had the excuse of the German peril
+and the need for an anti-German ally. Her natural ally for that purpose
+was England; but as there was no market in England for her money, her
+plutocrats drove her into the alliance with Russia as well; and it is
+that alliance and not the alliance with England that has terrified
+Germany into flying at her throat and plunging Europe into a frightful
+war. The natural alliance with England twice averted war: in the
+Moroccan crises of Algeciras and Agadir, when Sir Edward Grey said
+boldly that we should defend France, and took the first steps towards a
+joint military and naval control of the French and English forces. Why
+he shrank from that firm position last July and thereby led Germany to
+count so fatally on our neutrality I do not pretend to know; it suffices
+for my argument that we were able to hold the balance between France and
+Germany, but failed to hold it between Germany and Russia, and that it
+was the placing of Russian loans in France and England that brought
+Russia into our western affairs. It would have paid us ten times over to
+have made Russia a present of all we and France have lent her
+(indemnifying, of course, the holders of the stock through an addition
+to the income tax) rather than pay the price of a European war. But what
+is the use of crying for spilt milk? I am merely explaining why, when
+French money went to Russia, the French papers discovered that the
+Russians were a most interesting people and their Government--properly
+understood--a surprisingly Liberal Government; and why, when English
+money went to Russia, the English press suddenly developed leanings
+towards the Greek Church, and deplored the unofficial execution of
+Stolypin as deeply as it had rejoiced in the like fate of Bobrikoff. The
+upshot of it all is that western civilization is at present busy
+committing suicide by machinery, and importing hordes of Asiatics and
+Africans to help in the throat cutting, not for the benefit of the silly
+capitalists, who are being ruined wholesale, but to break up the
+Austrian Empire for the benefit of Russia and the Slavs of eastern
+Europe, which may be a very desirable thing, but which could and should
+be done by the eastern Powers among themselves, without tearing Belgium
+and Germany and France and England to pieces in the process.
+
+
+*The Red Flag and the Black.*
+
+Will you now at last believe, O stupid British, German, and French
+patriots, what the Socialists have been telling you for so many years:
+that your Union Jacks and tricolours and Imperial Eagles ("where the
+carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered") are only toys to keep
+you amused, and that there are only two real flags in the world
+henceforth: the red flag of Democratic Socialism and the black flag of
+Capitalism, the flag of God and the flag of Mammon? What earthly or
+heavenly good is done when Tom Fool shoots Hans Narr? The plain fact is
+that if we leave our capital to be dealt with according to the
+selfishness of the private man he will send it where wages are low and
+workers enslaved and docile: that is, as many thousand miles as possible
+from the Trade Unions and Trade Union rates and parliamentary Labour
+Parties of civilization; and Germany, at his sordid behest, will plunge
+the world into war for the sake of disgracing herself with a few rubber
+plantations, poetically described by her orators and journalists as "a
+place in the sun." When you do what the Socialists tell you by keeping
+your capital jealously under national control and reserving your
+shrapnel for the wasters who not only shirk their share of the
+industrial service of their country, but intend that their children and
+children's children shall be idle wasters like themselves, you will find
+that not a farthing of our capital will go abroad as long as there is a
+British slum to be cleared and rebuilt, or a hungry, ragged, and
+ignorant British child to be fed, clothed, and educated.
+
+
+*A League of Peace*.
+
+But in the west I see no insuperable obstacle to a Treaty of Peace in
+the largest sense. This war has smoothed the way to it, if I may use the
+word smoothing to describe a process conduced with so little courtesy
+and so much shrapnel. Germany has now learned--and the lesson was
+apparently needed, obvious as it would have been to a sanely governed
+nation--that when it comes to shoving and shooting, Germany instantly
+loses all the advantages of her high civilization, because France and
+England, cultured or uncultured, can shove and shoot as well or beter
+than she, whilst as to slashing and stabbing, their half barbarous Turco
+and Ghoorka slaves can cut the Prussian Guard to bits, in spite of the
+unquestionable superiority of Wagner's music to theirs. Then take
+France. She does not dream that she could fight Germany and England
+single-handed. And England could not fight France and Germany without a
+sacrifice as ruinous as it would be senseless. We therefore have the
+necessary primary conditions for a League of Peace between the three
+countries; for if one of them break it, the other two can make her
+sorry, under which circumstances she will probably not break it. The
+present war, if it end in the reconquest of Alsace and Lorraine by the
+French, will make such a League much more stable; not that France can
+acquire by mere conquest any right to hold either province against its
+will (which could be ascertained by plebiscite), but because the honors
+of war as between France and Germany would then be easy, France having
+regained her laurels and taught Germany to respect her, without
+obliterating the record of Germany's triumph in 1870. And if the war
+should further result in the political reconstruction of the German
+Empire as a democratic Commonwealth, and the conquest by the English
+people of democratic control of English foreign policy, the combination
+would be immensely eased and strengthened, besides being brought into
+harmony with American public feeling, which is important to the security
+and prestige of the League.
+
+
+*The Case of the Smaller States.*
+
+Already the war has greatly added to the value of one of the factors
+upon which the League of Peace will depend. The smaller States: Holland,
+Belgium, Switzerland, and the Scandinavian Powers, would have joined it
+any time these 40 years, had it existed, for the sake of its protection,
+and thereby made the Protestant north of Mr. Houston Chamberlain's dream
+as much a reality as any such dream is ever likely to be. But after the
+fight put up by Belgium the other day, the small States will be able to
+come in with the certainty of being treated with considerable respect as
+military factors; for Belgium can now claim to have saved Europe
+single-handed. Germany has been very unpleasantly reminded of the fact
+that though a big man may be able to beat a little one, yet if the
+little one fights for all he is worth he may leave the victor very sorry
+he broke the peace. Even as between the big Powers, victory has not, as
+far as the fighting has yet gone, been always with the biggest
+battalions. With a couple of millions less men, the Kaiser might have
+taken more care of them and made a better job of it.
+
+At the same time I hold no brief for small States as such, and most
+vehemently deny that we are in any way bound to knight errantry on their
+behalf as against big ones. They are mostly either incorrigibly
+bellicose themselves, like Montenegro, or standing temptations to the
+big Powers, like Bosnia and Herzegovina. They multiply frontiers, which
+are nuisances, and languages, which have made confusion since the
+building of Babel. The striking contrast between the United States of
+North America and the disunited States of South America in this respect
+is, from the Pacifist point of view, very much in favor of the northern
+unity. The only objection to large political units is that they make
+extremely dangerous autocracies. But as groups of federated democracies
+they are the best neighbours in the world. A federal democratic Russia
+would be as safe a colleague as America: a federal democratic Germany
+would be as pleasant company as Switzerland. Let us, I beg, hear no more
+of little States as British Dulcineas.
+
+
+*The Claims of Belgium.*
+
+As to the special case of Belgium, its claims in the settlement are
+simple and indeed single. If we conclude a peace without clearing the
+Germans completely out of Belgium, we shall be either beaten or
+dishonoured. And such indemnity as a money payment can effect for
+Belgium is due not only by Germany, but by Britain, France, and Russia
+as well. Belgium has been crushed between the Alliance and the Entente:
+it was these two menaces to the peace of Europe that produced
+Armageddon; and as Belgium's heroic resistance served the Entente
+against the Alliance, the obligation to make good the remediable damage
+is even more binding on the Entente.
+
+But there is another and more pressing matter arising out of the
+conquest of Belgium.
+
+
+*The Belgian Refugees and the Problem of Unemployment.*
+
+As I write these lines the descent on our shores of an army of refugees
+from captured Antwerp and threatened Ostend has forced the President of
+the Local Government Board to make a desperate appeal to all and sundry
+to form representative committees to deal with the prevention and relief
+of distress: in other words to save the refugees from starving to death.
+Now the Board of Trade has already drawn attention to a memorandum of
+the Local Government Board as to the propriety of providing employment
+for refugees. And instantly and inevitably the condition had to be laid
+down that if the Committees find employment for anyone, they shall refer
+the case to the local Labour Exchange in order that "any steps taken to
+assist refugees to find employment shall not be such as to endanger the
+employment of British workpeople." In other words, the starving Belgians
+have fled from the Germans only to compete for crust with starving
+Englishmen. As long as there is an unemployed Englishman in the
+country--and there are a good many, especially in the cotton
+industry--how is it possible to give a job to a Belgian without
+depriving an Englishman of it? Why, instead of making impossible
+conditions, and helplessly asking private citizens to do something for
+pity's sake, will not the Government face the fact that the refugee
+question is simply an intensification of the normal unemployed question,
+the only difference being that we are accustomed to leave our own people
+to starve when they are common persons with whom the governing classes
+do not associate, whereas the Belgians have rendered us such a
+tremendous service in the war, and our statesmen have so loudly
+protested that the integrity of Belgium is dearer to England than her
+own heart's blood, that we cannot with any decency treat the destitute
+Belgians as if they were mere British riffraff. Yet when we attempt to
+provide for the Belgians by finding work for them the Board of Trade has
+to point out that by doing so we are taking the bread out of the mouths
+of our own people. Hence we arrive at the remarkable situation of
+starving Britons and Belgians looking hungrily through barbed wire
+fences at flourishing communities of jolly and well fed German prisoners
+of war (whose friendly hat wavings to me and my fellow passengers as I
+rush through Newbury Racecourse Station in the Great Western Express I
+hereby acknowledge publicly with all possible good feeling). I therefore
+for the present strongly recommend all Belgians who have made up their
+minds to flee to England, to pick up German uniforms on the battle
+fields and surrender to the British in the character of Uhlans. Their
+subsistence will then be secure until the war is over, as we dare not
+illtreat our prisoners lest the Germans should retaliate upon the
+British soldiers in their hands, even if we were all spiteful enough to
+desire to do it, as some of our baser sort have not been ashamed to
+propose.
+
+But the women and children, and the too young and the too old, cannot
+resort to this expedient. And though theoretically our own unemployed
+could be dressed in British uniforms and sent abroad with instructions
+to take refuge in neutral territory and be "interned" or to surrender to
+the first Uhlan patrol they met, yet it would be difficult to reduce
+this theory to practice, though the possibility is worth mentioning as a
+reduction to absurdity of the situation. As a matter of common sense "we
+should at once place all destitute Belgian refugees on the footing of
+prisoners of war, except that we need not post sentries to shoot them if
+they try to escape, nor surround them with barbed wire. Indeed these
+precautions are necessary in the case of the Germans rather to save
+their sense of honour whilst remaining here than to defeat any very
+strong longing on their part to return to the trenches.
+
+In a reasonable state of society there would be another difference. The
+Belgians would offer to work so as not to be a burden to us; whilst the
+German prisoner would say--as he actually does, by the way--"No: I am
+not here by my own will: if you open the door I shall go home and take
+myself off your hands; so I am in no way bound to work for you." As it
+is, our Trade Unions are up in arms at the slightest hint of either
+Belgian or German labour being employed when there is no shortage of
+English labour!"
+
+
+*The Minority Report*.
+
+All this exasperating anomaly and deadlock and breakdown would disappear
+if we had a proper system of provision for our own unemployed civilians
+(there are no unemployed soldiers: we do not discharge them between the
+battles). The Belgians would have found an organization of unemployment
+ready for them, and would have been provided for with our own
+unemployed, not as refugees, but simply as unemployed. How to do that
+need not be explained here. The problem was worked out by one of the
+hardest bits of thinking yet done in the Socialist movement, and set
+forth in the Minority Report of the Royal Commission on the Poor Laws
+and the Relief of Distress, 1909. Our helplessness in the present
+emergency shews how very unwise we were to shelve that report.
+Unluckily, what with the wounded vanity of the majority of the
+Commission, who had been played off the stage by Mrs. Sidney Webb; the
+folly of the younger journalists of the advanced guard, who had just
+then rediscovered Herbert Spencer's mare's nest of "the servile State,"
+and revolted with all the petulant anarchism of the literary profession
+against the ideal Interfering Female as typified in their heated
+imaginations by poor Mrs. Sidney Webb, who became the Aunt Sally of our
+young artists in stale anti-bureaucratic invective; and, above all, the
+mulishly silent refusal of our governing classes to see why the
+unemployed should not be simply left to starve, as they had always been
+(the Poor Law being worse than useless for so large a purpose), nothing
+was done; and there is consequently no machinery ready for dealing with
+the refugees. That is why we must treat them for the moment simply as
+unguarded prisoners of war.
+
+
+*The General Strike Against War.*
+
+But if the problem of unemployment among our own people becomes acute,
+we shall have to fall back on the Minority Report proposals or else run
+the risk of a revolt against the war. We have already counted on the
+chances of that revolt hampering Germany, just as Germany counted on the
+chances of its hampering Russia, The notion that the working classes can
+stop a war by a general international strike is never mentioned during
+the first rally to the national flag at the outbreak of a war; but it is
+there all the time, ready to break out again if the supplies of food and
+glory run short. Its gravity lies in its impracticability. If it were
+practicable, every sane man would advocate it. As it is, it might easily
+mean that British troops would be coercing British strikers at home when
+they should be fighting Potsdam abroad, thus producing a disastrous and
+detestable division of popular feeling in the face of the enemy.
+
+
+*The Disarmament Delusion.*
+
+Objections to the Western Pacifist settlement will come from several
+quarters, including the Pacifist quarters. Some of the best disposed
+parties will stumble over the old delusion of disarmament. They think it
+is the gun that matters. They are wrong: the gun matters very much when
+war breaks out; but what makes both war and the gun is the man behind
+them. And if that man really means the peace of the world to be kept, he
+will take care to have a gun to keep it with. The League of Peace must
+have a first-rate armament, or the League of War will very soon make
+mincemeat of it. The notion that the men of evil intent are to have all
+the weapons will not work. Theoretically, all our armaments should be
+pooled. But as we, the British Empire, will most certainly not pool our
+defenses with anyone, and as we have not the very smallest intention of
+disarming, and will go on building gun for gun and ship for ship in step
+with even our dearest friends if we see the least risk of our being left
+in a position of inferiority, we cannot with any countenance demand that
+other Powers shall do what we will not do ourselves. Our business is not
+to disable ourselves or anyone else, but to organize a balance of
+military power against war, whether made by ourselves or any other
+Power; and this can be done only by a combination of armed and fanatical
+Pacifists of all nations, not by a crowd of non-combatants wielding
+deprecations, remonstrances, and Christmas cards.
+
+
+*America's Example: War at a Year's Notice.*
+
+How far it will be possible to take these national armaments out of
+national control remains to be seen. Already America, who is as deeply
+demoralized by Capitalism as we are, though much less tainted with
+Militarism now that Colonel Roosevelt has lost his front seat, has
+pledged herself to several European States not to go to war with them
+until the matter under dispute has been in the hands of an international
+tribunal for a year. Now there is no military force on earth, nor likely
+to be, strong enough to prevent America from treating these agreements
+as Germany has just treated the 1839 Treaty guaranteeing the neutrality
+of Belgium. Therefore the Militarists declare that the agreements are
+not worth the scraps of paper they are written on. They always will
+footle in this way. They might as well say that because there are crimes
+which men can commit with legal impunity in spite of our haphazard
+criminal codes, men always do commit them. No doubt nations will do what
+it is to their interest to do. But because there is in every nation a
+set of noisy moral imbeciles who cannot see that nations have an
+overwhelming interest in creating and maintaining a tradition of
+international good faith, and honouring their promissory notes as
+scrupulously as the moral imbeciles pay their silly gambling debts and
+fight their foolish duels, we are not, I presume, going to discard every
+international guarantee except the howitzer. Why, the very Prussian
+Militarists themselves are reviling us for doing what their own
+Militarist preachers assumed as a matter of course that we should do:
+that is, attack Prussia without regard to the interests of European
+civilization when we caught her at a disadvantage between France and
+Russia. But we should have been ashamed to do that if she had not, by
+assuming that there was no such thing as shame (_alias_ conscience),
+terrified herself into attacking France and Belgium, when, of course, we
+were immediately ashamed not to defend them. This idiotic ignoring of
+the highest energies of the human soul, without the strenuous pressure
+of which the fabric of civilization--German civilization perhaps most of
+all--could not hold together for a single day, should really be treated
+in the asylums of Europe, not on battlefields.
+
+I conclude that we might all very well make a beginning by pledging
+ourselves as America has done to The Hague tribunal not to take up arms
+in any cause that has been less than a year under arbitration, and to
+treat any western Power refusing this pledge as an unpopular and
+suspicious member of the European club. To break such a pledge would be
+an act of brigandage; and the need for suppressing brigandage cannot be
+regarded as an open question.
+
+
+*The Security Will o' the Wisp.*
+
+It will be observed that I propose no guarantee of absolute security.
+Not being a sufferer from _delirium tremens_ I can live without it.
+Security is no doubt the Militarists' most seductive bait to catch the
+coward's vote. But their method makes security impossible, They
+undertook to secure the English in Egypt from an imaginary Islam rising
+by the Denshawai Horror, as a result of which nobody has ventured to
+suggest that we should trust the Egyptian army in this conflict, though
+India, having learnt from Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay Macdonald that
+there are really anti-Militarists in England who regard Indians as
+fellow creatures, is actually rallying to us against the Prussian
+Junkers, who are, in Indian eyes, indistinguishable from the
+Anglo-Indians who call Mr. Keir Hardie and Mr. Ramsay Macdonald
+traitors, and whose panicstricken denial of even a decent pretence of
+justice in the sedition trials is particularly unfortunate just now. We
+must always take risks; and we should never trade on the terror of
+death, nor forget that this wretchedest of all the trades is none the
+less craven because it can so easily be gilt with romance and heroism
+and solemn national duty and patriotism and the like by persons whose
+superficial literary and oratorical talent covers an abyss of
+Godforsaken folly.
+
+
+*The Only Real World Danger.*
+
+The one danger before us that nothing can avert but a general raising of
+human character through the deliberate cultivation and endowment of
+democratic virtue without consideration of property and class, is the
+danger created by inventing weapons capable of destroying civilization
+faster than we produce men who can be trusted to use them wisely. At
+present we are handling them like children. Now children are very
+pretty, very lovable, very affectionate creatures (sometimes); and a
+child can make nitroglycerine or chloride of nitrogen as well as a man
+if it is taught to do so. We have sense enough not to teach it; but we
+do teach the grown-up children. We actually accompany that dangerous
+technical training with solemn moral lessons in which the most
+destructive use of these forces at the command of kings and capitalists
+is inculcated as heroism, patriotism, glory and all the rest of it. It
+is all very well to fire cannons at the Kaiser for doing this; but we do
+it ourselves. It is therefore undeniably possible that a diabolical
+rhythm may be set up in which civilization will rise periodically to the
+point at which explosives powerful enough to destroy it are discovered,
+and will then be shattered and thrown back to a fresh start with a few
+starving and ruined survivors. H.G. Wells and Anatole France have
+pre-figured that result in fiction; and I cannot deny the strength of
+its probability; for if England and Germany can find no better way of
+celebrating their arrival at the highest point of civilization yet
+attained than setting out to blow one another to fragments with
+fulminates, it would seem that the peace of the neutral States is the
+result, not of their being more civilized, but less heavily armed. And
+when we see that the effect of the enterprise is not to redouble civil
+vigilance and stimulate the most alert and jealous political criticism,
+but on the contrary to produce an assumption that every constitutional
+safeguard must be suspended until the war is over, and that every silly
+tyrannical expedient such as censorship of the press, martial law, and
+the like, will begin to work good instead of evil the moment men take to
+murdering one another, it must be admitted that the prospect is not too
+hopeful. Our only consolation is that civilization has survived very
+destructive wars before, mostly because they have produced effects not
+only unintended but violently objected to by the people who made them.
+In 1870, for instance, Napoleon III. can hardly have intended his own
+overthrow and return to exile in England; nor did Bismarck aim at the
+restoration of French Republicanism and the formation of an
+Anglo-Franco-Russian alliance against Prussia. Several good things may
+come out of the present war if it leaves anybody alive to enjoy them.
+
+
+*The Church and the War.*
+
+And now, where in our society is the organ whose function it should be
+to keep us constantly in mind that, as Lassalle said, "the sword is
+never right," and to shudder with him at the fact that "the Lie is a
+European Power"? In no previous war have we struck that top note of keen
+irony, the closing of the Stock Exchange and not of the Church. The
+pagans were more logical: they closed the Temple of Peace when they drew
+the sword. We turn our Temples of Peace promptly into temples of war,
+and exhibit our parsons as the most pugnacious characters in the
+community. I venture to affirm that the sense of scandal given by this
+is far deeper and more general than the Church thinks, especially among
+the working classes, who are apt either to take religion seriously or
+else to repudiate it and criticize it closely. When a bishop at the
+first shot abandons the worship of Christ and rallies his flock around
+the altar of Mars, he may be acting patriotically, necessarily,
+manfully, rightly; but that does not justify him in pretending that
+there has been no change, and that Christ is, in effect, Mars. The
+straightforward course, and the one that would serve the Church best in
+the long run, would be to close our professedly Christian Churches the
+moment war is declared by us, and reopen them only on the signing of the
+treaty of peace. No doubt to many of us the privation thus imposed would
+be far worse than the privation of small change, of horses and motor
+cars, of express trains, and all the other prosaic inconveniences of
+war. But would it be worse than the privation of faith, and the horror
+of the soul, wrought by the spectacle of nations praying to their common
+Father to assist them in sabring and bayonetting and blowing one another
+to pieces with explosives that are also corrosives, and of the Church
+organizing this monstrous paradox instead of protesting against it?
+Would it make less atheists or more? Atheism is not a simple homogeneous
+phenomenon. There is the youthful atheism with which every able modern
+mind begins: an atheism that clears the soul of superstitions and
+terrors and servilities and base compliances and hypocrisies, and lets
+in the light of heaven. And there is the atheism of despair and
+pessimism: the sullen cry with which so many of us at this moment,
+looking on blinded deafened maimed wrecks that were once able-bodied
+admirable lovable men, and on priests blessing war, and newspapers and
+statesmen and exempt old men hounding young men on to it, are saying "I
+know now there is no God." What has the Church in its present attitude
+to set against this crushed acceptance of darkness except the quaint but
+awful fact that there are cruder people on whom horrifying calamities
+have just the opposite effect, because they seem the work of some power
+so overwhelming in its malignity that it must be worshipped because it
+is mighty? Let the Church beware how it plays to that gallery. If all
+the Churches of Europe closed their doors until the drums ceased rolling
+they would act as a most powerful reminder that though the glory of war
+is a famous and ancient glory, it is not the final glory of God.
+
+But as I know quite well that the Churches are not going to do anything
+of the kind, I must not close on a note which might to some readers
+imply that I hope, as some highly respected friends of mine do, to build
+a pacific civilization on the ruins of the vast ecclesiastical
+organizations which have never yet been able to utter the truth, because
+they have had to speak to the poor according to their ignorance and
+credulity, and to the rich according to their power. When I read that
+the icon of the Russian peasant is a religious force that will prevail
+over the materialism of Helmholtz and Haeckel, I have to contain myself
+as best I can in the face of an assumption by a modern educated European
+which implies that the Irish peasants who tied scraps of rag to the
+trees over their holy wells and paid for masses to shorten the stay of
+their dead relatives in purgatory, were more enlightened than their
+countryman Tyndall, the Lucretian materialist, and to ask whether the
+Russian peasant may not find his religious opinions somewhat neutralized
+by his alliance with the countries of Paul Bert and Combes, of Darwin
+and Almroth Wright. If we are to keep up any decent show of talking
+sense on this point we must begin by recognizing that the lines of
+battle in this war cut right across all the political and sectarian
+lines in Europe, except the line between our Socialist future and our
+Commercialist past. Materialist France, metaphysical Germany,
+muddle-headed English, Byzantine Russia may form what military
+combinations they please: the one thing they cannot form is a Crusade;
+and all attempts to represent this war as anything higher or more
+significant philosophically or politically or religiously for our
+Junkers and our Tommies than a quite simple primitive contest of the
+pugnacity that bullies and the pugnacity that will not be bullied are
+foredoomed to the derision of history. However far-reaching the
+consequences of the war may be, we in England are fighting to shew the
+Prussians that they shall not trample on us nor on our neighbors if we
+can help it, and that if they are fools enough to make their fighting
+efficiency the test of civilization, we can play that game as
+destructively as they. That is simple, and the truth, and by far the
+jolliest and most inspiring ground to recruit on. It stirs the blood and
+stiffens the back as effectively and quickly as hypocrisy and cant and
+humbug sour and trouble and discourage. But it will not carry us farther
+than the end of the fight. We cannot go on fighting forever, or even for
+very long, whatever Lord Kitchener may think; and win, lose, or tie, the
+parties, when the fight is over, must fall back on their civil wisdom
+and political foresight for a settlement of the terms on which we are to
+live happily together ever after. The practicable conditions of a stable
+comity of nations cannot be established by the bayonet, which settles
+nothing but the hash of those who rely on it. They are to found, as I
+have already explained, in the substitution for our present Militarist
+kingdoms of a system of democratic units delimited by community of
+language, religion, and habit; grouped in federations of united States
+when their extent makes them politically unwieldy; and held against war
+by the bond of international Socialism, the only ground upon which the
+identity of interest between all workers never becomes obscured.
+
+
+*The Death of Jaures.*
+
+By far the greatest calamity wrought by the war has been the death of
+Jaures, who was worth more to France and to Europe than ten army corps
+and a hundred Archdukes. I once proposed a press law that might have
+saved him. It was that every article printed in a newspaper should bear
+not only the name and address of the writer, but the sum paid him for
+the contribution. If the wretched dupe who assassinated Jaures had known
+that the trashy articles on the Three Years Law he had been reading were
+not the voice of France in peril, but the ignorant scribbling of some
+poor devil at his wits' end to earn three francs, he would hardly have
+thrown away his own life to take that of the greatest statesman his
+country has produced since Mirabeau. It is hardly too much to say that
+this ghastly murder and the appalling war that almost eclipsed its
+horror, is the revenge of the sweated journalist on a society so silly
+that though it will not allow a man to stuff its teeth without
+ascertained qualifications for the task, it allows anyone, no matter how
+poor, how ignorant, how untrained, how imbecile, to stuff its brains
+without even taking the trouble to ask his name. When we interfere with
+him and his sweaters at all, we interfere by way of appointing a
+censorship to prevent him from telling, not lies, however mischievous
+and dangerous to our own people abroad, but the truth. To be a liar and
+a brewer of bad blood is to be a privileged person under our censorship,
+which, so far, has proceeded by no discoverable rule except that of
+concealing from us everything that the Germans must know lest the
+Germans should find it out.
+
+
+*Socialism Alone Keeps Its Head.*
+
+Socialism has lost its leader on the Continent; but it is solid and
+representative on the main point; it loathes war; and it sees clearly
+that war is always waged by working men who have no quarrel, but on the
+contrary a supreme common interest. It steadily resists the dangerous
+export of capital by pressing the need for uncommercial employment of
+capital at home: the only practicable alternative. It knows that war, on
+its romantic side, is "the sport of kings": and it concludes that we had
+better get rid of kings unless they can kill their tedium with more
+democratic amusements. It notes the fact that though the newspapers
+shout at us that these battles on fronts a hundred miles long, where the
+slain outnumber the total forces engaged in older campaigns, are the
+greatest battles known to history, such machine-carnages bore us so
+horribly that we are ashamed of our ingratitude to our soldiers in not
+being able to feel about them as about comparatively trumpery scraps
+like Waterloo or even Inkerman and Balaclava. It never forgets that as
+long as higher education, culture, foreign travel, knowledge of the
+world: in short, the qualification for comprehension of foreign affairs
+and intelligent voting, is confined to one small class, leaving the
+masses in poverty, narrowness, and ignorance, and being itself
+artificially cut off at their expense from the salutary pressure of the
+common burden which alone keeps men unspoilt and sane, so long will that
+small class be forced to obtain the support of the masses for its wars
+by flattering proclamations of the national virtues and indignant
+denunciations of the villanies of the enemy, with, if necessary, a
+stiffening of deliberate falsehood and a strenuous persecution of any
+attempt at inconvenient truthtelling. Here there is no question of the
+Junker being a monster. You must rule ignoramuses according to their
+ignorance. The priest must work bogus miracles for them; the man of
+science must offer them magical cures and prophylactics; the barrister
+must win their verdict by sophistries, false pathos, and appeals to
+their prejudices; the army and navy must dazzle them with pageants and
+bands and thundering salvos and romantic tales; the king must cut
+himself off from humanity and become an idol. There is no escape whilst
+such classes exist. Mahomet, the boldest prophet that ever threw down
+the gage of the singleness and supremacy of God to a fierce tribe of
+warriors who worshipped stones as devotedly as we worship dukes and
+millionaires, could not govern them by religious truth, and was forced
+to fall back on revolting descriptions of hell and the day of judgment,
+invented by him for the purpose. What else could he do if his people
+were not to be abandoned to their own destruction? If it is an axiom of
+diplomacy that the people must not be told the truth, that is not in the
+least because, for example, Sir Edward Grey has a personal taste for
+mendacity; it is a necessity imposed by the fact that the people are
+incapable of the truth. In the end, lying becomes a reflex action with
+diplomatists; and we cannot even issue a penny bluebook without
+beginning it with the quite unprovoked statement that "no crime has ever
+aroused deeper or more general horror throughout Europe" than the
+assassination of the Archduke. The real tragedy was that the violent
+death of a fellow creature should have aroused so little.
+
+
+*Divided Against Ourselves*.
+
+This state of things would be bad enough if the governing classes really
+sought the welfare of the governed, and were deceiving them for their
+own good. But they are doing nothing of the sort. They are using their
+power secondarily, no doubt, to uphold the country in which they have so
+powerful and comfortable a position; but primarily their object is to
+maintain that position by the organized legal robbery of the poor; and
+to that end they would join hands with the German Junkers as against the
+working class in Germany and England as readily as Bismarck joined hands
+with Thiers to suppress the Commune of Paris. And even if this were not
+so, nothing would persuade the working classes that those who sweat them
+ruthlessly in commercial enterprise are any more considerate in public
+affairs, especially when there is any question of war, by which much
+money can be made for rich people who deal in the things most wanted and
+most highly paid for in war time: to wit, armaments and money. The
+direct interest of our military caste in war accounts for a good deal;
+but at least it involves personal risk and hardship and bereavement to
+the members of that caste. But the capitalist who has shares in
+explosives and cannons and soldiers' boots runs no risk and suffers no
+hardship; whilst as to the investor pure and simple, all that happens to
+him is that he finds the unearned income obtainable on Government
+security larger than ever. Victory to the capitalists of Europe means
+that they can not only impose on the enemy a huge indemnity, but lend
+him the money to pay it with whilst the working classes produce and pay
+both principal and interest.
+
+As long as we have that state of things, we shall have wars and secret
+and mendacious diplomacy. And this is one of many overwhelming reasons
+for building the State on equality of income, because without it
+equality of status and general culture is impossible. Democracy without
+equality is a delusion more dangerous than frank oligarchy and
+autocracy. And without Democracy there is no hope of peace, no chance of
+persuading ourselves that the sacredness of civilization will protect it
+any more than the sacredness of the cathedral of Rheims has protected
+it, not against Huns and Vandals, but against educated German gentlemen.
+
+
+*Rheims.*
+
+Commercial wage-slaves can never reproduce that wonderful company of
+sculptured figures that made Rheims unlike any other place in the world;
+and if they are now destroyed, or shortly about to be, it does not
+console me that we still have--perhaps for a few days longer only--the
+magical stained glass of Chartres and the choir of Beauvais. We tell
+ourselves that the poor French people must feel as we should feel if we
+had lost Westminster Abbey. Rheims was worth ten Westminster Abbeys; and
+where it has gone the others may just as easily go too. Let us not sneer
+at the German pretension to culture: let us face the fact that the
+Germans are just as cultured as we are (to say the least) and that war
+has nevertheless driven them to do these things as irresistibly as it
+will drive us to do similar things tomorrow if we find ourselves
+attacking a town in which the highest point from which our positions can
+be spotted by an observer with a field glass in one hand and a telephone
+in the other is the towering roof of the cathedral. Also let us be
+careful how we boast of our love of medieval art to people who well
+know, from the protests of Ruskin and Morris, that in times of peace we
+have done things no less mischievous and irreparable for no better
+reason than that the Mayor's brother or the Dean's uncle-in-law was a
+builder in search of a "restoration" job. If Rheims cathedral were taken
+from the Church to-morrow and given to an English or French joint stock
+company, everything transportable in it would presently be sold to
+American collectors, and the site cleared and let out in building sites.
+That is the way to make it "pay" commercially.
+
+
+*The Fate of The Glory Drunkard.*
+
+But our problem is how to make Commercialism itself bankrupt. We must
+beat Germany, not because the Militarist hallucination and our
+irresolution forced Germany to make this war, so desperate for her, at a
+moment so unfavourable to herself, but because she has made herself the
+exponent and champion in the modern world of the doctrine that military
+force is the basis and foundation of national greatness, and military
+conquest the method by which the nation of the highest culture can
+impose that culture on its neighbors. Now the reason I have permitted
+myself to call General Von Bernhardi a madman is that he lays down quite
+accurately the conditions of this military supremacy without perceiving
+that what he is achieving is a _reductio ad absurdum_. For he declares
+as a theorist what Napoleon found in practice, that you can maintain the
+Militarist hold over the imaginations of the people only by feeding them
+with continual glory. You must go from success to success; the moment
+you fail you are lost; for you have staked everything on your power to
+conquer, for the sake of which the people have submitted to your tyranny
+and endured the sufferings and paid the cost your military operations
+entailed. Napoleon conquered and conquered and conquered; and yet, when
+he had won more battles than the maddest Prussian can ever hope for, he
+had to go on fighting just as if he had never won anything at all. After
+exhausting the possible he had to attempt the impossible and go to
+Moscow. He failed; and from that moment he had better have been a
+Philadelphia Quaker than a victor of Marengo, Austerlitz, Jena and
+Wagrarn. Within a short breathing time after that morning when he stood
+outside Leipsic, whistling _Malbrook s'en va-t-en guerre_ whilst his
+flying army gasped its last in the river or fled under a hail of bullets
+from enemies commanded by generals without a tenth of his ability or
+prestige, we find him disguised as a postillion, cowering abjectly
+behind the door of a carriage whilst the French people whom he had
+crammed with glory for a quarter of a century were seeking to tear him
+limb from limb. His success had made him the enemy of every country
+except France: his failure made him the enemy of the human race. And
+that was why Europe rose up finally and smashed him, although the
+English Government which profited by that operation oppressed the
+English people for thirty years afterwards more sordidly than Napoleon
+would have oppressed them, and its Allies replaced him on the throne of
+France by an effete tyrant not worthy to unlace his shoe latchet.
+Nothing can finally redeem Militarism. When even genius itself takes
+that path its end is still destruction. When mere uppishness takes it
+the end is not changed, though it may be reached more precipitately and
+disastrously.
+
+
+*The Kaiser.*
+
+Prussia has talked of that path for many years as the one down which its
+destiny leads it. Its ruler, with the kid gloves he called mailed fists
+and the high class tailoring he called shining armour, did much of the
+talking, though he is in practice a most peaceful teetotaller, as many
+men with their imaginations full of the romance of war are. He had a
+hereditary craze for playing at soldiers; and he was and is a naive
+suburban snob, as the son of The Englishwoman would naturally be,
+talking about "the Hohenzollerns" exactly as my father's people in
+Dublin used to talk about "the Shaws." His stage walk, familiar through
+the cinematograph, is the delight of romantic boys, and betrays his own
+boyish love of the _Paradeschritt_. It is frightful to think of the
+powers which Europe, in its own snobbery, left in the hands of this
+Peter Pan; and appalling as the results of that criminal levity have
+been, yet, being by no means free from his romantic follies myself, I do
+not feel harshly toward Peter, who, after all, kept the peace for over
+twenty-six years. In the end his talk and his games of soldiers in
+preparation for a toy conquest of the world frightened his neighbours
+into a league against him; and that league has now caught him in just
+such a trap as his strategists were laying for his neighbours. We please
+ourselves by pretending that he did not try to extricate himself, and
+forced the war on us; but that is not true. When he realized his peril
+he tried hard enough; but when he saw that it was no use he accepted the
+situation and dashed at his enemies with an infatuate courage not
+unworthy of the Hohenzollern tradition. Blinded as he was by the false
+ideals of his class, it was the best he could do; for there is always a
+chance for a brave and resolute warrior, even when his back is not to
+the wall but to the Russians.
+
+That means that we have to conquer him and not to revile him and strike
+moral attitudes. His victory over British and French Democracy would be
+a victory of Militarism over civilization; it would literally shut the
+gates of mercy on mankind. Leave it to our official fools and
+governesses to lecture the Kaiser, and to let loose Turcos and Ghoorkas
+on him: a dangerous precedent. Let Thomas Atkins, Patrick Murphy, Sandy
+McAlister, and Pitou Dupont fight him under what leadership they can
+get, until honour is satisfied, simply because if St. George does not
+slay the dragon the world will be, as a friend of mine said of Europe
+the other day, "no place for a gentleman."
+
+
+*Recapitulation.*
+
+1. The war should be pushed vigorously, not with a view to a final
+crushing of the German army between the Anglo-French combination and the
+Russian millions, but to the establishment of a decisive military
+superiority by the Anglo-French combination alone. A victory
+unattainable without Russian aid would be a defeat for Western European
+Liberalism; Germany would be beaten not by us, but by a Militarist
+autocracy worse than her own. By sacrificing Prussian Poland and the
+Slav portions of the Austrian Empire Germany and Austria could satisfy
+Russia, and merge Austria and Germany into a single German State, which
+would then dominate France and England, having ascertained that they
+could not conquer her without Russia's aid. We may fairly allow Russia
+to conquer Austria if she can; that is her natural part of the job. But
+if we two cannot without Russian help beat Potsdam, or at least hold her
+up in such a stalemate as will make it clear that it is impossible for
+her to subjugate us, then we shall simply have to "give Germany best"
+and depend on an alliance with America for our place in the sun.
+
+2. We cannot smash or disable Germany, however completely we may defeat
+her, because we can do that only by killing her women; and it is
+trifling to pretend that we are capable of any such villainy. Even to
+embarrass her financially by looting her would recoil on ourselves, as
+she is one of our commercial customers and one of our most frequently
+visited neighbors. We must, if we can, drive her from Belgium without
+compromise. France may drive her from Alsace and Lorraine. Russia may
+drive her from Poland. She knew when she opened fire that these were the
+stakes in the game; and we are bound to support France and Russia until
+they are won or lost, unless a stalemate reduces the whole method of
+warfare to absurdity. Austria, too, knew that the Slav part of her
+empire was at stake. By winning these stakes the Allies will wake the
+Kaiser from his dream of a Holy Teuton Empire with Prussia as the Head
+of its Church, and teach him to respect us; but that once done, we must
+not allow our camp followers to undo it all again by spiteful
+humiliations and exactions which could not seriously cripple Germany,
+and would make bad blood between us for a whole generation, to our own
+great inconvenience, unhappiness, disgrace, and loss. We and France have
+to live with Germany after the war; and the sooner we make up our mind
+to do it generously, the better. The word after the fight must be _sans
+rancune_; for without peace between France, Germany, and England, there
+can be no peace in the world.
+
+3. War, as a school of character and a nurse of virtue, must be formally
+shut up and discharged by all the belligerents when this war is over. It
+is quite true that ill-bred and swinish nations can be roused to a
+serious consideration of their position and their destiny only by
+earthquakes, pestilences, famines, comets' tails, Titanic shipwrecks,
+and devastating wars, just as it is true that African chiefs cannot make
+themselves respected unless they bury virgins alive beneath the
+doorposts of their hut-palaces, and Tartar Khans find that the
+exhibition of a pyramid of chopped-off heads is a short way to impress
+their subjects with a convenient conception of their divine right to
+rule. Ivan the Terrible did undoubtedly make his subjects feel very
+serious indeed; and stupid people are apt to believe that this sort of
+terror-stiffened seriousness is virtue. It is not. Any person who should
+set-to deliberately to contrive artificial earthquakes, scuttle liners,
+and start epidemics with a view to the moral elevation of his
+countrymen, would very soon find himself in the dock. Those who plan
+wars with the same object should be removed with equal firmness to
+Hanwell or Bethlehem Hospital. A nation so degraded as to be capable of
+responding to no higher stimulus than that of horror had better be
+exterminated, by Prussian war lords or anyone else foolish enough to
+waste powder on them instead of leaving them to perish of their own
+worthlessness.
+
+4. Neither England nor Germany must claim any moral superiority in the
+negotiations. Both were engaged for years in a race for armaments. Both
+indulged and still indulge in literary and oratorical provocation. Both
+claimed to be "an Imperial race" ruling other races by divine right.
+Both shewed high social and political consideration to parties and
+individuals who openly said that the war had to come. Both formed
+alliances to reinforce them for that war. The case against Germany for
+violating the neutrality of Belgium is of no moral value to England
+because (_a_) England has allowed the violation of the Treaty of Paris
+by Russia (violation of the neutrality of the Black Sea and closing of
+the free port of Batoum), and the high-handed and scandalous violation
+of the Treaty of Berlin by Austria (seizure of Bosnia and Herzegovina),
+without resorting to arms or remedying the aggression in any other way;
+(_b_) because we have fully admitted that we should have gone to war in
+defence of France in any case, whether the Germans came through Belgium
+or not, and refused to give the German Ambassador any assurance that we
+should remain neutral if the Germans sacrificed the military advantage
+of attacking through Belgium for the sake of avoiding a war with us;
+(_c_) that the apparent moral superiority of the pledge given by France
+and England to respect Belgian neutrality is illusory in face of the
+facts that France and England stood to gain enormously, and the Germans
+to lose correspondingly, by confining the attack on France to the
+heavily fortified Franco-German frontier, and that as France and England
+knew they would be invited by the Belgians to enter Belgium if the
+Germans invaded it, the neutrality of Belgium had, as far as they were
+concerned, no real existence; (_d_) that as all treaties are valid only
+_rebus sic stantibus_, and the state of things which existed at the date
+of the Treaty of London (1839) had changed so much since then (Belgium
+is no longer menaced by France, at whom the treaty was aimed, and has
+acquired important colonies, for instance) that in 1870 Gladstone could
+not depend on it, and resorted to a special temporary treaty not now in
+force, the technical validity of the 1839 treaty is extremely doubtful;
+(_e_) that even if it be valid its breach is not a _casus belli_ unless
+the parties for reasons of their own choose to make it so; and (_f_)
+that the German national peril pleaded by the Imperial Chancellor in his
+Peer Gynt speech (the _durchhauen_ one), when he rashly but frankly
+threw away the strong technical case just stated and admitted a breach
+of international law, was so great according to received Militarist
+ideas in view of the Russian mobilization, that it is impossible for us
+or any other Militarist-ridden Power to feel sure ourselves, much less
+to convince others, that we should have been any more scrupulous in the
+like extremity. It must be added that nothing can extenuate the enormity
+of the broad fact that an innocent country has been horribly devastated
+because her guilty neighbors formed two huge explosive combinations
+against one another instead of establishing the peace of Europe, but
+that is an offence against a higher law than any recorded on diplomatic
+scraps of paper, and when it comes to judgment the outraged conscience
+of humanity will not have much patience with the naughty child's plea of
+"he began it."
+
+5. Militarism must not be treated as a disease peculiar to Prussia. It
+is rampant in England; and in France it has led to the assassination of
+her greatest statesman. If the upshot of the war is to be regarded and
+acted upon simply as a defeat of German Militarism by Anglo-French
+Militarism, then the war will not only have wrought its own immediate
+evils of destruction and demoralization, but will extinguish the last
+hope that we have risen above the "dragons of the prime that tare each
+other in their slime." We have all been equally guilty in the past. It
+has been steadily assumed for years that the Militarist party is the
+gentlemanly party. Its opponents have been ridiculed and prosecuted in
+England; hanged, flogged or exiled in Russia; and imprisoned in France:
+they have been called traitors, cads, cranks, and so forth: they have
+been imprisoned for "bad taste" and for sedition whilst the most
+virulent sedition against Democracy and the most mutinous military
+escapades in the commissioned ranks have been tolerated obsequiously,
+until finally the practical shelving of Liberal Constitutionalism has
+provoked both in France and England a popular agitation of serious
+volume for the supersession of parliament by some sort of direct action
+by the people, called Syndicalism. In short Militarism, which is nothing
+but State Anarchism, has been carried to such a pitch that it has been
+imitated and countered by a movement of popular Anarchism, and has
+exploded in a European war because the Commercialist Governments of
+Europe had no faith in the effective guidance of any modern State by
+higher considerations than Lord Roberts's "will to conquer," the weight
+of the Kaiser's mailed fist, and the interest of the Bourses and Stock
+Exchanges. Unless we are all prepared to fight Militarism at home as
+well as abroad, the cessation of hostilities will last only until the
+belligerents have recovered from their exhaustion.
+
+6. It had better be admitted on our side that as to the conduct of the
+war there is no trustworthy evidence that the Germans have committed any
+worse or other atrocities than those which are admitted to be inevitable
+in war or accepted as part of military usage by the Allies. By "making
+examples" of towns, and seizing irresponsible citizens as hostages and
+shooting them for the acts of armed civilians over whom they could exert
+no possible control, the Germans have certainly pushed these usages to a
+point of Terrorism which is hardly distinguishable from the deliberate
+murder of non-combatants; but as the Allies have not renounced such
+usages, nor ceased to employ them ruthlessly in their dealings with the
+hill tribes and fellaheen and Arabs with whom they themselves have to
+deal (to say nothing of the notorious domestic Terrorism of the Russian
+Government), they cannot claim superior humanity. It is therefore waste
+of time for the pot to call the kettle black. Our outcry against the
+Germans for sowing the North Sea with mines was followed too closely by
+the laying of a mine field there by ourselves to be revived without
+flagrant Pharisaism. The case of Rheims cathedral also fell to the
+ground as completely as a good deal of the building itself when it was
+stated that the French had placed a post of observation on the roof.
+Whether they did or not, all military experts were aware that an officer
+neglecting to avail himself of the cathedral roof in this way, or an
+opposing officer hestitating to fire on the cathedral so used, would
+have been court-martialed in any of the armies engaged. The injury to
+the cathedral must therefore be suffered as a strong hint from
+Providence that though we can have glorious wars or glorious cathedrals
+we cannot have both.
+
+7. To sum up, we must remember that if this war does not make an end of
+war in the west, our allies of to-day may be our enemies of to-morrow,
+as they are of yesterday, and our enemies of to-day our allies of
+to-morrow as they are of yesterday; so that if we aim merely at a fresh
+balance of military power, we are as likely as not to negotiate our own
+destruction. We must use the war to give the _coup de grace_ to medieval
+diplomacy, medieval autocracy, and anarchic export of capital, and make
+its conclusion convince the world that Democracy is invincible, and
+Militarism a rusty sword that breaks in the hand. We must free our
+soldiers, and give them homes worth fighting for. And we must, as the
+old phrase goes, discard the filthy rags of our righteousness, and fight
+like men with everything, even a good name, to win, inspiring and
+encouraging ourselves with definite noble purposes (abstract nobility
+butters no parsnips) to face whatever may be the price of proving that
+war cannot conquer us, and that he who dares not appeal to our
+conscience has nothing to hope from our terrors.
+
+
+
+
+*"Shaw's Nonsense About Belgium"*
+
+By Arnold Bennett.
+
+Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.
+
+
+Mr. Bernard Shaw's "Common Sense About the War" is the talk of the town,
+and it deserves to be. One of its greatest values is its courage, for in
+it Shaw says many things no one else would have dared to say. It
+therefore, by breaking the unearthly silence on certain aspects of the
+situation, perhaps inaugurates a new and healthier period of discussion
+and criticism on such subjects as recruiting, treatment of soldiers and
+sailors' dependents, secret diplomacy, militarism, Junkerism, churches,
+Russia, peace terms, and disarmament. It contains the most magnificent,
+brilliant, and convincing common sense that could possibly be uttered.
+No citizen, I think, could rise from the perusal of this tract with a
+mind unilluminated or opinions unmodified. Hence everybody ought to read
+it, though everybody will not be capable of appreciating the profoundest
+parts of it.
+
+Mixed up with the tremendous common sense, however, is a considerable
+and unusual percentage of that perverseness, waywardness, and
+arlequinading which are apparently an essential element of Mr. Shaw's
+best work. This is a disastrous pity, having regard to the immense
+influence and vogue of Shaw, not only in Germany, but in America, and
+the pity is more tragic as Shaw has been most absurd about the very
+matter which most Englishmen regard as most important, namely, Great
+Britain's actual justification for going to war.
+
+
+*Shaw's Admitted Prejudice.*
+
+Mr. Shaw begins by conceiving the possibility of his being blinded by
+prejudice or perversity, and admits his capacity for criticising England
+with a certain slight malicious taste for taking the conceit out of her.
+Seemingly he belongs to that numerous class who think that to admit a
+fault is to excuse it. As a highwayman might say before taking your
+purse, "Now, I admit, I have a certain slight taste for thieving," and
+expect you to smile forgiveness of his depredation, Shaw's bias is
+evident wherever he discusses the action and qualities of Great Britain.
+Thus he contrasts Bernhardi's brilliant with our own very dull
+militarists' facts, the result being that the intense mediocrity of
+Bernhardi leaps to the eye on every page, and that events have
+thoroughly discredited all his political and many of his military ideas,
+whereas we possess militarists of first-class quality.
+
+Naturally, Shaw calls England muddle-headed. Yet of late nothing has
+been less apparent than muddle-headednes. Of British policy, Shaw says
+that since the Continent generally regards us as hypocritical, we must
+be hypocritical. He omits to say that the Continent generally, and
+Germany in particular, regards our policy and our diplomacy as extremely
+able and clear-sighted. The unscrupulous cleverness of Britain is one of
+Germany's main themes.
+
+These are minor samples of Mr. Shaw's caprices. In discussing the origin
+of the war Mr. Shaw's aim is to prove that all the great powers are
+equally to blame. He goes far back and accuses Great Britain of
+producing the first page of Bernhardian literature in the anonymous
+pamphlet "The Battle of Dorking." He admits in another passage that the
+note of this pamphlet was mainly defensive. He is constantly thus making
+intrenchments for himself in case of forced retirement, and there is in
+his article almost nothing unjust against Great Britain that is not
+ingeniously contradicted or mitigated elsewhere.
+
+
+*Great Britain's War Literature.*
+
+Beginning with "The Battle of Dorking" and ending with H.G. Well's "War
+in the Air," one of the most disturbing and effective warnings against
+militarism ever written, he sees simply that Great Britain has produced
+threatening and provocative militarist literature comparable to
+Germany's. No grounds exist for such a contention. There are militarists
+in all countries, but there are infinitely more in Germany than in any
+other country. The fact is notorious. The fact is also notorious that
+the most powerful, not the most numerous, party in Germany wanted the
+war. It would be as futile to try to prove that Ireland did not want
+home rule as that Germany did not want war. As for a war literature,
+bibliographical statistics show, I believe, that in the last ten years
+Germany has published seven thousand books or pamphlets about war. No
+one but a German or a Shaw, in a particularly mischievous mood, would
+seek to show that Great Britain is responsible for the war fever. It
+simply is not so.
+
+Mr. Shaw urges that we all armed together. Of course we did. When one
+nation publicly turns bellicose the rest must copy her preparations. If
+Great Britain could live this century over again she would do over again
+what she actually did, because common sense would not permit her to do
+otherwise. The admitted fact that some Britons are militarists does not
+in the slightest degree impair the rightness or sagacity of our policy.
+If one member of a family happens to go to the bad and turn burglar,
+therein is no reason why the family mansion should not be insured
+against burglary.
+
+Mr. Shaw proceeds to what he calls the diplomatic history of the war.
+His notion of historical veracity may be judged from his description of
+the Austrian ultimatum to Servia as an escapade of a dotard. He puts the
+whole blame of it on Franz Josef, and yet he must know quite well that
+Germany has admitted even to her own subjects that Austria asked
+Germany's opinion about her policy and obtained Germany's approval
+before delivering the ultimatum. [Official German pamphlet "Reasons for
+the War with Russia," August, 1914.] There is no word in Mr. Shaw's
+diplomatic history of the repeated efforts toward peace made by Great
+Britain and scotched by Germany. On the contrary, with astounding
+audacity and disingenuousness, he tries to make it appear that
+suggestions for peace were offered by Germany and rejected by Great
+Britain. Once more it simply was not so.
+
+
+*Defense of Sir Edward Grey.*
+
+Mr. Shaw's paraphrase of Document 17 in the British diplomatic
+dispatches is a staggering travesty. So far as I can see it bears no
+relation to the original. Further, he not only deplores that a liberal
+government should have an imperialist Foreign Secretary, but he accuses
+Sir Edward Grey of sacrificing his country's welfare to the interests of
+his party and committing a political crime in order not to incur the
+wrath of The Daily News and The Manchester Guardian. This is totally
+inexcusable. Let me not be misunderstood. I am not a liberal. I am an
+out-and-out radical. I foresee a cleavage in the Liberal Party, and when
+that cleavage comes I shall be on the extreme left wing. I entirely
+agree with Mr. Shaw's denunciation of secret diplomacy and undemocratic
+control of foreign policy. By every social tradition I should be in
+opposition to Sir Edward Grey, but I think Grey was the best Foreign
+Secretary that the Liberal Party could have chosen and that he worked
+well on the only possible plane, the plane of practicality. I am quite
+sure he is an honest man, and I strongly resent, as Englishmen of all
+opinions will resent, any imputation to the contrary.
+
+As for the undemocratic control of foreign policy, a strong point about
+our policy on the eve of the war is that it was dictated by public
+opinion. [See Grey's dispatch to the British Ambassador at Berlin, No.
+123.] Germany could have preserved peace by a single gesture addressed
+to Franz Josef. She did not want peace. Mr. Shaw said Sir Edward Grey
+ought to have shouted out at the start that if Germany fought we should
+fight. Sir Edward Grey had no authority to do so, and it would have been
+foolish to do so. Mr. Shaw also says Germany ought to have turned her
+whole army against Russia and left the western frontier to the care of
+the world's public opinion in spite of the military alliance by which
+France was bound to Russia. We have here an example of his aptitude for
+practical politics.
+
+
+*Was Belgium a Mere Excuse?*
+
+Let us now come to Belgium. Mr. Shaw protests needlessly that he holds
+no brief for small States as such, and he most vehemently denies that we
+are bound to knight errantry on their behalf. His objection to small
+States is that they are either incorrigibly bellicose or standing
+temptations to big powers. Outside the Balkans no small State is
+bellicose. All are eminently pacific. That they are a standing
+temptation to thieves is surely no reason for their destruction. If it
+is a reason Mr. Shaw ought to throw his watch down the drain.
+
+Mr. Shaw states that Belgium was a mere excuse for our going to war.
+That there was a vast deal more in the pre-war diplomacy than appears in
+the printed dispatches, or in any dispatches, I am as convinced as Mr.
+Shaw is, but I am equally convinced that so far as we are concerned
+there was nothing in diplomacy, however secret, to contradict our public
+attitude. The chief item not superficially apparent is that the
+diplomats knew all along that Germany wanted war and was doing all she
+could to obtain war on terms most favorable to herself. That our own
+interest coincided with our duty to Belgium did not by any means render
+our duty a mere excuse for action. If a burglar is making his way upward
+in the house where Mr. Shaw lives and Mr. Shaw comes down and collars
+him in the flat of a defenseless invalid below and hands him over to the
+police Mr. Shaw would not expect the police to say, "You are a
+hypocrite; you only seized the burglar because you feared he would come
+to you next." I stick to the burglar simile, because a burglar is just
+what Germany is.
+
+
+*The "Infamous Proposal" Phrase.*
+
+Mr. Shaw characterizes Mr. Asquith's phrase, "Germany's infamous
+proposal," as the "obvious barrister's claptrap." Once more this is
+totally inexcusable. I do not always see eye to eye with Mr. Asquith, I
+agree with Mr. Shaw that he has more than once sinned against democratic
+principles, but what has that to do with the point? My general
+impression of Mr. Asquith and general impression of this country is that
+Mr. Asquith, in addition to being a pretty good Liberal, is an honest
+man. His memorable speech containing the "infamous proposal" phrase was
+most positively a genuine emotional expression of his conviction and of
+the conviction of the whole country, and Mr. Shaw, a finished master of
+barrister's claptrap when he likes, has been merely scurrilous about it.
+Germany's proposal was infamous. Supposing that we had taken the Belgium
+point at Mr. Shaw's valuation of it, the "nonsense about Belgium," as he
+calls it, and refrained from war, what would have been the result? The
+result would have been that today we could not have looked one another
+in the face as we passed down the street.
+
+But Mr. Shaw is not content with arguing that the Belgium point was a
+mere excuse for us. He goes further and continually implies that there
+was no Belgium point. Every time he mentions the original treaty that
+established Belgian neutrality he puts after it in brackets, [date
+1839,] an obvious barrister's device, sarcastically to discredit the
+treaty because of its age. He omits to say that the chief clause in the
+treaty contains the word "perpetually." What is worse, he infers that by
+the mere process of years, as Belgium gradually made herself, civilized
+herself, enriched herself, and increased her stake in the world, her
+moral right to independence and freedom instead of being strengthened
+was somehow mysteriously weakened. The theory is monstrous, but if he
+does not mean that he means nothing.
+
+Further, he says that in 1870 Gladstone could not depend on the treaty
+of 1839 and resorted to a special temporary treaty not now in force, and
+that, therefore, technically the validity of the 1839 treaty is
+extremely doubtful. This twisting of facts throws a really sinister
+light upon the later developments of Mr. Shaw as a controversialist. The
+treaty of 1870 was, indeed, temporary, except in so far as it confirmed
+the treaty of 1839. Article 3 of the treaty of 1870 says it shall be
+binding on the contracting parties during the continuance of the war and
+for twelve months after, and then proceeds "and on the expiration of
+that time the independence and neutrality of Belgium will, so far as the
+high contracting parties are respectively concerned, continue to rest as
+heretofore on the quintuple treaty of 1839," (textual.)
+
+Mr. Shaw's manifesto is lengthy and it will no doubt be reprinted in
+book form. I repeat what I said in my first paragraph as to the major
+part of it, but I assert that the objectionable part of the manifesto is
+so objectionable in its flippancy, in its perversity, in its injustice,
+and in its downright inexactitude as to amount to a scandal. Mr. Shaw
+has failed to realize either his own importance or the importance and
+very grave solemnity of the occasion. The present is no hour for that
+disingenuous, dialectical bravura which might excusably relieve a
+domestic altercation. Before reprinting Mr. Shaw should, I suggest;
+seriously reconsider his position and rewrite.
+
+
+
+
+*"Bennett States the German Case"*
+
+By George Bernard Shaw.
+
+Letter to The Daily News of London.
+
+
+_To The Daily News, Sir:_
+
+In justice to the enemy I am bound to admit that Mr. Bennett's case,
+which is the German case, is a very strong one and that his ironic
+comment on the case against Germany, "We have here an example of Mr.
+Shaw's aptitude for practical politics," is a comment that the Kaiser
+will probably make and that the average "practical man" will make, too.
+
+Mr. Bennett, in saying that I am a simpleton to doubt that, if Germany
+had not attacked France, France would have attacked her, shows a much
+greater courage than he credits me with. That is Germany's contention,
+and if valid is her justification for dashing at any enemy who, as Mr.
+Bennett believes, was lying in wait to spring on her back when Russia
+had her by the throat. If Mr. Bennett is right, and I am a simpleton,
+there is nothing more to be said. The Imperial Chancellor's plea of "a
+state of necessity" is proved up to the hilt.
+
+I did not omit to say that Germany regards our policy and our diplomacy
+as extremely able and clear-sighted. I expressly and elaborately pointed
+that out. Mr. Bennett, being an Englishman, is so flattered by the
+apparent compliment from those clever Germans that he insists it is
+deserved. I, being an Irishman and, therefore, untouched by flattery,
+see clearly that what the Germans mean by able and clear-sighted is
+crafty, ruthless, unscrupulous, and directed to the deliberate and
+intentional destruction of Germany by a masterly diplomatic combination
+of Russia, France and Great Britain against her, and I defend the
+English and Sir Edward Grey in particular on the ground, first, that the
+British nation at large was wholly innocent of the combination, and,
+second, that even among diplomatists, guilty as most of them
+unquestionably were and openly as our Junkers--like the German
+ones--clamored for war with Germany, there was more muddle than
+Machiavelli about them, and that Sir Edward never completely grasped the
+situation or found out what he really was doing and even had a
+democratic horror of war.
+
+
+*Shaw's Excuses Scorned.*
+
+But Mr. Bennett will not have any of my excuses for his unhappy country.
+He will have it that the Germans are right in admiring Sir Edward as a
+modern Caesar Bogia, and that our militarist writers are "of first class
+quality," as contrasted with the "intense mediocrity" of poor Gen.
+Bernhardi.
+
+If Mr. Bennett had stopped there the Kaiser would send him the Iron
+Cross, but of course, like a true born Englishman, he goes on to deny
+indignantly that England has produced a militarist literature comparable
+to Germany and to affirm hotly that Mr. Asquith is an honest man whose
+bad arguments are "a genuine emotional expression of his convictions and
+that of the whole country," and that Sir Edward Grey is an honest man,
+and that he (Mr. Bennett) "strongly resents as Englishmen of all
+opinions will resent any imputation to the contrary"--just what I said
+he would say and that he entirely agrees with my denunciation of secret
+diplomacy and undemocratic control of foreign policy and that I am a
+perverse and wayward harlequin, mischievous, unveracious, scurrilous,
+monstrous, disingenuous, flippant, unjust, inexact, scandalous, and
+objectionable, and that on all points to which he takes exception and a
+good many more I am so magnificent, brilliant, and convincing that no
+citizen could rise from perusing me without being illuminated.
+
+That is just a little what I meant by saying that Englishmen are
+muddle-headed, because they never have been forced by political
+adversity to mistrust their tempers and depend on a carefully stated
+case as Irishmen have been.
+
+
+*Showed Germany the Way.*
+
+I did with great pains what nobody else had done. I showed what Germany
+should have done, knowing that I had no right to reproach her for doing
+what she did until I was prepared to show that a better way had been
+open to her.
+
+Bennett says, in effect, that nobody but a fool could suppose that my
+way was practicable and proceeds to call Germany a burglar. That does
+not get us much further. In fact, to me it seems a step backward. At all
+events it is now up to Mr. Bennett to show us what practical alternative
+Germany had except the one I described. If he cannot do that, can he
+not, at least, fight for his side? We, who are mouthpieces of many
+inarticulate citizens, who are fighting at home against the general
+tumult of scare and rancor and silly cinematograph heroics for a sane
+facing of facts and a stable settlement, are very few. We have to bring
+the whole continent of war-struck lunatics to reason if we can.
+
+What chance is there of our succeeding if we begin by attacking one
+another because we do not like one another's style or confine ourselves
+to one another's pet points? I invite Mr. Bennett to pay me some more
+nice compliments and to reserve his fine old Staffordshire loathing for
+my intellectual nimbleness until the war is over.--G. BERNARD SHAW.
+
+[Illustration: G.K. CHESTERTON. _See Page 108_]
+
+[Illustration: SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE. (_Photo by Arnold Genthe_) _See
+Page 132_]
+
+
+
+
+*Flaws in Shaw's Logic*
+
+By Cunninghame Graham.
+
+Letter to The Daily News of London.
+
+
+_To the Editor of The Daily News:_
+
+The controversy between men of peace as to the merits, demerits, causes,
+and possible results of the great war is becoming almost as dangerous
+and little less noisy than the real conflict now being waged in and
+around Ypres. The only difference between the two conflicts is that the
+combatants in Flanders only strive to kill the body. Those who fire
+paper bullets aim at the annihilation of the soul.
+
+Literature is a nice thing in its way. It both passes and gives us many
+weary hours. It has its place. But I submit that at present it is mere
+dancing on a tight rope. Whether the war could have been avoided or not
+is without interest today. In fact, there is no controversy possible
+after Maximilian Harden's pronouncement. In it he throws away the
+scabbard and says boldly that Germany from the first was set on war.
+Hence it becomes a work of supererogation to find excuses for her, and
+hence, my old friend, Bernard Shaw, penned his long indictment of his
+hereditary enemy, England, all in vain.
+
+We are a dull-witted race. Although the Continent has dubbed us
+"Perfidious Albion," it is hard for us to take in general ideas, and no
+man clearly sees the possibilities of the development of the original
+sin that lies dormant in him. Thus it becomes hard for us to understand
+the reason why, if Germany tore up a treaty three months ago we are
+certain to tear up another in three years' time.
+
+All crystal gazing appeals but little to the average man on this side of
+the St. George's channel. It may be that we shall tear up many treaties,
+but the broad fact remains that hitherto we have torn up none.
+
+The particular treaty that Germany tore up was signed by five powers in
+1839, ratified again in 1870 by a special clause respected by King
+Frederick William in his war against the French, was often referred to
+in Parliament by Gladstone and by other Ministers, and was considered
+binding on its signatories. Germany tore it up for her own ends, thus
+showing that she was a stupid though learned people, for she at once at
+the same time prejudiced her case to the whole world and made a military
+mistake.
+
+No human motives are without alloy, but at the same time honesty in our
+case has proved the better policy. Germany, no doubt, would have granted
+us almost anything for our assent to her march through Belgium. We
+refused her offers, no doubt from mixed motives, for every Englishman is
+not an orphan archangel, stupid, or dull or muddle-headed, or what not.
+The balance of the world is with us, not, perhaps, because they love us
+greatly, but because they see that we, perhaps by accident, have been
+forced into the right course and that all smaller nationalities such as
+Montenegro, Ireland, Poland, and the rest would disappear on our defeat.
+
+CUNNINGHAME GRAHAM.
+
+
+
+
+*Editorial Comment on Shaw*
+
+From THE NEW YORK TIMES, Nov. 5, 1914.
+
+
+Mr. G. Bernard Shaw thinks that "the time has now come to pluck up
+courage and begin to talk and write soberly about the war." Our readers
+will find in THE TIMES Sunday Magazine this morning some of the fruits
+of this auto-suggestion. They are very remarkable. While Mr. Shaw can
+hardly be called a representative of any considerable class, the fact
+that one prominent writer, always much read, can assume Mr. Shaw's
+attitude and make public Mr. Shaw's comments throws a strong light on
+the spirit of British society. It is true that he intimates that he ran
+the risk of "prompt lynching" at one time, but that was probably the
+suggestion of a certain timidity and vanity to which he pleads guilty.
+His safe and prosperous existence is really a striking evidence, on the
+one hand, of British good nature, and, on the other, of the indifferent
+estimate the British put on his influence.
+
+Like Iago, Mr. Shaw is nothing if not critical, and in this crisis his
+criticism is for the most part bitter, extreme, and in purpose
+destructive. He particularly dislikes Sir Edward Grey and the Government
+of which he is a leading spirit, and the class which the Government
+represents. He singles out Sir Edward as the chief "Junker" and among
+the chief "militarists" who brought about this war. Mr. Shaw's attacks
+on the Foreign Secretary are savage, and, as often happens with savage
+attacks--they are far from consistent. For example, Mr. Shaw paraphrases
+at some length the interview between Sir Edward and the German
+Ambassador, in which the latter made four different propositions to
+secure the neutrality of Great Britain if Germany waged war on France,
+all of which Sir Edward refused. Mr. Shaw sees in this only evidence of
+determination to take arms against Germany in any case, carrying out a
+long-cherished plan formed by the Government of which Sir Edward Grey
+was, for this matter, the responsible member. He does not see--- though
+it is so plain that a wayfaring man though a professional satirist
+should not err therein--that what the Secretary intended to do--what, in
+fact, he did do--was to refuse to put a price on British perfidy, to
+accept any "bargain" offered to that end.
+
+On the other hand, Mr. Shaw paraphrases at still greater length the
+report of the interview in which the Russian Foreign Minister and the
+French Ambassador at St. Petersburg tried to induce the British
+Government to commit itself in advance to war against Germany. Mr. Shaw
+thinks that thus the German "bluff" would have been called and war would
+have been prevented, and he is confident that Mr. Winston Churchill
+would have taken the Bismarck tone and dictated the result. He cannot
+see--what is really the essential fact in both cases--that Sir Edward
+Grey was striving in every honorable way to preserve peace, that his
+Government refused to stand idle and see France crushed in the same
+spirit that it refused to menace Germany until a definite and undeniable
+cause of war arose.
+
+That cause came with Germany's violation of its pledge to observe the
+neutrality of Belgium, and England's response excites Mr. Shaw's most
+furious contempt. He adopts with zest the judgment of the German
+Chancellor. The pledge for all who signed it was but a scrap of paper,
+of no more binding force than others that had gone their way to dusty
+death in the diplomatic waste baskets. To observe the obligation it
+imposed was hypocrisy. To fight in order to compel Germany to observe it
+was crass militarism. Plainly, Mr. Shaw is a little difficult. The
+Government under which he lives is either too bellicose or not bellicose
+enough; too ready to help France if France is attacked or not ready
+enough to bully Germany, and especially it is all wrong about Belgium
+and its treaty, since treaties have several times been broken, and so on
+through a bewildering circle of contradictory statements and notions.
+
+Mr. Shaw finds little to choose between the groups of combatants. He
+distinctly prides himself on his impartiality, not to say indifference.
+On account of his Irish birth he claims something of the detachment of a
+foreigner, but admits a touch of Irish malice in taking the conceit out
+of the English. Add to this his professed many-sidedness as a dramatist
+and playwright and we get as good an explanation as can be given of this
+noted writer's attitude toward the tremendous struggle now waging. But
+Mr. Shaw's assumption of even-handed scorn for every one concerned, of
+"six of one and a half dozen of the other," does not hold out. He feels
+profoundly that such fighting as Germany does, for such a purpose as
+inspires Germany, must be met by force, and that England could not in
+the long run, no matter by whom guided or governed, have shirked the
+task laid upon her. That being the case, one wonders a little why it was
+worth while to cover every one with ridicule and to present a picture of
+Great Britain so essentially grotesque and distorted.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+*Bernard Shaw on the End of the War.*
+
+_From The New York Sun, Nov_. 15, 1914.
+
+
+In the midst of a good deal of untimely gibing, George Bernard Shaw, as
+reported in a London dispatch to The Sun of yesterday, says one or two
+very wise and appropriate things about the end of the war and the times
+to come after it. His warnings are a useful check to the current loose
+talk of the fire-eaters and preachers of the gospel of vengeance.
+
+"We and France have to live with Germany after the war," Mr. Shaw points
+out. Even to embarrass her financially would be a blow to England
+herself, Germany being one of England's best customers and one of her
+most frequently visited neighbors. The truth of this is unanswerable.
+The great object must be to effect a peace with as little rancor as
+possible.
+
+Mr. Shaw does not say it, but there are going to be overwhelming
+political reasons why the pride of Germany and Austria and still more
+why their military power shall not be too much impaired in case of their
+defeat.
+
+Perhaps in the final settlement the Western Allies may be found to have
+more in common with Berlin than with St. Petersburg. Germany has pointed
+this out with much force.
+
+Mr. Shaw's position is not admirable when he chooses their days of
+tribulation for sticking pins into his own people, even though some of
+the things he says may be unpleasantly true. But it cannot be denied
+that he has some sane views on the situation. The pity is that he must
+always impair the force of the useful things he has to say by
+flippancies, impertinences, and out-of-place girdings at those whose
+courage he should help to maintain. He reminds one of a man who insists
+on wrangling over the mistaken construction of a chimney while the house
+is burning down.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+*Bernard Shaw as a Patriot.*
+
+_From The New York World, Nov. 17, 1914._
+
+
+Bernard Shaw has written for our neighbor THE TIMES an elaborate
+three-page thesis to maintain:
+
+1. That Great Britain was abundantly justified in making war with
+Germany.
+
+2. That the explanation given by the British Government for making war
+against Germany was stupid, hypocritical, mendacious, and disgraceful.
+
+3. That he alone is capable of interpreting the moral purpose of the
+British people in undertaking this necessary work of civilization.
+
+4. That the reason the British Government's justification of the war is
+so inadequate is because no British Government is ever so clever as
+Bernard Shaw.
+
+5. That even in the midst of the most horrible calamity known to human
+history it pays to advertise.
+
+Various patriots have various ways of serving their country. Some go to
+the firing line to be shot and others stay at home to be a source of
+innocent merriment to the survivors.
+
+
+
+
+*"Shaw Empty of Good Sense"*
+
+
+By Christabel Pankhurst.
+
+Written for THE NEW YORK TIMES.
+
+
+His reputation for perversity and contrariety is fully maintained by
+George Bernard Shaw in the ineptly-named article, "Common Sense About
+the War." At home in Britain we all know that it is Mr. Shaw's habit to
+oppose where he might be expected to support, and vice versa. For
+example, should he speak at a prohibition meeting he would most likely
+extol strong drink, or if asked to defend the sale of liquor declare
+dramatically for prohibition.
+
+He sees himself as the critic of everything and everybody--the one and
+only man who knows what to do and how to do it.
+
+Mr. Shaw charges his compatriots with intellectual laziness, but they
+are not so lazy as to leave him to do their thinking for them. That he
+sometimes--and oftener in the past than now--says illuminating things is
+true, but firm reliance cannot be placed upon his freakish mental
+processes, exemplified in his writings about the war. He has played with
+effect the part of jester to the British public, but when, as now, his
+jests are empty of the kernel of good sense, the matter gets beyond a
+joke.
+
+The truth is that in face of this great and tragic reality of war the
+men of mere words, the literary theorists, are in danger of missing
+their way. Certainly women of deeds are more likely to see things aright
+than are men of words, and it is as a woman of deeds that I, a
+suffragette, make answer to my irresponsible compatriot, Mr. Bernard
+Shaw. And yet not a compatriot, for Mr. Shaw disclaims those feelings of
+loyalty and enthusiasm for the national cause that fill the mass of us
+who live under the British flag!
+
+"Until Home Rule emerges from its present suspended animation," says Mr.
+Shaw, "I shall retain my Irish capacity for criticising England with
+something of the detachment of a foreigner." Now, these words are not a
+little surprising, because Mr. Shaw's interest in the Home Rule cause
+has hitherto been of a most restrained and well-nigh secret character,
+and any one who imagines that Mr. Shaw is a strenuous campaigner for
+Home Rule is greatly mistaken. If in the years preceding the war the
+Horne Rule cause had depended upon Mr. Shaw's activities, it would have
+been in a bad way. It is now, when a foreign enemy menaces our nation as
+a whole, that Mr. Shaw manifests this enhanced interest in Home Rule.
+
+The suffragettes, who have fought and suffered for their cause as no
+living man reformer in the British Isles has fought and suffered for
+his, have during the present crisis subordinated their claim to the
+urgent claims of national honor and safety. So Mr. Shaw, whose
+campaigning is done generally in the armchair, and never in any place
+more dangerous than the rostrum, ought surely to refrain from his
+frivolous, inconsistent, destructive, and unprofitable criticism of our
+country.
+
+As for the question of lynching, Mr. Shaw is, the American public may be
+assured, in no danger whatever of being lynched. He is in far more
+danger of having the Iron Cross conferred upon him by the Kaiser in
+recognition of his attempt to supplement the activities of the official
+German Press Bureau. But if he were a German subject, writing on certain
+points of German policy as he does upon certain points of British
+policy, his fate can well be imagined. The only retribution that will
+come upon this man, who exploits the freedom of speech and pen that
+England gives him, is that his words lose now and henceforth the weight
+they used to have. Oh, the conceit of the man, who in this dark hour,
+when the English are dying on the battlefield, writes of "taking the
+conceit out of England" by a stroke of his inconsequent pen!
+
+
+*Admits England's Cause Is Just.*
+
+But with all his will to "take the conceit" out of this England, so
+fiercely menaced, her sons killed, her daughters widowed--yet needing,
+so he thinks, his castigation into the bargain--the critic is
+constrained to admit that our country is playing the part of "the
+responsible policeman of the West" and that "for England to have
+refrained from hurling herself into the fray, horse, foot, and
+artillery, was impossible from every point of view." Then why preface
+these statements by a series of attacks upon the country which is
+admitted to be justly fighting in a just cause?
+
+The sole importance of Mr. Shaw's criticism comes from this. He
+unwarrantably indorses statements made by Germany in her attempt to put
+the Allies in the wrong. Because he is known to the German people by his
+dramatic work, extracts from his article will be circulated among them
+as an expression of the views of a representative British citizen. And
+how are the Germans to know that this is false, deprived as they are of
+news of what is happening in the outside world and ignorant as they must
+be of Mr. Shaw's real lack of influence at this serious time?
+
+That their traffic in mere words disables some literary men from
+comprehending facts is shown by Mr. Shaw's play upon the word
+"Junkerism." He points to the dictionary definition of the word instead
+of to the fact it represents, and by this verbal juggling tries to
+convince his readers that the military autocracy that dominates and
+misdirects Germany has its counterpart and equal in Great Britain.
+Whereas, the conditions in the two countries are wholly different, and
+it is this very difference that Germany has regarded as one of the signs
+of British inferiority.
+
+Mr. Shaw's suggestion that the British are posing as "Injured Innocence"
+and as "Mild Gazelles" is neither funny nor true. We are simply a people
+defending ourselves, resisting conquest and military despotism, and
+fighting for the ideal of freedom and self-government. When our country
+is no longer in danger we suffragettes, if it be still necessary, are
+prepared to fight on and wage our civil war that we may win freedom and
+self-government for women as well as men. But, in the meantime, we
+support the men--yes, and even the Government do we in a sense
+support--in fighting the common enemy who menaces the freedom of men and
+women alike. Although the Government in the past have erred gravely in
+their dealing with the woman question, they are for the purpose of this
+war the instrument of the nation.
+
+
+*Facts Belie Him.*
+
+Mr. Shaw would seem to hold Britain responsible for German militarism,
+but the facts he cites are against him there. "I am old enough," says
+he, "to remember the beginnings of the anti-German phase of military
+propaganda in England. The Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 left England
+very much taken aback. Up to that date nobody was much afraid that
+Prussia--suddenly Prussia beat France right down in the dust."
+Precisely! It was this war on France, deliberately engineered by
+Bismarck, and it was the defeat and despoilment of France that fed
+Germany's militarism and encouraged Germany to make those plans of
+military aggression which, after long and deliberate preparation, are
+being carried into effect in the present war. Germany's plans of
+military aggression have compelled other countries to prepare, however
+inadequately, to defend themselves.
+
+Mr. Shaw gives support to the Germans' contention that they are not the
+aggressors but are menaced by Russia. Yet he does not explain why, if
+that is so, Germany took French gold and territory in 1870 and has since
+continued to alienate France; nor why Germany has chosen Britain as her
+enemy of enemies to be supplanted and surpassed in power.
+
+If Germany is simply on the defensive against Russia and has no desire
+to attack and cripple France and Britain, then why has she antagonized
+these countries and driven one after the other into a Russian alliance?
+
+When he affects to criticise Germany for not having "entrusted the
+security of her western frontier to the public opinion of Western Europe
+and to America and fought Russia, if attacked, with her rear not
+otherwise defended," Mr. Shaw burkes the fact that Germany's object is
+to seize Belgium and to make it part of the German Empire, also to seize
+at least the northern coast of France and to make this seizure the means
+of dominating Britain.
+
+Indeed, the point at which German ambition for conquest ceases would be
+hard to fix. And yet Mr. Shaw pictures for us an injured-innocent,
+mild-gazelle Germany on the defensive! Quite in this picture is his
+assertion that "the ultimatum to Servia was the escapade of a dotard,"
+whereas, everybody knows that the ultimatum was dictated at Berlin. It
+is plain as a pikestaff that in order to bring on the Great War of
+conquest for which her rulers thought The Day had arrived. Germany
+dictated the issue and terms of the ultimatum to Servia and then urged
+Austria to refuse any compromise and arbitration which might have
+averted war.
+
+Mr. Shaw has assumed the impossible task of trying to blind the American
+public to these and other facts that prove Germany to be the aggressor
+in this war, but he will fail in his attempt at white-washing German
+policy because it is one of the characteristics of the American people
+that they have a strong feeling for reality and that no twisting and
+combining of words can prevent them from getting at the facts beneath.
+
+Bernhardi's writings are generally believed to be an inspiration, and in
+part a statement of German policy. But Mr. Shaw differs. In trying to
+prove that Bernhardism has nothing to do with the case, he maintains
+that Germany has neglected the Bernhardi programme, and says:
+
+"He warned Germany to make an alliance with Italy, Austria, Turkey, and
+America before undertaking the subjugation of France, then of England."
+
+Mr. Shaw then asserts that Germany disregarded this advice and allowed
+herself to be caught between Russia and a Franco-British combination
+with no ally save Austria. But here again facts are against him. For
+Germany has followed with marvelous precision the line drawn by
+Bernhardi.
+
+She is actually fighting in partnership with Austria. She allied herself
+with Italy--though Italy has refused to fight with her in this present
+war of aggression. Germany has also bent Turkey to her purpose, and has
+dragged the Turks into the war. An alliance with America! Well, to have
+gained the help of America in crushing France and crippling England, and
+ravaging and conquering Belgium was quite beyond the power of German
+diplomacy and intrigue! Still Germany's attempts to win at least
+America's moral support in this war are vigorous, if unsuccessful.
+
+And with what quotable matter Mr. Shaw provides the German rulers for
+the further deluding of their subjects when he writes of the German
+people being "stirred to their depths by the apparent treachery and
+duplicity of the attack made upon them in their extrernest peril from
+France and Russia," when he writes of the Kaiser doing "all a Kaiser
+could do without unbearable ignominy to induce the British not to fight
+him and give him fair play with Russia," and when he writes of "taking
+the Kaiser at a disadvantage." As though we ought meekly to have agreed
+to the Kaiser's plan of defeating France and using her defeat as a
+bridge to England and a means of conquering England! Uncommon nonsense
+about the war--so we must rename Mr. Shaw's production!
+
+And what is all this that flows from the pen of Mr. Shaw about Belgium
+and "obsolete treaties," "rights of way," "necessities that know no
+international law," "circumstances that alter treaties"? Made in Germany
+such statements are, and yet even the Imperial German Chancellor is not
+so contemptuous as Bernard Shaw is of Belgium's charter of existence,
+the treaty now violated by Germany.
+
+That is a treaty that cannot become obsolete until the powers who made
+it release Belgium from the restrictions and obligations which the
+treaty imposes. Germany pleads guilty in this matter of the violation of
+Belgian neutrality, though Mr. Shaw attempts to show her innocent, for
+the German Chancellor has said: "This is an infraction of international
+law--we are compelled to overrule the legitimate protests of the
+Luxemburg and Belgian Governments. We shall repair the wrong we are
+doing as soon as our military aims have been achieved." And again the
+Chancellor said the invasion of Belgium "is contrary to the law of
+nature." To Mr. Bernard Shaw's peculiar sense of international morality
+such dealing is not, however, repugnant.
+
+
+*No "Right of Way" in Belgium.*
+
+In his letter to President Wilson Mr. Shaw, either willfully or
+ignorantly, seeks to confuse the neutrality of a neutralized State such
+as Belgium and the neutrality of an ordinary State such as Italy, and he
+pretends that violation of the first sort of neutrality creates a
+situation in no way different from that created by the violation of the
+second and normal sort of neutrality. I would refer Mr. Shaw to "The
+Case for Belgium" issued by the Belgian delegates to the United States
+wherein they point out that "the peculiarity about Belgian neutrality is
+that it has been imposed upon her by the powers as the one condition
+upon which they recognized her national existence."
+
+The consequence of this is that whereas Italy and the United States and
+other powers having a similar status can, subject to the risk of attack
+from an affronted belligerent, please themselves whether or not they
+condone a violation of their neutrality, Belgium and the other
+neutralized States cannot condone such violation, but must either resist
+all breaches of their neutrality or surrender their right to existence.
+And further a neutralized State, putting faith in the treaty that
+guarantees its existence and its neutrality, refrains naturally from
+that preparation for war which would be deemed necessary in the absence
+of such a treaty.
+
+There is no such thing as the "right of way" through neutralized Belgium
+which Mr. Shaw claims on behalf of belligerent Germany. Far from
+exercising a right of way Germany has violently committed a trespass,
+offering a German promise, a mere "scrap of paper," as reparation. "A
+right of way," argues Bernard Shaw, "is not a right of conquest"; but
+the truth is that in passing through Belgium Germany assumed dominion
+over Belgium, which dominion she has since formally asserted and is
+seeking forcibly to maintain.
+
+
+*A New Shavian Theory.*
+
+No comprehension does Mr. Shaw display of the hurt to the Belgians'
+sense of honor involved in Germany's use of their territory for purposes
+hostile to their friendly neighbor, France. To be forced into injuring a
+friend is an outrage, indeed, and Mr. Shaw surely knows too much of
+matters military to be unaware that to permit a right of way to one
+combatant amounts to making an attack upon the other, and that Germany,
+by the very fact of crossing Belgium soil, was forcing Belgium to be the
+enemy of France. Only by their great heroism were the Belgians able to
+escape this infamy that had been planned for them.
+
+To be conquered does not really matter! There we have another Shavian
+theory. How grateful would the would-be world-ruling Kaiser feel to Mr.
+Shaw were he to succeed in inoculating the peoples of Europe and of
+America with that theory! So would the task of putting the peoples under
+the German yoke (otherwise known as German culture) be made easier--and
+cheaper. But the spirit of national freedom, which is as precious to
+humanity as is the spirit of individual freedom, cannot be driven out by
+words any more than it can be driven out by blows. The most unlettered
+Belgian soldier, fighting for a truth that is at the very heart and
+depth of all things true, puts the mere wordmonger to shame.
+
+That Great Britain does not fight only for Belgium is certainly a fact,
+though Belgium's plight alone would have been enough to bring us into
+the conflict. We fight also for France, because she is wrongfully
+attacked, and because she is by her civilization and culture one of the
+world's treasures. We fight for the all-sufficient reason of
+self-defense.
+
+There is the case for Britain, and despite his special pleading for
+Germany, Mr. Shaw can show no flaw in it. He does say, however, that the
+British Government, instead of first seeking a mild way of preserving
+peace, ought to have said point blank to Germany: "If you attack France
+we shall attack you." I also think that such a declaration would have
+been the right one. To me and to many others the thought that our
+country might stand by and watch inactively an attack upon France was
+intolerable. Great was our relief when this apprehension was removed by
+the British Government's declaration of war. Why did not the British
+Government say to Germany before the war cloud burst that Britain would
+fight to defend France, and why did the Government delay so long in
+declaring war? Mr. Shaw does not give the reason, but I will give it.
+
+It was that the Government feared opposition to our entering into the
+war would come from a Radico-Socialist literary clique in London, from a
+section of the Liberal press, and from certain Liberal and Labor
+politicians who had been deceived by German professors and other
+missionaries of the Kaiser into thinking the German peril did not exist.
+When Belgium was invaded most of these misguided ones were unable to
+cling any longer to their "keep out of it" policy, and then the
+Government felt free to act. Yet the Government need not have waited,
+because with the facts before them the people as a whole would perfectly
+have understood the necessity of fighting even had Belgium not been
+invaded.
+
+Henceforward the general public must be kept informed of what is
+happening in the international world. Foreign politics must be conducted
+with greater publicity. There, at least, Bernard Shaw is right, but this
+is a reform which he and his fellow-men have failed to effect, whereas
+women, had they been voters, would have demanded and secured it long
+ago.
+
+Now, although undue diplomatic secrecy, always wrong, will be especially
+wrong when the terms of peace come to be made, sentimentality will
+certainly be more mischievous still. It is difficult to resist the
+conclusion that Bernard Shaw's writings on the war are intended as an
+appeal to sentimentality--an appeal that Germany at the close of the war
+shall have treatment which, by being more than just to her, would be
+less than just to the countries whom she has attacked, and would mean a
+recurrence of this appalling war in after years.
+
+Before the war specious words were used to cloak the German policy of
+aggression which has plunged the world in horror and is martyrizing
+peoples. In view of the coming victory of the Allies, the same tactics
+will be adopted by the German militarists, and it behooves Bernard Shaw
+to beware lest even without intent he serve as their tool. Men such as
+he who believe that while they can never be in the wrong, their country
+can never be in the right, are just the men who are in danger of
+stumbling at this time.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTABEL PANKHURST.
+
+_Photo (C) by Underwood & Underwood._
+
+_See Page 68_]
+
+[Illustration: JAMES M. BARRIE. _See Page 100_]
+
+
+
+
+*Comment by Readers of Shaw*
+
+ *Shaw Has Made Minister von Jagow's Remark on a "Scrap of Paper"
+ Understandable.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+Most hearty thanks for that masterly "common-sense" article of Bernard
+Shaw. How clearly he expresses the much that many of us have felt way
+down inside and have not been able to formulate even to ourselves!
+
+He has made at least one woman--and one of German parentage at
+that--understand what reams of public and private communications from
+all over the Fatherland could not make clear: just why the blunt,
+impetuous, shocked, and astounded Kaiser dared give utterance to that
+disgraceful "scrap of paper" remark--inexcusable but also very
+understandable in the light of his knowledge of and confidence in a more
+astute miscreant; why France and Germany have always considered England
+more or less of a Tartuffe and a "Scheinheilige" (one who seems holy);
+and why every German--man, woman and child--so execrates Sir Edward Grey
+and colleagues.
+
+Nothing in all the sickening present conditions, the future long-lasting
+woe and misery, the barbarous neutrality violations has so made me blush
+for my mother's country as the "scrap of paper" incident; and it has
+been most bitter to listen to the extravagant, fantastic eulogies on
+England, with which we've been so favored without feeling honestly able
+to make any excuses whatever for Germany.
+
+But now--thanks to that article--I can understand what I may not
+condone, and, though abhorring the Kaiser and my mother's compatriots
+for their share in that horror going on abroad, I can also pity the
+hot-headed, imperfect mere man going to war under a carefully incited
+and fostered misapprehension, and need no longer glorify the
+cool-headed, sapient policy which so cleverly duped ruler and people.
+
+Not since the war began have I felt so undepressed, so free to
+sympathize where I so love, so free from having to commend those for
+whom I feel no love whatever. For all of which accept the warmest thanks
+of
+
+KATE HUDSON.
+
+New York, Nov. 17.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*Shaw Article Work of "Farceur."*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+"Common sense and Shaw!" Shaw begins his article by saying, "I am giving
+my views for what they are worth, with a malicious bias." Later on he
+says: "I am writing history." Toward the end, after having obscured with
+words many things which had hitherto been clear to most people, he says:
+"Now that we begin to see where we really are, &c." How Shavian!
+
+There are at least two sides to all questions, and so long as they are
+reasonably presented one is glad to hear them even if they fail to
+convince, but when a farceur is allowed to occupy three whole pages
+usually filled by serious and interesting writers it seems time to
+protest. The subject itself is not one for easy paradox or false and
+flippant epigram.
+
+Mr. Shaw says he does not hold his tongue easily. He certainly does not,
+and when it wags it wags foolishly, and, as he admits, maliciously,
+albeit sometimes amusingly, and with superficial brilliance. He says the
+Irish do not consider England their country yet. Of course they do not.
+Why should the Irish consider themselves English? Neither do the Scots,
+nor the Welsh, nor the Canadians, nor will they ever so think. But they
+are all British, and so, despite all Mr. Shaw says to the contrary,
+Kitchener was right.
+
+Mr. Shaw falls into a common and regrettable error when he continually
+writes England when he really means the British Empire. It is the
+British Empire that is at war, for which, though a citizen, Mr. Shaw has
+no authority to speak or to be considered a representative, for, as he
+unnecessarily admits, he is not a "British patriot"; neither is he a
+"Junker," for I have looked through all his definitions of the word, and
+none applies to him.
+
+In what way is the "Battle of Dorking" like Bernhardi? The one he says
+had as a moral: "To arms! or the Germans will besiege London!" The other
+said: "To arms! so that the Germans may besiege London, or any other
+country that does not want compulsory culture!" The one was defensive,
+the other offensive.
+
+He says of the war: "We" began it. Since he says he is not English, and
+that it is an English war, whom does he mean by "We"? If he means the
+British, then, should a policeman see a small boy being ill-treated by a
+large man and go to the help of that boy, he, the policeman, must be
+said to have begun the fight which would probably ensue between him and
+said man, notwithstanding that the policeman is only fulfilling what he
+has sworn to do.
+
+Monaco, he says, "seems to be, on the whole, the most prosperous and
+comfortable State in Europe." If this is buffoonery it is singularly out
+of place. But even Monaco has an "army," has had recently a small
+revolution, and the Monegasques do not consider themselves ideally
+comfortable, and they have many "injustices." Does he hold the
+principality up as a model administration and the source of its
+prosperity as above reproach?
+
+Mr. Shaw represents no one but himself, and, like all small men, he
+reviles others greater than he, such as Sir Edward Grey and Mr. Asquith,
+but it does not become him, looking at his own life's history, to cast
+cheap sneers at anonymous journalists in cheap newspapers, who, though
+they may lack his literary style, possess, at least, one virtue which he
+boasts that he has not--patriotism! Yours very truly,
+
+LAWRENCE GRANT.
+
+New York, Nov. 18.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*Antidote to "Long Infliction of Dreary Stuff."*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+Hail to Bernard Shaw! Could anything be more refreshing? After the long
+infliction upon us of the flood of dreary stuff from London and Paris,
+and all the talk of German militarism, and what is to become of it at
+the hands of such immaculately unmilitary apostles of peace and
+international righteousness and treaty observances as Russia, France,
+and England, and all the maudlin denunciations of the German Nietzsche
+and Bernhardi, and the terrible Kaiser, could anything be more
+refreshing than Shaw's advent in the field of current war history?
+
+Though an Anglo-Saxon of American birth and long descent, and no
+believer in militarism of any sort of itself, yet I see in that no
+reason to distort ancient history by an attempt to make it appear that
+German militarism is at all the chief sinner, or, for that matter, not a
+very necessary and desirable thing in order that Germany may have her
+rightful place in the world, or any place at all.
+
+V.A.W. Warwick, N.Y., Nov. 16.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*False Assumptions Basis of Shaw's Attack.*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times_:
+
+The article on the European war by Mr. G.B. Shaw in THE TIMES of Sunday
+appeals to me as a noteworthy specimen of what an artful literary genius
+can do in the way of argumentative cantankerousness. His chief grievance
+is British diplomacy as represented by Sir Edward Grey, upon whose
+devoted head he empties the vials of his splenetic humor.
+
+Underlying his argument are two glaringly false assumptions, and on
+these the whole fabric rests. The first is that a certain undefined but
+presumably multitudinous body, which he designates as "Socialist,"
+"Democratic," and "Social Democratic," is better qualified to determine
+the policy and conduct the correspondence of the Foreign Office than
+trained and experienced statesmen.
+
+The second is that Sir Edward Grey should have followed the suggestion
+of Sazonof and threatened Germany with war at a certain stage of the
+correspondence. This can now be only a matter of opinion, but it may be
+confidently affirmed that of all nations the Germany of this day would
+be the last to back down in face of a threat. It may be also said
+generally that an open threat is about the surest way to bring on a war.
+Austria threatened Servia and war ensued. Germany threatened Russia and
+war ensued. Germany threatened Belgium--in the form of a notification
+that she intended to invade her territory--and war ensued.
+
+Mr. Shaw's contentions are grotesque.
+
+Flushing, Nov. 16. SAM TEST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+*"Junkers" Controlled Old World Ages Before Shaw.*
+
+_To the Editor of The New York Times:_
+
+With regard to the article by Mr. Bernard Shaw, the gist of the matter
+can be compressed in fewer words. The ideas expressed are not the
+exclusive property of Mr. Shaw. The Old World for indefinite ages has
+been controlled and directed by what he calls the "Junker" class, the
+rich and idle aristocrats who want for nothing, and, being born to rule,
+do not find it worth while to exert themselves mentally, and for whom
+there is no suitable profession but the army and diplomacy.
+
+The mass of the people are to them the great unwashed, and those a
+little higher in the scale "cads and bounders," or the German
+equivalent, in fact the canaille of the French who at the time of the
+Revolution took things into their own hands to the great surprise of
+everybody. This substratum is not considered in the scheme of the
+"Junker's" existence, though the lower orders alone are the workers and
+producers and make ease and luxury possible.
+
+Mr. Shaw. I believe, intends to intimate that there might be a use for
+the intellectual class, the thinkers and writers with the imagination
+that can put them mentally in the place of the individuals who make up
+the masses, think the thoughts and live the lives vicariously of the
+people who are the nation, and if the "Junker" class of England and
+Germany and kindred nations who govern and dictate its policies were
+leavened with the brains and broad-mindedness of the thinkers there
+might be found a better use for men than killing each other and a
+brighter outlook for the world which is now filled with widows and
+orphans.
+
+Mrs. F.B. WILLIAMSON.
+
+Elizabeth, N.J., Nov, 16.
+
+
+
+
+*Open Letter to President Wilson*[A]
+
+*By George Bernard Shaw.*
+
+
+Sir: I petition you to invite the neutral powers to confer with the
+United States of America for the purpose of requesting Britain, France,
+and Germany to withdraw from the soil of Belgium and fight out their
+quarrel on their own territories. However the sympathies of the neutral
+States may be divided, and whatever points now at issue between the
+belligerent powers may be doubtful, there is one point on which there
+can be neither division nor doubt, and that is that the belligerent
+armies have no right to be in Belgium, much less to fight in Belgium,
+and involve the innocent inhabitants of that country in their reciprocal
+slaughter. You will not question my right to address this petition to
+you. You are the official head of the nation that is beyond all question
+or comparison the chief of the neutral powers, marked out from all the
+rest by commanding magnitude, by modern democratic constitution, and by
+freedom from the complication of monarchy and its traditions, which have
+led Europe into the quaint absurdity of a war waged formally between the
+German Kaiser, the German Czar, the German King of the Belgians, the
+German King of England, the German Emperor of Austria, and a gentleman
+who shares with you the distinction of not being related to any of them,
+and is therefore describable monarchically as one Poincare, a Frenchman.
+
+I make this petition on its merits, without claiming any representative
+character except such as attaches to me as a human being. Nobody here
+has asked me to do it. Except among the large class of constitutional
+beggars, the normal English feeling is that it is no use asking for a
+thing if you feel certain that it will be refused, and are not in a
+position to enforce compliance. Also, that the party whose request is
+refused and not enforced looks ridiculous. Many Englishmen will say that
+a request to the belligerents to evacuate Belgium forthwith would be
+refused; could not be enforced; and would make the asker ridiculous. We
+are, in short, not a prayerful nation. But to you it will be clear that
+even the strongest power, or even allied group of powers, can have its
+position completely changed by an expression of the public opinion of
+the rest of the world. In your clear western atmosphere and in your
+peculiarly responsible position as the head centre of western democracy,
+you, when the European situation became threatening three months ago,
+must have been acutely aware of the fact to which Europe was so fatally
+blinded--namely, that the simple solution of the difficulty in which the
+menace of the Franco-Russo-British Entente placed Germany was for the
+German Emperor to leave his western frontier under the safeguard of the
+neighborliness and good faith of American, British, and French
+democracy, and then await quite calmly any action that Russia might take
+against his country on the east. Had he done so, we could not have
+attacked him from behind; and had France made such an attack--and it is
+in the extremest degree improbable that French public opinion would have
+permitted such a hazardous and unjustifiable adventure--he would at
+worst have confronted it with the fullest sympathy of Britain and the
+United States, and at best with their active assistance. Unhappily,
+German Kings do not allow democracy to interfere in their foreign
+policy; do not believe in neighborliness; and do believe in cannon and
+cannon fodder. The Kaiser never dreamed of confiding his frontier to you
+and to the humanity of his neighbors. And the diplomatists of Europe
+never thought of that easy and right policy, and could not suggest any
+substitute for it, with the hideous result which is before you.
+
+
+*The State of Belgium.*
+
+Now that this mischief has been done, and the two European thunderclouds
+have met and are discharging their lightnings, it is not for me to
+meddle with the question whether the United States should take a side in
+their warfare as far as it concerns themselves alone. But I may plead
+for a perfectly innocent neutral State, the State of Belgium, which is
+being ravaged in a horrible manner by the belligerents. Her surviving
+population is flying into all the neighboring countries to escape from
+the incessant hail of shrapnel and howitzer shells from British cannon,
+French cannon, German cannon, and, most tragic of all, Belgian cannon;
+for the Belgian Army is being forced to devastate its own country in its
+own defense.
+
+For this there can be no excuse; and at such a horror the rest of the
+world cannot look on in silence without incurring the guilt of the
+bystander who witnesses a crime without even giving the alarm. I grant
+that Belgium, in her extreme peril, made one mistake. She called to her
+aid the powers of the Entente alone instead of calling on the whole
+world of kindly men. She should have called on America, too; and it is
+hard to see how you could in honor have disregarded that call. But if
+Belgium says nothing, but only turns her eyes dumbly toward you while
+you look at the red ruin in which her villages, her heaps of slain, her
+monuments and treasures are being hurled by her friends and enemies
+alike, are you any the less bound to speak out than if Belgium had asked
+you to send her a million soldiers?
+
+Not for a moment do I suggest that your intervention should be an
+intervention on behalf of either the Allies or the Entente. If you
+consider both sides equally guilty, we know that you can find reasons
+for that verdict. But Belgium is innocent; and it is on behalf of
+Belgium that so much of the world as is still at peace is waiting for a
+lead from you. No other question need be prejudged. If Germany maintains
+her claim to a right of way through Belgium on a matter which she
+believed (however erroneously) to be one of life and death to her as a
+nation, nobody, not even China, now pretends that such rights of way
+have not their place among those common human rights which are superior
+to the more artificial rights of nationality. I think, for example, that
+if Russia made a descent on your continent under circumstances which
+made it essential to the maintenance of your national freedom that you
+should move an army through Canada, you would ask our leave to do so,
+and take it by force if we did not grant it. You may reasonably suspect,
+even if all our statesmen raise a shriek of denial, that we should take
+a similar liberty under similar circumstances in the teeth of all the
+scraps of paper in our Foreign Office dustbin. You see, I am frank with
+you, and fair, I hope, to Germany. But a right of way is not a right of
+conquest; and even the right of way was not, as the Imperial Chancellor
+imagined, a matter of life and death at all, but a militarist
+hallucination, and one that has turned out, so far, a military mistake.
+In short, there was no such case of overwhelming necessity as would have
+made the denial of a right of way to the German Army equivalent to a
+refusal to save German independence from destruction, and therefore to
+an act of war against her, justifying a German conquest of Belgium. You
+can therefore leave the abstract question of international rights of way
+quite unprejudiced by your action. You can leave every question between
+the belligerents fully open, and yet, in the common interest of the
+world, ask Germany to clear out of Belgium, into France or across the
+Channel, if she can, back home if she can force no other passage, but at
+all events out of Belgium. A like request would, of course, be addressed
+to Britain and to France at the same time. The technical correctness of
+our diplomatic position as to Belgium may be unimpeachable; but as the
+effect of our shells on Belgium is precisely the same as that of the
+German shells, and as by fighting on Belgian soil we are doing her
+exactly the same injury that we should have done her if the violation of
+her neutrality had been initiated by us instead of by Germany, we could
+not decently refuse to fall in with a general evacuation.
+
+
+*A Certain Result of Intervention.*
+
+At all events, your intervention could not fail to produce at least the
+result that even if the belligerents refused to comply, your request
+would leave them in an entirely new and very unpleasant relation to
+public opinion. No matter how powerful a State is, it is not above
+feeling the vast difference between doing something that nobody condemns
+and something that everybody condemns except the interested parties.
+
+That difference alone would be well worth your pains. But it is by no
+means a foregone conclusion that a blank refusal would be persisted in.
+Germany must be aware that the honor of England is now so bound up with
+the complete redemption of Belgium from the German occupation that to
+keep Antwerp and Brussels she must take Portsmouth and London. France is
+no less deeply engaged. You can judge better than I what chance Germany
+now has, or can persuade herself she has, of exhausting or overwhelming
+her western enemies without ruining herself in the attempt. Whatever
+else the war and its horrors may have done or not done, you will agree
+with me that it has made an end of the dreams of military and naval
+steam-rollering in which the whole wretched business began. At a cost
+which the conquest of a whole continent would hardly justify, these
+terrible armaments and the heroic hosts which wield them push one
+another a few miles back and forward in a month, and take and retake
+some miserable village three times over in less than a week. Can you
+doubt that though we have lost all fear of being beaten, (our darkened
+towns, and the panics of our papers, with their endless scares and silly
+inventions, are mere metropolitan hysteria,) we are getting very tired
+of a war in which, having now re-established our old military
+reputation, and taught the Germans that there is no future for their
+empire without our friendship and that of France, we have nothing more
+to gain? In London and Paris and Berlin nobody at present dares say
+"Sirs, ye are brethren; why do ye wrong one to another?"; for the
+slightest disposition toward a Christian view of things is regarded as a
+shooting matter in these capitals; but Washington is still privileged to
+talk common humanity to the nations.
+
+
+*An Advantage of Aloofness.*
+
+Finally, I may remind you of another advantage which your aloofness from
+the conflict gives you. Here, in England and in France, men are going to
+the front every day; their women and children are all within earshot;
+and no man is hard-hearted enough to say the worst that might be said of
+what is going on in Belgium now. We talk to you of Louvain and Rheims in
+the hope of enlisting you on our side or prejudicing you against the
+Germans, forgetting how sorely you must be tempted to say as you look on
+at what we are doing, "Well, if European literature, as represented by
+the library of Louvain, and European religion, as represented by the
+Cathedral of Rheims, have not got us beyond this, in God's name let them
+perish." I am thinking of other things--of the honest Belgians, whom I
+have seen nursing their wounds, and whom I recognize at a glance as
+plain men, innocent of all warlike intentions, trusting to the wisdom
+and honesty of the rulers and diplomatists who have betrayed them, taken
+from their farms and their businesses to destroy and be destroyed for no
+good purpose that might not have been achieved better and sooner by
+neighborly means. I am thinking of the authentic news that no papers
+dare publish, not of the lies that they all publish to divert attention
+from the truth. In America these things can be said without driving
+American mothers and wives mad; here, we have to set our teeth and go
+forward. We cannot be just; we cannot see beyond the range of our guns.
+The roar of the shrapnel deafens us; the black smoke of the howitzer
+blinds us; and what these do to our bodily senses our passions do to our
+imaginations. For justice, we must do as the mediaeval cities did--call
+in a stranger. You are not altogether that to us; but you can look at
+all of us impartially. And you are the spokesman of Western democracy.
+That is why I appeal to you.
+
+G. BERNARD SHAW.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[A] The English newspaper, The Nation, in which Mr. Shaw's letter to the
+President of the United States appeared on Nov. 7, made the following
+comment thereon:
+
+We are glad to publish Mr. Shaw's brilliant appeal to the President of
+the United States, because we believe that when the time for settlement
+arrives, the influence of America will be a powerful, perhaps a
+decisive, factor in obtaining it. We agree, too, with him that while she
+is not likely to respond to an appeal to intervene on the side of the
+Entente or the Alliance, the case of Belgium, the innocent victim of the
+war, is bound to find her in a very different mood. The States are
+already Belgium's almoner; it is only a step further for them to come in
+as her savior. But on a vital point we disagree with Mr. Shaw. His Irish
+mind puts the case with an indifference to which we cannot pretend. We
+have got to save Western Europe from a victory of Prussian militarism,
+as well as to avenge Belgium and set her on her feet again. We regard
+the temper and policy revealed in Germany's violation of Belgium soil
+and her brutalization of the Belgian people as essential to our judgment
+of this war and its end. And we dare not concede an inch to Mr. Shaw's
+"right of way" theory. His distinction between "right of way" and a
+"right of conquest" has no practical effect other than to extinguish the
+rights of small nationalities as against great ones, who alone have the
+power to take a "right of way" when it is refused, and afterward to turn
+it into a right of conquest. Germany's action was not only a breach of
+her own treaty (only revealed within a few hours of its execution), but
+of Article I. of The Hague Convention on the rights of neutral powers:
+
+ "THE TERRITORY OF NEUTRAL POWERS IS INVIOLABLE."
+
+It is not therefore a small thing that Germany has ripped clean through
+the whole fabric of The Hague Conventions of 1907. Could the American
+Government, aware of that fact, address herself to intervention on the
+Belgian question without regard to the breaches of international law
+which were perpetrated, first, through the orignal German invasion of
+Belgium, and then in the conduct of the campaign in that country?
+
+
+
+
+*A German Letter to G. Bernard Shaw*
+
+By Herbert Eulenberg.
+
+ _The following letter from the noted German playwright Eulenberg,
+ whose plays of a decided modern tendency have been presented
+ extensively in Germany and in Vienna, was made public by the German
+ Press Bureau of New York in October_, 1914.
+
+Bernard Shaw: You have addressed us Germans several times of late
+without receiving a reply from us. The reason for this was probably the
+momentary bitterness against your country of our people's intellectual
+representatives. Indeed, our best scholars and artists, Ernst Haeckel at
+81 years, leading the rest, stripped themselves during these past weeks
+of all the honors which England had apportioned them. Permit me as one
+who had the opportunity to do much for the propagation of your dramatic
+works, especially of your finest drama, "Candida," in Western Germany
+and in Holland, to present as quiet and as moderate a retort as is
+possible.
+
+Your appeal to intellectual Germany we reciprocate with a question to
+intellectual England. It is as follows: How is it possible for you to
+witness your country's present unheard of policy (so opposed to culture)
+without rising as one man against it? Do you believe that we thinking
+Germans would ever, without saying or doing anything, observe an
+alliance of our Government, whose goal was the strengthening of
+imperialism and the subjugation and destruction of a cultured power,
+such as France or England? Never! Among your people only a very small
+number of brave scholars protested against this criminal alliance of
+your Government at the beginning of the war. You others, you poets,
+painters, and musicians of present-day England were silent and permitted
+Sir Edward Grey to continue to sin against a people related to you by
+blood and intellect. You raised your voice a little, Bernard Shaw! But
+what did you propose to us: "Refrain from your militarism, my dear
+Germans, and become again the congenial, complacent poets and thinkers,
+the people of Goethe and Beethoven, whom no one hated! Then we will
+surely help you against the bad Russians!"
+
+Is not this proposal a bit too naive for you, Bernard Shaw? We are
+situated in the midst of Russians and Frenchmen, who have formed an open
+alliance against us for more than twenty years. Our neighbors in the
+East denounce nothing more than us, and our neighbors in the West
+denounce us and plan against us, who have for nearly half a century
+evinced nothing but friendliness toward them. When such enemies surround
+us, does not your friendly counsel, Bernard Shaw, seem as if you said to
+us: "Just let yourself be massacred, Germans! Afterward your British
+cousins will vouchsafe you their protection."
+
+
+*Germany Not Isolated.*
+
+Do you think that we would carry on our militarism and our expensive
+drilling if we lived on an island as you do? We would not think of it.
+We would speedily dispatch a blood-thirsty butcher, like your Lord
+Kitchener, from our island to our most unhealthy colony. We could not
+even reconcile our worthy Dr. Karl Peters, who had dealt a little
+unscrupulously with a few negro women, with our conceptions of culture,
+and had to pass him over to you! But the thought shall not come to me or
+to us, as it does to your Prime Ministers, to pose as angels of light, a
+fact about which you have yourself told your compatriots the bitter
+truth to our great joy. We admit having injured Belgium's neutrality,
+but we have only done it because of dire necessity, because we could not
+otherwise reach France and take up the fight against two sides forced
+upon us. Belgium's independence and freedom, which is suddenly of the
+utmost importance to your King and your Ministers, we have not touched.
+Even after the expeditious capture of Liege we asked Belgium for the
+second time: "Let us pass quickly through your country. We will make
+good every damage, and will not take away a square foot of your country!
+Do destroyers of liberty and Huns and vandals, or whatever other
+defamatory names your English papers now heap upon us, who at the time
+of Beethoven and Schopenhauer formed the Areopagus of culture, conduct
+themselves in such a way? Does not one of your living spirits in England
+cry aloud at the reprehensible alliance which your Government has made
+over your heads with Russia and Japan? On the most shameful day in
+English history, on the day when Mongolian Japan gave the German people
+her ultimatum at the instigation of your politicians, on this, I repeat
+it, most shameful day in the entire English history, I believed that the
+great dead in Westminster Abbey would rise from their graves horrified
+at the shameful deed which their grandsons and great-grandsons imposed
+upon old England.
+
+
+*The Land of Shakespeare.*
+
+We Germans venerated the old England almost as a fatherland. We have
+recognized, understood, and studied Shakespeare, whom you, Bernard Shaw,
+so dislike, more than any other people, even more than the English
+nation itself. Lord Byron received more benefits from Goethe alone than
+from all of England put together. Newton, Darwin, and Adam Smith found
+in Germany their best supporters and interpreters. The dramatic writers
+of latter-day England, most worthy of mention, from Oscar Wilde to you,
+Galsworthy and Knoblauch, are recognized by us and their plays performed
+numberless times. We have always endeavored to understand the English
+character. "Nowhere did we feel so much at home as in Germany," all your
+compatriots will tell you who have been guests here.
+
+In "gratitude" for this our merchants were persecuted for years by your
+merchants, because of a wild hatred for Germans, which, by the way, had
+a most disagreeable effect upon the races of other colors. In
+"gratitude," with but few exceptions which we will not forget, we are
+now abused and belittled by your press before all of Europe and America
+as if we were assassins, vagabonds, enemies of culture and murderers,
+far worse than the Russians. As thanks for that you have entered upon a
+war against us, for which even Sir Edward Grey could not at first give a
+good reason until the injury of Belgium neutrality luckily came to his
+assistance.
+
+Our people are, therefore, now rightly embittered against England
+because through your groundless participation you have made more
+difficult the war against Russia and France, for which one alone, the
+Czar of Russia, bears the blame. But despite this great bitterness they
+would never approve the demolition of your country and your nation,
+because of their respect for your great past and your share in the
+development of culture in Europe. You, however, joined an alliance as a
+third great power, whose only purpose is our dissolution and
+destruction. Merely for reasons of justice and of moral courage a Pitt,
+a Burke, a Disraeli would have withdrawn their participation in such an
+alliance, which--Oh, heroic deed--falls upon the Germans by threes, no,
+by fours or fives. Your present-day statesmen, wholly unworthy of
+representing a people with your past and your inheritance, incite the
+Mongolians and blacks against us, your brother nation. They steal and
+permit our small and insufficiently protected colonies to be stolen and
+no not care a jot for all considerations of Europeans' culture and
+morals.
+
+
+*An Unnatural Russian Alliance.*
+
+England, once the home and the refuge for all free spirits from the days
+of the Inquisition, from Rousseau until Freiligrath and Karl Marx,
+England has allied herself with Russia--the prison and the horror of all
+friends of liberty! Hear ye, hear ye illustrious dead, who lived and
+struggled for the freedom and the greatest possible joy of mankind, and
+shake in your tombs with disgust and with horror! But you living ones,
+and you, Bernard Shaw, the foremost of all English artists, do
+everything in your power to break this terrible alliance and make it
+powerless for England. Much more lies in the balance for her than is
+understood by your present nearsighted politicians, who have in mind
+only the momentary advantages. The destruction of the German power is
+not the only thing in question here; no, it concerns a great part of
+civilized Europe in regard to the suspension of their hard-won political
+liberty; and England, the people of the Magna Charta, the first free
+Constitution, can never be a party to that. That is why we call to you,
+Bernard Shaw, in the name of Europe, and ask you for your voice in the
+struggle.
+
+It is a splendid thing that this serious time has also aroused the
+poets, the thinkers and artists as political and diplomatic advisers,
+and we should not let ourselves be crowded out of this profession, for
+which, thanks to our minds, we are not less fitted than the high-brow
+Lords and Counts. Men of our guild from Thucydides and Herodotus to
+Petrarch and Rubens, and our Humboldt and your Beaconsfield have ever
+shown themselves to be good intermediaries and peace advocates. And
+that, believe me, Bernard Shaw, is of more importance to our people, as
+well as to our Kaiser, who for over twenty-five years has avoided war
+like a poison, than all other bloody laurels. Here's to a decent,
+honorable and "eternal" peace.
+
+HERBERT EULENBERG.
+
+
+
+
+*British Authors Defend England's War*
+
+
+ _One of the most interesting documents brought forth about the war
+ was issued Sept. 17 in London. It was signed by fifty-three of the
+ leading British writers. Herewith are presented the text of their
+ defense of England and their autograph signatures in facsimile._
+
+The undersigned writers, comprising among them men of the most divergent
+political and social views, some of them having been for years ardent
+champions of good-will toward Germany, and many of them extreme
+advocates of peace, are nevertheless agreed that Great Britain could not
+without dishonor have refused to take part in the present war. No one
+can read the full diplomatic correspondence published in the "White
+Paper" without seeing that the British representatives were throughout
+laboring whole-heartedly to preserve the peace of Europe, and that their
+conciliatory efforts were cordially received by both France and Russia.
+
+When these efforts failed Great Britain had still no direct quarrel with
+any power. She was eventually compelled to take up arms because,
+together with France, Germany, and Austria, she had solemnly pledged
+herself to maintain the neutrality of Belgium. As soon as danger to that
+neutrality arose she questioned both France and Germany as to their
+intentions. France immediately renewed her pledge not to violate Belgian
+neutrality; Germany refused to answer, and soon made all answer needless
+by her actions. Without even the pretense of a grievance against Belgium
+she made war on the weak and unoffending country she had undertaken to
+protect, and has since carried out her invasion with a calculated and
+ingenious ferocity which has raised questions other and no less grave
+than that of the willful disregard of treaties.
+
+When Belgium in her dire need appealed to Great Britain to carry out her
+pledge, that country's course was clear. She had either to break faith,
+letting the sanctity of treaties and the rights of small nations count
+for nothing before the threat of naked force, or she had to fight. She
+did not hesitate, and we trust she will not lay down arms till Belgium's
+integrity is restored and her wrongs redressed.
+
+The treaty with Belgium made our duty clear, but many of us feel that,
+even if Belgium had not been involved, it would have been impossible for
+Great Britain to stand aside while France was dragged into war and
+destroyed. To permit the ruin of France would be a crime against liberty
+and civilization. Even those of us who question the wisdom of a policy
+of Continental ententes or alliances refuse to see France struck down by
+a foul blow dealt in violation of a treaty.
+
+We observe that various German apologists, official and semi-official,
+admit that their country had been false to its pledged word, and dwell
+almost with pride on the "frightfulness" of the examples by which it has
+sought to spread terror in Belgium, but they excuse all these
+proceedings by a strange and novel plea. German culture and civilization
+are so superior to those of other nations that all steps taken to assert
+them are more than justified, and the destiny of Germany to be the
+dominating force in Europe and the world is so manifest that ordinary
+rules of morality do not hold in her case, but actions are good or bad
+simply as they help or hinder the accomplishment of that destiny.
+
+These views, inculcated upon the present generation of Germans by many
+celebrated historians and teachers, seem to us both dangerous and
+insane. Many of us have dear friends in Germany, many of us regard
+German culture with the highest respect and gratitude; but we cannot
+admit that any nation has the right by brute force to impose its culture
+upon other nations, nor that the iron military bureaucracy of Prussia
+represents a higher form of human society than the free Constitutions of
+Western Europe.
+
+Whatever the world destiny of Germany may be, we in Great Britain are
+ourselves conscious of a destiny and a duty. That destiny and duty,
+alike for us and for all the English-speaking race, call upon us to
+uphold the rule of common justice between civilized peoples, to defend
+the rights of small nations, and to maintain the free and law-abiding
+ideals of Western Europe against the rule of "Blood and Iron" and the
+domination of the whole Continent by a military caste.
+
+For these reasons and others the undersigned feel bound to support the
+cause of the Allies with all their strength, with a full conviction of
+its righteousness, and with a deep sense of its vital import to the
+future of the world.
+
+[Illustration: Signatures]
+
+[Illustration: Signatures]
+
+
+
+
+*WHO'S WHO AMONG THE SIGNERS.*
+
+WILLIAM ARCHER, dramatic critic and editor of Ibsen's works, author of
+"Life of Macready," "Real Conversations," "The Great Analysis," and
+(with Granville Barker) "A National Theatre."
+
+H. GRANVILLE BARKER, actor, dramatist, and manager, shares with his wife
+management of the Kingsway Theatre, London; author of "The Voysey
+Inheritance," and (with Laurence Housman) "Prunella."
+
+SIR JAMES MATTHEW BARRIE, creator of "Sentimental Tommy" and "Peter
+Pan," famous for his sympathetic studies of Scotch life and his
+fantastic comedies.
+
+HILAIRE BELLOC, best known as a writer on history, politics, and
+economics; a recognized authority on the French Revolution.
+
+ARNOLD BENNETT, author of many popular realistic studies of English
+provincial life, including "Clayhanger" and "Hilda Lessways."
+
+ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER BENSON, chiefly known for "From a College Window,"
+"Beside Still Waters," and other volumes of essays.
+
+EDWARD FREDERIC BENSON, brother of the preceding, author of many novels
+of modern life, including "Dodo."
+
+VERY REV. MONSIGNOR ROBERT HUGH BENSON, the youngest of the three famous
+Benson brothers. Besides numerous devotional and theological works,
+Monsignor Benson has written several widely appreciated historical
+novels.
+
+LAWRENCE BINYON, author of many lyrics and poetic dramas, Assistant
+Keeper in the British Museum, in charge of Oriental Prints and Drawings.
+
+ANDREW CECIL BRADLEY, critic, sometime Professor of Poetry at Oxford
+University, author of a standard work on Shakespeare.
+
+ROBERT BRIDGES, Poet-Laureate. Prominent as a physician before his
+poetry brought him the high honor he now enjoys.
+
+HALL CAINE, one of the most popular of contemporary novelists.
+
+R.C. CARTON, dramatist, author of "Lord and Lady Algy" and "A White
+Elephant."
+
+CHARLES HADDON CHAMBERS, dramatist, author of "John a Dreams," part
+author of "The Fatal Card."
+
+GILBERT K. CHESTERTON, essayist, novelist, poet; defender of orthodox
+thought by unorthodox methods.
+
+HUBERT HENRY DAVIES, dramatist, author of "The Mollusc" and "A Single
+Man."
+
+SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE, creator of "Sherlock Holmes."
+
+HERBERT ALBERT LAURENS FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University,
+author of "The Mediaeval Empire," "Napoleon Bonaparte," and other
+historical works.
+
+JOHN GALSWORTHY, a novelist and dramatist who has come into great
+prominence during the last five years, his plays, "Strife" and
+"Justice," and his novel, "The Dark Flower," being widely known.
+
+ANSTEY GUTHRIE, (F. ANSTEY,) author of "The Brass Bottle," "The Talking
+Horse," and other fantastic and humorous tales.
+
+SIR HENRY RIDER HAGGARD, author of many widely read romances, among them
+being "She."
+
+THOMAS HARDY, generally considered to be the greatest living English
+novelist.
+
+JANE ELLEN HARRISON, sometime Fellow and Lecturer at Newnham College,
+Cambridge University; writer of many standard works on classical
+religion, literature, and life.
+
+ANTHONY HOPE HAWKINS, (ANTHONY HOPE,) author of popular historical
+romance and sketches of modern society, including "The Prisoner of
+Zenda."
+
+MAURICE HEWLETT, poet and romantic novelist, author of "Earthworks Out
+of Tuscany" and other mediaeval tales.
+
+ROBERT HICHENS, novelist, author of "The Garden of Allah," "Bella
+Donna," and other stories.
+
+JEROME K. JEROME, humorist, famous for "Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow"
+and the "Three Men" series, and for his play "The Passing of the Third
+Floor Back."
+
+HENRY ARTHUR JONES, dramatist, author of "The Silver King," "The
+Hypocrites," and other plays.
+
+RUDYARD KIPLING needs no introduction to people who read the English
+language.
+
+WILLIAM J. LOCKE, author of "The Morals of Marcus," "Septimus," and "The
+Beloved Vagabond," which have been made into successful plays.
+
+EDWARD VERRAL LUCAS, associate editor of Punch and editor of several
+popular anthologies, author of "A Wanderer in Holland."
+
+JOHN WILLIAM MACKAIL, Professor of Poetry at Oxford University, author
+and editor of many volumes dealing with ancient Greek and Roman
+literature.
+
+JOHN MASEFIELD, known chiefly for his long poems of life among the
+British poor.
+
+ALFRED EDWARD WOODLEY MASON, writer of romantic novels, of which "The
+Four Feathers" and "The Turnstile" are perhaps the best known, and of
+several popular dramas.
+
+GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek at Oxford University since
+1908, editor and translator of Greek classics, perhaps the greatest
+Greek scholar now living.
+
+HENRY NEWBOLT, "laureate of the British Navy," author of "Drake's Drum"
+and many other songs.
+
+BARRY PAIN, author of "Eliza" and other novels and short stories of
+adventure, of many well-known parodies and poems.
+
+SIR GILBERT PARKER, of Canadian birth, poet and author of romantic
+novels, including "The Judgment House," and "The Right of Way."
+
+EDEN PHILLPOTTS, realistic novelist, noted for his exact portraits of
+the English rustic, author of "Down Dartmoor Way."
+
+SIR ARTHUR WING PINERO, one of the most popular of living dramatists.
+His plays include "Sweet Lavender" and "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray."
+
+SIR ARTHUR QUILLER-COUCH, Professor of English Literature at Cambridge
+University, poet, novelist, and writer of short stories.
+
+SIR OWEN SEAMAN, since 1906 editor of Punch, writer of parodies and
+light verse.
+
+GEORGE R. SIMS, journalist, poet, and author of many popular dramas,
+including "The Lights of London," "Two Little Vagabonds," and "Harbour
+Lights."
+
+MAY SINCLAIR, writer of novels dealing with modern moral problems, "The
+Divine Fire" and "The Combined Maze" being best known.
+
+FLORA ANNIE STEEL, author of "Tales from the Punjab," "On the Face of
+the Waters," "A Prince of Dreamers," and other novels and short stories,
+most of which deal with life in India.
+
+ALFRED SUTRO, dramatist, author of "The Walls of Jericho," "The
+Barrier," and other plays of modern society."
+
+GEORGE MACAULAY TREVELYAN, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge;
+author of "England Under the Stuarts," and other historical and
+biographical works.
+
+RT. HON. GEORGE OTTO TREVELYAN, historian, biographer of Macaulay, and
+author of a four-volume work on the American Revolution.
+
+HUMPHRY WARD, journalist and author, sometime Fellow of Brasenose
+College, editor of several biographical and historical works.
+
+MARY A. WARD, (Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD,) best known of contemporary women
+novelists; her first success was "Robert Elsmere."
+
+H.G. WELLS, novelist, author of "Tono Bungay" and "Ann Veronica."
+
+MARGARET L. WOODS, poet; her "Wild Justice" and "The Invader" have
+placed her in the front rank.
+
+ISRAEL ZANGWILL, novelist, poet, dramatist, interpreter of the modern
+Jewish spirit.
+
+
+
+
+*The Fourth of August--Europe at War*
+
+*By H.G. Wells.*
+
+_Copyright_, 1914, _by The New York Times Company_.
+
+
+Europe is at war!
+
+The monstrous vanity that was begotten by the easy victories of '70 and
+'71 has challenged the world, and Germany prepares to reap the harvest
+Bismarck sowed. That trampling, drilling foolery in the heart of Europe,
+that has arrested civilization and darkened the hopes of mankind for
+forty years. German imperialism, German militarism, has struck its
+inevitable blow. The victory of Germany will mean the permanent
+enthronement of the War God over all human affairs. The defeat of
+Germany may open the way to disarmament and peace throughout the earth.
+
+To those who love peace there can be no other hope in the present
+conflict than the defeat, the utter discrediting of the German legend,
+the ending for good and all of the blood and iron superstition, of
+Krupp, flag-wagging Teutonic Kiplingism, and all that criminal, sham
+efficiency that centres in Berlin. Never was war so righteous as war
+against Germany now. Never has any State in the world so clamored for
+punishment.
+
+But be it remembered that Europe's quarrel is with the German State, not
+with the German people; with a system, and not with a race. The older
+tradition of Germany is a pacific and civilizing tradition. The
+temperament of the mass of German people is kindly, sane, and amiable.
+Disaster to the German Army, if it is unaccompanied by any such
+memorable wrong as dismemberment or intolerable indignity, will mean the
+restoration of the greatest people in Europe to the fellowship of
+Western nations. The role of England in this huge struggle is plain as
+daylight. We have to fight. If only on account of the Luxemburg outrage,
+we have to fight. If we do not fight, England will cease to be a country
+to be proud of; it will be a dirt-bath to escape from. But it is
+inconceivable that we should not fight. And having fought, then in the
+hour of victory it will be for us to save the liberated Germans from
+vindictive treatment, to secure for this great people their right, as
+one united German-speaking State, to a place in the sun.
+
+First we have to save ourselves and Europe, and then we have to stand
+between German on the one hand and the Cossack and revenge on the other.
+
+For my own part, I do not doubt that Germany and Austria are doomed to
+defeat in this war. It may not be catastrophic defeat, though even that
+is possible, but it is defeat. There is no destiny in the stars and
+every sign is false if this is not so.
+
+They have provoked an overwhelming combination of enemies. They have
+underrated France. They are hampered by a bad social and military
+tradition. The German is not naturally a good soldier; he is orderly and
+obedient, but he is not nimble nor quick-witted; since his sole
+considerable military achievement, his not very lengthy march to Paris
+in '70 and '71, the conditions of modern warfare have been almost
+completely revolutionized and in a direction that subordinates the
+massed fighting of unintelligent men to the rapid initiative of
+individualized soldiers. And, on the other hand, since those years of
+disaster, the Frenchman has learned the lesson of humility; he is
+prepared now sombrely for a sombre struggle; his is the gravity that
+precedes astonishing victories. In the air, in the open field, with guns
+and machines, it is doubtful if any one fully realizes the superiority
+of his quality to the German. This sudden attack may take him aback for
+a week or so, though I doubt even that, but in the end I think he will
+hold his own; even without us he will hold his own, and with us then I
+venture to prophesy that within three months from now his tricolor will
+be over the Rhine. And even suppose his line gets broken by the first
+rush. Even then I do not see how the Germans are to get to Paris or
+anywhere near Paris. I do not see how against the strength of the modern
+defensive and the stinging power of an intelligent enemy in retreat, of
+which we had a little foretaste in South Africa, the exploit of Sedan
+can be repeated. A retiring German army, on the other hand, will be far
+less formidable than a retiring French army, because it has less "devil"
+in it, because it is made up of men taught to obey in masses, because
+its intelligence is concentrated in its aristocratic officers, because
+it is dismayed when it breaks ranks. The German Army is everything the
+conscriptionists dreamed of making our people; it is, in fact, an army
+about twenty years behind the requirements of contemporary conditions.
+
+On the eastern frontier the issue is more doubtful because of the
+uncertainty of Russian things. The peculiar military strength of Russia,
+a strength it was not able to display in Manchuria, lies in its vast
+resources of mounted men. A set invasion of Prussia may be a matter of
+many weeks, but the raiding possibilities in Eastern Germany are
+enormous. It is difficult to guess how far the Russian attack will be
+guided by intelligence, and how far Russia will blunder, but Russia will
+have to blunder very disastrously indeed before she can be put upon the
+defensive. A Russian raid is far more likely to threaten Berlin than a
+German to reach Paris.
+
+Meanwhile there is the struggle on the sea. In that I am prepared for
+some rude shocks. The Germans have devoted an amount of energy to the
+creation of an aggressive navy that would have been spent more wisely in
+consolidating their European position. It is probably a thoroughly good
+navy and ship for ship the equal of our own. But the same lack of
+invention, the same relative uncreativeness that has kept the German
+behind the Frenchman in things aerial has made him, regardless of his
+shallow seas, follow our lead in naval matters, and if we have erred,
+and I believe we have erred, in overrating the importance of the big
+battleship, the German has at least very obligingly fallen in with our
+error. The safest, most effective place for the German fleet at the
+present time is the Baltic Sea. On this side of the Kiel Canal, unless I
+overrate the powers of the waterplane, there is no safe harbor for it.
+If it goes into port anywhere that port can be ruined, and the
+bottled-up ships can be destroyed at leisure by aerial bombs. So that if
+they are on this side of the Kiel Canal they must keep the sea and
+fight, if we let them, before their coal runs short. Battle in the open
+sea in this case is their only chance. They will fight against odds, and
+with every prospect of a smashing, albeit we shall certainly have to pay
+for that victory in ships and men. In the Baltic we shall not be able to
+get at them without the participation of Denmark, and they may have a
+considerable use against Russia. But in the end even there mine and
+aeroplane and destroyer should do their work.
+
+So I reckon that Germany will be held east and west, and that she will
+get her fleet practically destroyed. We ought also to be able to sweep
+her shipping off the seas, and lower her flag forever in Africa and Asia
+and the Pacific. All the probabilities, it seems to me, point to that.
+There is no reason why Italy should not stick to her present neutrality,
+and there is considerable inducement close at hand for both Denmark and
+Japan to join in, directly they are convinced of the failure of the
+first big rush on the part of Germany. All these issues will be more or
+less definitely decided within the next two or three months. By that
+time I believe German imperialism will be shattered, and it may be
+possible to anticipate the end of the armaments phase of European
+history. France, Italy, England, and all the smaller powers of Europe
+are now pacific countries; Russia, after this huge war, will be too
+exhausted for further adventure; a shattered Germany will be a
+revolutionary Germany, as sick of uniforms and the imperialist idea as
+France was in 1871, as disillusioned about predominance as Bulgaria is
+today. The way will be open at last for all these western powers to
+organize peace. That is why I, with my declared horror of war, have not
+signed any of these "stop-the-war" appeals and declarations that have
+appeared in the last few days. Every sword that is drawn against Germany
+now is a sword drawn for peace.
+
+
+
+
+*If the Germans Raid England*
+
+*By H.G. Wells.*
+
+*From The Times of London, Oct. 31, 1914.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: At the outset of the war I made a suggestion in your columns for
+the enrollment of all that surplus of manhood and patriotic feeling
+which remains after every man available for systematic military
+operations has been taken. My idea was that comparatively undrilled boys
+and older men, not sound enough for campaigning, armed with rifles, able
+to shoot straight with them, and using local means of transport,
+bicycles, cars, and so forth, would be a quite effective check upon an
+enemy's scouting, a danger to his supplies, and even a force capable of
+holding up a raiding advance--more particularly if that advance was poor
+in horses and artillery, as an overseas raid was likely to be. I
+suggested, too, that the mere enrollment and arming of the population
+would have a powerful educational effect in steadying and unifying the
+spirit of our people. My proposals were received with what seemed even a
+forced amusement by the "experts." I was told that I knew nothing about
+warfare, and that the Germans would not permit us to do anything of the
+sort. The Germans, it seems, are the authorities in these matters, a
+point I had overlooked. They would refuse to recognize men with only
+improvised uniforms, they would shoot their prisoners--not that I had
+proposed that my irregulars should become prisoners--and burn the
+adjacent villages. This seemed to be an entirely adequate reply from the
+point of view of the expert mind, and I gathered that the proper role
+for such an able-bodied civilian as myself was to keep indoors while the
+invader was about and supply him as haughtily as possible with light
+refreshments and anything else he chose to requisition. I was also
+reminded that if only men like myself had obeyed their expert advice and
+worked in the past for national service and the general submission of
+everything to expert military direction, these troubles would not have
+arisen. There would have been no surplus of manhood and everything would
+have gone as smoothly and as well for England as--the Press Censorship.
+
+
+*An Improbable Invasion.*
+
+For a time I was silenced. Under war conditions it is always a difficult
+question to determine how far it is better to obey poor, or even bad,
+directions or to criticise them in the hope of getting better. But the
+course of the war since that correspondence and the revival of the idea
+of a raid by your military correspondent provoke me to return to this
+discussion. Frankly, I do not believe in that raid, and I think we play
+the German game in letting our minds dwell upon it. I am supposed to be
+a person of feverish imagination, but even by lashing my imagination to
+its ruddiest I cannot, in these days of wireless telegraphy, see a
+properly equipped German force, not even so trivial a handful as 20,000
+of them, getting itself with guns, motors, ammunition, and provisions
+upon British soil. I cannot even see a mere landing of infantrymen. I
+believe in that raid even less than I do in the suggested raid of
+navigables that has darkened London. I admit the risk of a few aeroplane
+bombs in London, but I do not see why people should be subjected to
+danger, darkness, and inconvenience on account of that one-in-a-million
+risk. Still, as the trained mind does insist upon treating all
+unenlisted civilians as panicstricken imbeciles and upon frightening old
+ladies and influential people with these remote possibilities, and as it
+is likely that these alarms may even lead to the retention of troops in
+England when their point of maximum effectiveness is manifestly in
+France, it becomes necessary to insist upon the ability of our civilian
+population, if only the authorities will permit the small amount of
+organization and preparation needed, to deal quite successfully with any
+raid that in an extremity of German "boldness" may be attempted.
+
+And, in the first place, let the expert have no illusions as to what we
+ordinary people are going to do if we find German soldiers in England
+one morning. We are going to fight. If we cannot fight with rifles, we
+shall fight with shotguns, and if we cannot fight according to rules of
+war apparently made by Germans for the restraint of British military
+experts, we will fight according to our inner light. Many men, and not a
+few women, will turn out to shoot Germans. There will be no preventing
+them after the Belgian stories. If the experts attempt any pedantic
+interference, we will shoot the experts. I know that in this matter I
+speak for so sufficient a number of people that it will be quite useless
+and hopelessly dangerous and foolish for any expert-instructed minority
+to remain "tame." They will get shot, and their houses will be burned
+according to the established German rules and methods on our account, so
+they may just as well turn out in the first place, and get some shooting
+as a consolation in advance for their inevitable troubles. And if the
+raiders, cut off by the sea from their supports, ill-equipped as they
+will certainly be, and against odds, are so badly advised as to try
+terror-striking reprisals on the Belgian pattern, we irregulars will, of
+course, massacre every German straggler we can put a gun to. Naturally.
+Such a procedure may be sanguinary, but it is just the common sense of
+the situation. We shall hang the officers and shoot the men. A German
+raid to England will in fact not be fought--it will be lynched. War is
+war, and reprisals and striking terror are games that two can play at.
+This is the latent temper of the British countryside, and the sooner the
+authorities take it in hand and regularize it the better will be the
+outlook in the remote event of that hypothetical raid getting home to
+us. Levity is a national characteristic, but submissiveness is not.
+Under sufficient provocation the English are capable of very dangerous
+bad temper, and the expert is dreaming who thinks of a German expedition
+moving through an apathetic Essex, for example, resisted only by the
+official forces trained and in training.
+
+And whatever one may think of the possibility of raids, I venture to
+suggest that the time has come when the present exclusive specialization
+of our combatant energy upon the production of regulation armies should
+cease. The gathering of these will go on anyhow; there are unlimited men
+ready for intelligent direction. Now that the shortage of supplies and
+accommodation has been remedied the enlistment sluices need only be
+opened again. The rank and file of this country is its strength; there
+is no need, and there never has been any need, for press hysterics about
+recruiting. But there is wanted a far more vigorous stimulation of the
+manufacture of material--if only experts and rich people would turn
+their minds to that. It is the trading and manufacturing class that
+needs goading at the present time. It is very satisfactory to send
+troops to France, but in France there are still great numbers of
+able-bodied, trained Frenchmen not fully equipped. It is our national
+duty and privilege to be the storehouse and arsenal of the Allies. Our
+factories for clothing and material of all sorts should be working day
+and night. There is the point to which enthusiasm should be turned. It
+is just as heroic and just as useful to the country to kill yourself
+making belts and boots as it is to die in a trench. But our organization
+for the enrollment and utilization of people not in the firing line is
+still amazingly unsatisfactory. The one convenient alternative to
+enlistment as a combatant at present is hospital work. But it is really
+far more urgent to direct enthusiasm and energy now to the production of
+war material. If this war does not end, as all the civilized world hopes
+it will end, in the complete victory of the Allies, our failure will not
+be through any shortage of men, but through a shortage of gear and
+organizing ability. It will not be through a default of the people, but
+through the slackness of the governing class.
+
+
+*Arms and Equipment Needed.*
+
+Now so far as the enrollment of us goes, of the surplus people who are
+willing to be armed and to be used for quasi-military work at home, but
+who are not of an age or not of a physique or who are already in shop or
+office serving some quite useful purpose at home, we want certain very
+simple things from the authorities. We want the military status that is
+conferred by a specific enrollment and some sort of uniform. We want
+accessible arms. They need not be modern service weapons; the rifles of
+ten years ago are quite good enough for the possible need we shall have
+for them. And we want to be sure that in the possible event of an
+invasion the Government will have the decision to give every man in the
+country a military status by at once resorting to the levee en masse.
+Given a recognized local organization and some advice--it would not take
+a week of Gen. Baden-Powell's time, for example, to produce a special
+training book for us--we could set to work upon our own local drill,
+rifle practice, and exercises, in such hours and ways as best suited our
+locality. We could also organize the local transport, list local
+supplies, and arrange for their removal or destruction if threatened.
+Finally, we could set to work to convert a number of ordinary cars into
+fighting cars by reconstructing and armoring them and exercising crews.
+And having developed a discipline and self-respect as a fighting force,
+we should be available not only for fighting work at home, in the
+extremely improbable event of a raid, but also for all kinds of
+supplementary purposes, as a reserve of motor drivers, as a supply of
+physically exercised and half-trained recruits in the events of an
+extended standard, and as a guarantee of national discipline under any
+unexpected stress. Above all, we should be relieving the real fighting
+forces of the country for the decisive area, which is in France and
+Belgium now and will, I hope, be in Westphalia before the Spring.
+
+At present we non-army people are doing only a fraction of what we would
+like to do for our country. We are not being used. We are made to feel
+out of it, and we watch the not always very able proceedings of the
+military authorities and the international mischief-making of the
+Censorship with a bitter resentment that is restrained only by the
+supreme gravity of the crisis. For my own part I entertain three
+Belgians and make a young officer possible by supplementing his
+expenses, and my wife knits things. A neighbor, an able-bodied man of 42
+and an excellent shot, is occasionally permitted to carry a recruit to
+Chelmsford. If I try to use my pen on behalf of my country abroad, where
+I have a few friends and readers, what I write is exposed to the clumsy
+editing and delays of anonymous and apparently irresponsible officials.
+So practically I am doing nothing, and a great number of people are
+doing very little more. The authorities are concentrated upon the
+creation of an army numerically vast, and for the rest they seem to
+think that the chief function of government is inhibition. Their
+available energy and ability is taxed to the utmost in maintaining the
+fighting line, and it is sheer greed for direction that has led to their
+systematic thwarting of civilian co-operation. Let me warn them of the
+boredom and irritation they are causing. This is a people's war, a war
+against militarism; it is not a war for the greater glory of British
+diplomatists, officials, and people in uniforms. It is our war, not
+their war, and the last thing we intend to result from it is a
+permanently increased importance for the military caste.
+
+Yours very sincerely,
+
+H.G. WELLS.
+
+
+
+
+*Sir Oliver Lodge's Comment*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: In a strikingly vigorous letter Mr. H.G. Wells claims that a nation
+of which every individual prefers death to submission is unconquerable
+and cannot be successfully invaded. Ways of hampering an army are too
+numerous, if people are willing to run every risk, not only for
+themselves but for those dependent on them.
+
+This may be admitted. And we may also agree that the British race would
+be likely to risk everything if the consequences of carefully engendered
+hate were loosed upon us. But here comes a point worthy of
+consideration. An invasion of England is, to say the least, unlikely; an
+invasion of Germany may soon have to be undertaken. May it not add to
+the difficulties of our troops if a policy of "arming every woman,
+child, and cat and dog" is favorably regarded by us? Is not such a
+policy a sort of left-handed outcome of the Prussian contention that
+even their own unarmed civilian populace is contemptible and may be
+slaughtered without mercy if military procedure is resisted, or even if
+supplies are not forthcoming?
+
+It will be difficult, and I hope impossible, for the Allies to act in
+accordance with this latter view; though the German peasantry may have
+been so fed with lies that it will be unable to believe that our
+soldiers can be trusted to behave like civilized beings when the time
+has come for a forward march. It is clear that riotous license is
+subversive of discipline, and conduces to defeat--as it probably has in
+recent Continental experience. For, although ancient warriors used to
+ravage a country, and although women have occasionally intervened in
+order to stop a battle, surely never before in the history of the world
+have women and children been forced forward in defense of a fighting
+line! Yet undoubtedly war can be so conducted that foes mutually respect
+each other; indeed, save for the cowardly abomination of floating mines,
+this present war has been so conducted at sea. I suggest that the fair
+procedure in case of invasion is for each civilian to choose whether to
+be a combatant or not, and to incur the danger of an affirmative choice
+in a sufficiently conspicuous and permanent manner. I am, Sir,
+faithfully yours,
+
+*OLIVER LODGE,* The University, Birmingham, Oct. 31.
+
+
+
+
+*What the German Conscript Thinks*
+
+*By Arnold Bennett.*
+
+_Copyright_, 1914, _by The New York Times Company_.
+
+
+Some hold that this is a war of Prussian militarism, and not a war of
+the German people. This view has the merits of kindliness and
+convenience. Others warn us not to be misled by such sentimentalists,
+and assert that the heart of the German people is in the war. The point
+is of importance to us, because the work of the conscript in the field
+must be influenced by his private feelings. Notwithstanding all drill
+and sergeantry, the German Army remains a collection of human
+beings--and human beings more learned, if not better educated, than our
+own race! It is not a mere fighting machine, despite the efforts of its
+leaders to make it into one.
+
+Among those who assert that the heart of the German people is in the war
+are impartial and experienced observers who have carefully studied
+Germany for many years. For myself, I give little value to their
+evidence. To come at the truth by observation about a foreign country is
+immensely, overpoweringly difficult. I am a professional observer: I
+have lived in Paris and in the French provinces for nine years; I am
+fairly familiar with French literature and very familiar with the French
+language--and I honestly would not trust myself to write even a shilling
+handbook about French character and life. Nearly all newspapers are
+conservative; nearly all foreign correspondents adopt the official or
+conventional point of view; and the pictures of foreign life which get
+into the press are, as a rule--shall I say incomplete?
+
+Even when the honest observer says, "These things I saw with my own eyes
+and will vouch for," I am not convinced that he saw enough. An
+intelligent foreigner with first-class introductions might go through
+England and see with his own eyes that England was longing for
+protection, the death of home rule, and the repeal of the Insurance act.
+The unfortunate Prince Lichnowsky, after an exhaustive inquiry and
+access to the most secret sources of exclusive information telegraphed
+to the Kaiser less than a month ago that civil war was an immediate
+certainty throughout Ireland. Astounding fatuity? Not at all. English
+observers of England have made, and constantly do make, mistakes equally
+prodigious. See Hansard every month. So that when I read demonstrations
+of the thesis that the heart of the German people is in the war, I am
+not greatly affected by them.
+
+
+*German Heart Is In the War.*
+
+Still, I do myself believe that the heart of the German people is in the
+war, and that that heart is governed by two motives--the motive of
+self-defense against Russia and the motive of overbearing
+self-aggrandizement. I do not base my opinion on phenomena which I have
+observed. Beyond an automobile journey through Schleswig-Holstein, which
+was formidably tedious, and a yacht journey through the Kiel Canal and
+Kiel Bay, which was somewhat impressive, I have never traveled in
+Germany at all. I base my opinion on general principles. In a highly
+educated and civilized country such as Germany (the word "civilized"
+must soon take on a new significance!) it is impossible that an
+autocracy, even a military autocracy, could exist unrooted in the
+people. "Prussian militarism" may annoy many Germans, but it pleases
+more than it annoys, and there can be few Germans who are not flattered
+by it. That the lower classes have an even more tremendous grievance
+against the upper classes in Germany than in England or France is a
+certitude. But the existence and power of the army are their reward,
+their sole reward, for all that they have suffered in hardship and
+humiliation at the hands of the autocracy. It is the autocracy's bribe
+and sweetmeat to them.
+
+The Germans are a great nation; they have admirable qualities, but they
+have also defects, and among their defects is a clumsy arrogance, which
+may be noticed in any international hotel frequented by Germans. It is a
+racial defect, and to try to limit it to the military autocracy is
+absurd. An educated and civilized nation has roughly the Government that
+it wants and deserves. And it has in the end ways of imposing itself on
+its apparent rulers that are more effective than the ballot box or the
+barricade, and just as sure. No election was needed to prove to the
+Italian Government that Italy did not want to fight for the Triple
+Alliance, and would not fight for it. The fact was known; it was
+immanent in the air, beyond all arguments and persuasions. Italy
+breathed a negative, and war was not. So in Germany the mass of Germans
+have for years breathed war, and war is. The war may be autocratic,
+dynastic, what you will; but it is also national, and it symbolizes the
+national defect.
+
+
+*How About the Leaders?*
+
+Does the German conscript believe in the efficacy of his leaders? I mean
+when he is lying awake and fatigued at night, not when he is shouting
+"Hoch!" or watching the demeanor of women in front of him. Does no doubt
+ever lancinate him? Again I would answer the question from general
+principles and not from observation. The German conscript must know what
+everybody knows--that in almost every bully there is a coward. And he
+must know that he is led by bullies. He learned that in the barrack
+yard. An enormous number of conscripts must also know that there is
+something seriously wrong with a system that for the sake of its own
+existence has killed freedom of the press. And the million little things
+that are wrong in the system he also knows out of his own daily life as
+a conscript. Further, he must be aware that there is a dearth of really
+great men in his system. In the past there were in Germany men great
+enough to mesmerize Europe--Bismarck and von Moltke. There is none today
+that appeals to the popular imagination as Kitchener does in England or
+Joffre in France. Alone, in Germany, the Kaiser has been able to achieve
+a Continental renown. The Kaiser has good qualities. But twenty-four
+years ago he committed an act of folly and (one may say) "bad form"
+which nothing but results could justify, and which results have not
+justified. Whatever his good qualities may be it is an absolute
+certainty that common sense, foresight, and mental balance are not among
+them. The conscript feels that, if he does not state it clearly to
+himself. And as for the military organization of which the Kaiser is the
+figurehead, it has shown for many years past precisely those signs which
+history teaches us are signs of decay. It has not withstood the fearful
+ordeal of success. Just lately, if not earlier, the conscript must have
+felt that, too.
+
+What is the conclusion? Take the average conscript, the member of the
+lower middle class. He is accustomed to think politically, because at
+least fifty out of every hundred of him are professed Socialists with a
+definite and bitter political programme against certain manifestations
+of the autocracy. (It is calculated that two-fifths of the entire army
+is Socialist.) He may not argue very closely while in the act of war;
+indeed, he could not. But enormous experience is accumulated in his
+subconsciousness--experience of bullying and cowardice, of humiliation,
+of injustice, of lying, and of his own most secret shortcomings--for he,
+too, is somewhat of the bully, out for self-aggrandisement as well as
+for self-defense, and his conscience privately tells him so. The
+organization is still colossal, magnificent, terrific. In the general
+fever of activity he persuades himself that nothing can withstand the
+organization; but at the height of some hand-to-hand crisis, when
+one-hundredth of a dogged grain of obstinacy will turn the scale, he may
+remember an insult from an incompetent officer, or the protectionism at
+home which puts meat beyond his purse in order to enrich the landowner,
+or even the quite penal legislation of the autocracy against the
+co-operative societies of the poor, and the memory (in spite of him) may
+decide a battle. Men think of odd matters in a battle, and it is a
+scientific certainty that, at the supreme pinch, the subconscious must
+react.
+
+
+
+
+*Felix Adler's Comment*
+
+*From The Standard, Oct. 14, 1914.*
+
+
+Apropos of a recent article by Mr. Arnold Bennett, wherein he speaks of
+the resentment which the German soldiers--two-fifths of them
+Socialists--must feel against the bullying discipline to which they have
+been subjected, the following reflections are jotted down. The reader
+who is interested in pursuing the subject further may profitably consult
+a book entitled "Imperial Germany," by Prince von Buelow, which contains
+some penetrating observations on the workings of the German mind, as
+well as the chapter on Germany in Alfred Fouillee's notable work,
+"Esquisse Psychologique des Peuples Europeens."
+
+The precision which characterizes the operations of the German military
+machine is due to the German notion of discipline. Discipline in Germany
+is based on the peculiar place assigned to the expert. Military experts
+exercise in their branch an authority different in degree but not in
+kind from that belonging to experts in other departments--strategy,
+tactics, improvements of armament, methods of mobilization. The inexpert
+soldier submits to the military expert as a person about to undergo a
+necessary operation would submit to a surgeon. It is a mistake to
+suppose that the Germans, a highly intelligent and educated people, are
+being cowed into submission by brutal non-commissioned officers.
+Brutality, when it occurs, is looked upon as exceptional and incidental
+to a system on the whole approved. The Germans would never tolerate the
+severe discipline to which they are subjected did they not willingly
+submit to it. They regard a highly efficient army as necessary to the
+safety of the Fatherland, and they are willing to leave the
+responsibility for the means of securing efficiency to the experts.
+During the Franco-German war, when a student in the University of
+Berlin, I talked with some of the brightest of the younger men about
+their military obligations, and I found that they took precisely the
+view just stated. The Pomeranian peasant may submit to military
+dictation in a dull, half-instinctive fashion. The flower and elite of
+German intelligence submit to it no less--from conviction.
+
+How shall we account for the unique predominance of the expert in German
+life? The explanation would seem to lie in the phrase invented by a
+brilliant writer of the last century, "Deutschland ist Hamlet" (Germany
+is Hamlet). The Germans are a resolute people--not at all, as has been
+erroneously supposed, a nation of dreamers--just as Hamlet, according to
+recent criticism, was essentially of a resolute character. In the days
+of the Hansa and of the Hohenstaufen the Germans cut a great figure in
+oversea commerce and in war. They were great doers of deeds. The Germans
+are intensely volitional, but also intensely intellectual. Hence the
+native hue of resolution has sometimes been sicklied o'er by too much
+thinking. The intellect of the German refuses to sanction action until
+the successive steps to be taken have been worked out with logical
+accuracy, and a scientific groove, so to speak, has been hollowed out
+along which action can proceed. As soon as this is accomplished, the
+flood of volitional impulse enters gladly into the channel prepared for
+it and moves on in it with irresistible force. Bismarck represents the
+active side, as the eminent philosophers of the German people represent
+the side of logical construction. The two sides must be taken together
+to understand German history and the tendencies prevailing in Germany
+today.
+
+Underneath it all, of course, is German sentiment, but of this we need
+take no account in discussing German discipline, except in so far as
+love for the Fatherland enters in to sustain the patience of the people
+under the burden of their military establishment.
+
+Discipline, or the subordination of the inexpert to the expert, likewise
+accounts for certain peculiarities of the German political parties.
+Prince von Buelow mentions three examples of supremely efficient
+organization--the Prussian Army, the Roman Catholic hierarchy, and the
+German Social Democracy. There are some 4,200 Socialist associations,
+subject to the orders of forty-two district associations, these in turn
+being ruled by the Central Committee. The working of the Social
+Democratic machine is almost flawless. The discipline, it is said, is
+iron.
+
+Again, the conception of Government in Germany, unlike that which
+prevails in England, France, or America, is determined by the idea of
+expertness. The Government is the political expert par excellence. Its
+business is to study the interests of the State as a whole. In all
+matters of economic theory, of finance, of administration, of social
+reform, it invokes the advice of specialists. But it is itself the
+supreme political specialist. It stands high above all the political
+parties. It does not depend for its existence on majorities in
+Parliament. It seeks the co-operation of Parliament, but reserves to
+itself the right of initiative and leadership.
+
+The object of the above remarks is to explain, not to justify, and in
+the face of much uninstructed criticism to point out the deep sources in
+the nature of the German people from which spring the influences that
+have molded their life. The chief objections to their system may be
+summarized in the statements, that it takes too little account of the
+value of the inexpert; that it tends to suppress latent spontaneity;
+and, especially in the sphere of government, that it ascribes to the
+expert a knowledge of the needs of the people such as no ruling class
+can ever possess. And it overlooks the highest aim of political life and
+activity, which is the education of the inexpert to such a point that
+they may become more or less expert in understanding and promoting the
+public weal.
+
+FELIX ADLER.
+
+[Illustration: MAURICE MAETERLINCK. _See Page_ 144]
+
+[Illustration: EMILE BOUTROUX. _(Photo from Bain News Service.) See Page
+160_]
+
+
+
+
+*When Peace Is Seriously Desired*
+
+*By Arnold Bennett.*
+
+*From The Daily News of London.*
+
+
+When peace is seriously desired in any quarter, the questions to be
+discussed by the plenipotentaries will fall into three groups:
+
+1. Those which affect all Europe.
+
+2. Those which chiefly affect Western Europe.
+
+3. Those which chiefly affect Eastern Europe.
+
+The first group is, of course, the most important, both practically and
+sentimentally. And the main question in it is the question of Belgium.
+The original cause of the war was Germany's deliberate and advertised
+bellicosity, and it might be thought that the first aim of peace would
+be by some means to extinguish that bellicosity. But relative values may
+change during the progress of a war, and the question of Belgium--which
+means the question of the sanction of international pledges--now stands
+higher in the general view than the question of disarmament. Germany has
+outraged the public law of Europe, and she has followed up her outrage
+with a series of the most cowardly and wanton crimes. She ought to pay,
+and she ought to apologize. Only by German payment and German apology
+can international law be vindicated. Germany should pay a sum large
+enough to do everything that money can do toward the re-establishment of
+Belgium's well-being. I have no competence to suggest the amount of the
+indemnity. A hundred million pounds does not appear to me too large.
+
+Then the apology. It may be asked: Why an apology? Would not an apology
+be implied in the payment of an indemnity?
+
+It is undeniable that Germany is now directed by hysteric stupidity
+wielding a bludgeon. Granted, if you will, that half the nation is at
+heart against the stupidity and the bludgeon. So much the worse for the
+half. Citizens who have not had the wit to get rid of the Prussian
+franchise law must accept all the consequences of their political
+ineffectiveness. The peacemakers will not be able to divide Germany into
+two halves.
+
+For Potsdam a first-rate spectacular effect is needed, and that effect
+would best be produced by a German national apology carried by a
+diplomatic mission with ceremony to Brussels and published in all German
+official papers, and emphasized by a procession of Belgian troops down
+Unter den Linden. This visible abasement of German arms in front of the
+Socialists of Berlin would be an invaluable aid to the breaking of
+military tyranny in Prussia.
+
+So much for the Belgium question and the sanction of international
+pledges. The other question affecting the whole of Europe is the hope of
+a universal limitation of armaments. But there is a particular question,
+touching France, which in practice would come before that. I mean
+Alsace-Lorraine. Unless Germany conquers Europe, Alsace-Lorraine should
+be restored to France. A profound national sentiment, to which all
+conceivable considerations of expediency or ultimate advantage are
+unimportant, demands imperatively the return of the plunder. And in the
+councils of the Allies, either alone or with German representatives, the
+attitude of French diplomacy would be: "Is it clear about
+Alsace-Lorraine? If so, we may proceed. If not, it's no use going any
+further."
+
+
+*Question of Armaments.*
+
+We now come to armaments. I have seen it suggested that the destruction
+of Essen, Wilhelmshaven, and Heligoland ought to be a condition of peace
+with Germany. Certainly the disappearance of these phenomena would be a
+gain to the world. So would the disappearance of Rosyth and Toulon. It
+seems to me, however, very improbable that their destruction or
+dismantling by international command would occur after hostilities have
+ceased, or could usefully so occur. If the French Army on its way to
+Berlin can treat the Krupp factory as the German Army on its way to
+Paris treated Rheims Cathedral, well and good! In fact, most excellent!
+And if the British Navy can somehow emasculate Wilhelmshaven and
+Heligoland I shall not complain that its behavior has been purely
+doctrinaire. But otherwise I see nothing practical in the
+Essen-Wilhelmshaven-Heligoland suggestion. Nor in the project for
+dethroning the Kaiser and sending him and his eldest son to settle their
+differences in St. Helena! The Kaiser--happily--is not a Napoleon, nor
+has he yet himself accomplished anything big enough or base enough to
+merit Napoleon's fate. Any dethroning that may enliven the gray monotony
+of the post-bellum era at Potsdam should and will be done by the German
+soldiers themselves. Even in international politics it is futile to try
+to meddle in other people's private affairs.
+
+Disarmament in Germany can be achieved by the exercise of one principle,
+and one principle only. That principle is the principle of mutuality. A
+scheme in which every nation will proportionately share should be
+presented to Germany, and she should be respectfully but quite firmly
+asked to participate in it. There would be no sense in saying to
+Germany: "You must disarm." The magic words would be: "We are going to
+disarm, and so are you, whether you want to or not." As to the procedure
+of disarmament--whether it shall be slow or fast, whether it shall
+include destruction or be content with mere omission to renew, how the
+proportions shall be decided, who shall give the signal to begin--here
+are matters which I am without skill or desire to discuss. All I know
+about them is that they are horribly complicated, unprecedentedly
+difficult, and bursting with danger; and that they will strain the
+wisdom, patience, and ingenuity of the negotiators to the very utmost.
+
+
+*Three Vital Points.*
+
+Compared to disarmament, all remaining questions whatsoever affecting
+peace are simple and secondary. Indemnities for France or Russia, or
+both, a Polish Kingdom, a Balkan United States, the precise number of
+nations into which Austria-Hungary is to be shattered, the ownership of
+the east coast of the Adriatic, even the reparation of the infamy by
+which Denmark was robbed of Schleswig-Holstein--what are these but
+favorable ground for the art of compromise? The vital points, at any
+rate for us Westerners, are only three: Belgium, Alsace-Lorraine, and
+disarmament. * * * Stay, there is another. It is vital to Great
+Britain's reputation that she should accept nothing--neither indemnity,
+nor colonies; not a single pound, not a single square mile.
+
+Many persons, I gather, find it hard to believe that Prussia will ever
+admit that she is beaten or consent to her own humiliation. Naturally
+her conduct will depend upon the degree to which she is beaten. She has
+admitted defeat and swallowed the leek before, though it is a long time
+ago. Meanwhile she has forgotten, and her opponents seem to have
+forgotten also, that though her name is Prussia she is subject to the
+limitations of the human race. Out of her prodigious score off little
+Denmark, her thrashing of Austria--a country which never wins a war--and
+her victory over France, there grew a legend that Prussia, and therefore
+Germany, was not as other nations. This legend is contrary to fact.
+Every nation must yield to force--here, indeed, is Germany's
+contribution to our common knowledge.
+
+If in July, 1870, it had been prophesied that France would give up
+Alsace-Lorraine and pay two hundred millions to get rid of a foreign
+army of occupation, France would have protested that she would fight to
+the last man and to the last franc first. But nations don't do these
+things. If Germany won the present war and fulfilled her dream of
+establishing an army in this island, we should yield, and we should
+submit to her terms, we who have never been beaten save by our own
+colonies--that is a scientific certainty. And Germany's terms would not
+be amusing; in their terribleness they would outrun our poor Anglo-Saxon
+imagination. Similarly, if Germany is beaten, she will bow the head, and
+to precisely the extent to which she is walloped. We need not worry
+about that. Were she recalcitrant we need not even murmur in her ear:
+"What would you have extorted if you'd won?" A gesture of the still
+uplifted sword would suffice to convince her that facts are facts.
+
+Assuming that the tide turns not again, the chances of a thorough,
+workmanlike common sense peace can only be imperiled by one thing--the
+deep desire of France and of Belgium for repose and recuperation. We in
+England do not know what war is. We have not lived in hell. Our plains
+have not been devastated, nor our women and children shot, nor our ears
+deafened by the boom of cannon, nor our cathedrals shelled, nor our land
+turned into a vast and bloody hospital; and we have not experienced the
+appalling terror and shame of the foe's absolute dominion in our streets
+and lanes. We have suffered; we shall suffer; but our suffering is
+nought and less than nought weighed against the suffering on the
+Continent. Why, in the midst of a war of unparalleled horror, we grumble
+if a train is late! We can talk calmly of fighting Germany to a
+stand-still, even if the job takes two years, and it behooves us to talk
+so, and to prepare for the task; and for myself I am convinced that we
+could make good the word. But France and Belgium will not use that tone,
+if Russia does. Once the German armies are across the frontiers, the
+instinctive pressure in favor of peace would be enormous, and
+considerations of the distant future, of the welfare of our descendants
+and the progress of mankind, would count little in the scale. In that
+moment, if it happily comes, our part and Russia's would be to sustain
+and encourage and salve the supreme victims of fate. A tremendous factor
+in our favor would be the exhaustion of Germany; and the measure of our
+power and of the fear we inspire is the furious intensity of Germany's
+anger against our inconvenient selves. Without us the war could not last
+beyond the end of this year, and the peace would be unsatisfactory.
+
+And even with us, insisting on our own terms of reconciliation, I do not
+see how it can last over six months more on anything like the present
+scale, for the Kaiser, despite his kinship with Deity, can neither
+create men nor extract gold coins out of an empty hat. Military
+arguments, in Germany as elsewhere, hold good only for a certain period.
+
+
+
+
+*Barrie at Bay: Which Was Brown?*
+
+
+*An Interview on the War.*
+
+*From The New York Times, Oct. 1, 1914.*
+
+
+As our reporter entered Sir James Barrie's hotel room by one door, the
+next door softly closed. "I was alone," writes our reporter. "I sprang
+into the corridor and had just time to see him fling himself down the
+elevator. Then I understood what he had meant when he said on the
+telephone that he would be ready for me at 10:30.
+
+I returned thoughtfully to the room, where I found myself no longer
+alone. Sir James Barrie's "man" was there; a stolid Londoner, name of
+Brown, who told me he was visiting America for the first time.
+
+"Sir James is very sorry, but has been called away," he assured me
+without moving a muscle. Then he added: "But this is the pipe," and he
+placed a pipe of the largest size on the table.
+
+"The pipe he smokes?" I asked.
+
+Brown is evidently a very truthful man, for he hesitated. "That is the
+interview pipe," he explained. "When we decided to come to America, Sir
+James said he would have to be interviewed, and that it would be wise to
+bring something with us for the interviewers to take notice of. So he
+told me to buy the biggest pipe I could find, and he practiced holding
+it in his mouth in his cabin on the way across. He is very pleased with
+the way the gentlemen of the press have taken notice of it."
+
+"So that is not the pipe he really smokes?" I said, perceiving I was on
+the verge of a grand discovery. "I suppose he actually smokes an
+ordinary small pipe."
+
+Again Brown hesitated, but again truth prevailed.
+
+"He does not smoke any pipe," he said, "nor cigars, nor cigarettes; he
+never smokes at all; he just puts that one in his mouth to help the
+interviewers."
+
+"It has the appearance of having been smoked," I pointed out.
+
+"I blackened it for him," the faithful fellow replied.
+
+"But he has written a book in praise of My Lady Nicotine."
+
+"So I have heard," Brown said guardedly. "I think that was when he was
+hard up and had to write what people wanted; but he never could abide
+smoking himself. Years after he wrote the book he read it; he had quite
+forgotten it, and he was so attracted by what it said about the delights
+of tobacco that he tried a cigarette. But it was no good; the mere smell
+disgusted him."
+
+
+*Strange Forgetfulness.*
+
+"Odd that he should forget his own book," I said.
+
+"He forgets them all," said Brown. "There is this Peter Pan foolishness,
+for instance. I have heard people talking to him about that play and
+mentioning parts in it they liked, and he tried to edge them off the
+subject; they think it is his shyness, but I know it is because he has
+forgotten the bits they are speaking about. Before strangers call on him
+I have seen him reading one of his own books hurriedly, so as to be able
+to talk about it if that is their wish. But he gets mixed up, and thinks
+that the little minister was married to Wendy."
+
+"Almost looks as if he hadn't written his own works," I said.
+
+"Almost," Brown admitted uncomfortably.
+
+I asked a leading question. "You don't suppose," I said, "that any one
+writes them for him? Such things have been. You don't write them for him
+by any chance, just as you blackened the pipe, you know?"
+
+Brown assured me stolidly that he did not. Suddenly, whether to get away
+from a troublesome subject I cannot say, he vouchsafed me a startling
+piece of information. "The German Kaiser was on our boat coming across,"
+he said.
+
+"Sure?" I asked, wetting my pencil.
+
+He told me he had Sir James's word for it. There was on board, it seems,
+a very small, shrunken gentleman with a pronounced waist and tiny,
+turned-up mustache, who strutted along the deck trying to look fierce
+and got in the other passengers' way to their annoyance until Sir James
+discovered that he was the Kaiser Reduced to Life Size. After that Sir
+James liked to sit with him and talk to him.
+
+Sir James is a great admirer of the Kaiser, though he has not, like Mr.
+Carnegie, had the pleasure of meeting him in society. When he read in
+the papers on arriving here that the Kaiser had wept over the
+destruction of Louvain, he told Brown a story. It was of a friend who
+had gone to an oculist to be cured of some disease in one eye. Years
+afterward he heard that the oculist's son had been killed in some Indian
+war, and he called on the oculist to commiserate with him.
+
+"You cured my eye," he said to him, "and when I read of your loss I wept
+for you, Sir; I wept for you with that eye."
+
+"Sir James," Brown explained, "is of a very sympathetic nature, and he
+wondered which eye it was that the Kaiser wept with."
+
+I asked Brown what his own views were about the war, and before replying
+he pulled a paper from his pocket and scanned it. "We are strictly
+neutral," he then replied.
+
+"Is that what is written on the paper?" I asked. He admitted that Sir
+James had written out for him the correct replies to possible questions.
+"Why was he neutral?" I asked, and he again found the reply on the piece
+of paper: "Because it is the President's wish."
+
+
+*Brown Must Be Neutral.*
+
+So anxious, I discovered, is Sir James to follow the President's bidding
+that he has enjoined Brown to be neutral on all other subjects besides
+the war; to express no preference on matters of food, for instance, and
+always to eat oysters and clams alternately, so that there can be no
+ill-feeling. Also to walk in the middle of the streets lest he should
+seem to be favoring either sidewalk, and to be very cautious about
+admitting that one building in New York is higher than another. I
+assured him that the Woolworth Building was the highest, but he replied
+politely, "that he was sure the President would prefer him to remain
+neutral." I naturally asked if Sir James had given him any further
+instructions as to proper behavior in America, and it seems that he had
+done so. They amount, I gather, to this, that Americans have a sense of
+humor which they employ, when they can, to the visitor's undoing.
+
+"When we reach New York," Sir James seems to have told Brown in effect,
+"we shall be met by reporters who will pretend that America is eager to
+be instructed by us as to the causes and progress of the war; then, if
+we are fools enough to think that America cannot make up its mind for
+itself, we shall fall into the trap and preach to them, and all the time
+they are taking down our observations they will be saying to themselves,
+'Pompous asses.'
+
+"It is a sort of game between us and the reporters. Our aim is to make
+them think we are bigger than we are, and theirs is to make us smaller
+than we are; and any chance we have of succeeding is to hold our
+tongues, while they will probably succeed if they make us jabber. Above
+all, oh, Brown, if you write to the papers giving your views of why we
+are at war--and if you don't you will be the only person who
+hasn't--don't be lured into slinging vulgar abuse at our opponents, lest
+America takes you for another university professor."
+
+There is, I learned, only one person in America about whom it is
+impossible, even in Sir James's opinion, to preserve a neutral attitude.
+This is the German Ambassador, whose splendid work for England day by
+day and in every paper and to all reporters cannot, Sir James thinks, be
+too cordially recognized. Brown has been told to look upon the German
+Ambasador as England's greatest asset in America just now, and to hope
+heartily that he will be long spared to carry on his admirable work.
+
+Lastly, it was pleasant to find that Brown has not a spark of sympathy
+with those who say that, because Germany has destroyed art treasures in
+Belgium and France, the Allies should retaliate with similar rudeness if
+they reach Berlin. He holds that if for any reason best known to
+themselves (such as the wish for a sunnier location) the Hohenzollerns
+should by and by vacate their present residence, a nice villa should be
+provided for them, and that all the ancestral statues in the
+Sieges-Allee should be conveyed to it intact, and perhaps put up in the
+back garden. There the Junkers could drop in of an evening, on their way
+home from their offices, and chat pleasantly of old times. Brown thinks
+they should be allowed to retain all their iron crosses, and even given
+some more, with which, after smart use of their pocket combs, they would
+cut no end of a dash among the nursemaids.
+
+As for the pipe, I was informed that it had now done its work, and I
+could take it away as a keepsake. I took it, but wondered afterward at
+Brown's thinking he had the right to give it me.
+
+A disquieting feeling has since come over me that perhaps it was Sir
+James I had been interviewing all the time, and Brown who had escaped
+down the elevator.
+
+
+
+
+*A "Credo" for Keeping Faith*
+
+*By John Galsworthy.*
+
+
+I believe in peace with all my heart. I believe that war is outrage--a
+black stain on the humanity and the fame of man. I hate militarism and
+the god of force. I would go any length to avoid war for material
+interests, war that involved no principles, distrusting profoundly the
+common meaning of the phrase "national honor."
+
+But I believe there is a national honor charged with the future
+happiness of man, that loyalty is due from those living to those that
+will come after; that civilization can only wax and flourish in a world
+where faith is kept; that for nations, as for individuals, there are
+laws of duty, whose violation harms the whole human race; in sum, that
+stars of conduct shine for peoples, as for private men.
+
+And so I hold that without tarnishing true honor, endangering
+civilization present and to come, and ruining all hope of future
+tranquillity, my country could not have refused to take up arms for the
+defense of Belgium's outraged neutrality, solemnly guaranteed by herself
+and France.
+
+I believe, and claim in proof, the trend of events and of national
+character during the last century, that in democracy alone lies any
+coherent hope of progressive civilization or any chance of lasting peace
+in Europe, or the world.
+
+I believe that this democratic principle, however imperfectly developed,
+has so worked in France, in England, in the United States, that these
+countries are already nearly safe from inclination to aggress, or to
+subdue other nationalities.
+
+And I believe that while there remain autocratic Governments basing
+themselves on militarism, bitterly hostile to the democratic principle,
+Europe will never be free of the surcharge of swollen armaments, the
+nightmare menace of wars like this--the paralysis that creeps on
+civilizations which adore the god of force.
+
+And so I hold that, without betrayal of trusteeship, without shirking
+the elementary defense of beliefs coiled within its fibre, or beliefs
+vital to the future welfare of all men, my country could not stand by
+and see the triumph of autocratic militarism over France, that very
+cradle of democracy.
+
+I believe that democratic culture spreads from west to east, that only
+by maintenance of consolidate democracy in Western Europe can democracy
+ever hope to push on and prevail till the Eastern powers have also that
+ideal under which alone humanity can flourish.
+
+And so I hold that my country is justified at this juncture in its
+alliance with the autocratic power of Russia, whose people will never
+know freedom till her borders are joined to the borders of democracy.
+
+I do not believe that jealous, frightened jingoism has ever been more
+than the dirty fringe of England's peace-loving temper, and I profess my
+sacred faith that my country has gone to war at last, not from fear, not
+from hope of aggrandizement, but because she must--for honor, for
+democracy, and for the future of mankind.
+
+
+
+
+*Hard Blows, Not Hard Words*
+
+*By Jerome K. Jerome.*
+
+*From The London Daily News.*
+
+
+In one of Shaw's plays--I think it is "Superman"--one of the characters
+hints, toward the end of the last act, that the hero is a gentleman
+somewhat prone to talking. The hero admits it, but excuses himself on
+the ground that it is the only way he knows of explaining his opinions.
+
+Times of stress and struggle, whether individual or national, afford men
+and women other methods of expressing their views, and a large number of
+our citizens are, very creditably, taking the present opportunity to act
+instead of shout. There are the young fellows who in their thousands are
+pressing around the door of the recruiting offices. They are throwing
+up, many of them, good jobs for the privilege of drilling for the next
+six months for eight hours a day. Their reward will be certain hardship,
+their share of sickness and wounds, the probability of lying ten deep in
+a forgotten grave, their chance of glory a name printed in small type
+among a thousand others on a War Office report.
+
+There are the mothers and wives and children who are encouraging them to
+go; to whom their going means semi-starvation. The old, bent crones
+whose feeble hands will have to grasp again the hoe and the scrubbing
+brush. The young women who know only too well what is before them--the
+selling of the home just got together; first the easy chair and the
+mirror, and then the bed and the mattress; the weary tramping of the
+streets, looking for work. The children awestruck and wondering.
+
+There are the men who are quietly going on with their work, doing their
+best with straitened means to keep their business going; giving
+employment; getting ready to meet the income tax collector, who next
+year one is inclined to expect will be demanding anything from half a
+crown to five shillings in the pound. There are others. But there is a
+certain noisy and, to me, particularly offensive man (and with him, I am
+sorry to say, one or two women) very much to the fore just now with
+whose services the country could very well dispense. He is the man who
+does his fighting with his mouth. Unable for reasons of his own to get
+at the foe in the field, he thirsts for the blood of the unfortunate
+unarmed and helpless Germans that the fortunes of war have left stranded
+in England. He writes to the paper thoughtfully suggesting plans that
+have occurred to him for making their existence more miserable than it
+must be. He generally concludes his letter with a short homily directed
+against the Prussian Military Staff for their lack of the higher
+Christian principles.
+
+He has spies on the brain. Two quite harmless English citizens have
+already been shot in consequence of the funk this spy mania has created
+among us. The vast majority of Germans in England have come to live in
+England because they dislike Germany. That a certain number of spies are
+among us I take to be highly probable. I take it that if the Allies know
+their business a certain number of English spies are doing what they can
+for us at great personal risk to themselves in Germany. Until the German
+Army has landed on our shores German spies can do little or no harm to
+us. The police can be trusted to know something about them, and if any
+are caught red-handed the rules of war are not likely to be strained for
+their benefit.
+
+
+*A Story from the South.*
+
+From a small town in the South of England comes a story I can vouch for.
+A couple of Boy Scouts had been set to guard the local reservoir. About
+noon one sunny day they remarked the approach, somewhat ostentatious, of
+a desperate-looking character. Undoubtedly a German spy! What can he be
+up to! The boys approached him and he fled, leaving behind him the
+damning evidence--a tin suggestive of sardines and labeled "Poison!"
+That the gentleman should have chosen broad daylight for his nefarious
+design, should have been careful to label his tin, seemed to the good
+townsfolk under present scare conditions proof that they had at last
+discovered the real German spy, full of his devilish cunning. The tin
+was taken possession of by the police. And then the Sergeant's little
+daughter, who happened to have had a few lessons in French, suggested
+that the word on the tin was "Poisson," and the town now breathes again.
+
+So long as the war continues the spy will be among us. I suggest that we
+face the problem of his activities without blue funk and hysteria. The
+men and women who are shrieking for vicarious vengeance upon all the
+Germans remaining in our midst must remember that there are thousands of
+English families at the present moment residing in Germany and Austria.
+The majority of them, comparatively poor people, with all their
+belongings around them, were unable to get away. I shall, until I
+receive convincing proof to the contrary, continue to believe that they
+are living among their German neighbors unmolested. Even were it not so,
+I would suggest our setting the example of humanity rather than our
+slavishly following an example of barbarity.
+
+We are fighting for an idea--an idea of some importance to the
+generations that will come after us. We are fighting to teach the
+Prussian Military Staff that other laws have come to stay--laws
+superseding those of Attila the Hun. We are fighting to teach the German
+people that, free men with brains to think with, they have no right to
+hand themselves over body and soul to their rulers to be used as mere
+devil's instruments; that if they do so they shall pay the penalty, and
+the punishment shall go hard. We are fighting to teach the German Nation
+respect for God! Our weapons have got to be hard blows, not hard words.
+We are tearing at each other's throats; it has got to be done. It is not
+a time for yelping.
+
+Jack Johnson as a boxer I respect. The thing I do not like about him is
+his habit of gibing and jeering at his opponent while he is fighting
+him. It isn't gentlemanly, and it isn't sporting. The soldiers are
+fighting in grim silence. When one of them does talk, it is generally to
+express admiration of German bravery. It is our valiant stay-at-homes,
+our valiant clamorers for everybody else to enlist but themselves, who
+would have us fight like some drunken fish hag, shrieking and spitting
+while she claws.
+
+
+*Incredible Reports of Atrocities.*
+
+Half of these stories of atrocities I do not believe. I remember when I
+was living in Germany at the time of the Boer war the German papers were
+full of accounts of Tommy Atkins's brutality. He spent his leisure time
+in tossing babies on bayonets. There were photographs of him doing it.
+Detailed accounts certified by most creditable witnesses. Such lies are
+the stock in trade of every tenth-rate journalist, who, careful not to
+expose himself to danger, slinks about the byways collecting hearsay. In
+every war each side, according to the other, is supposed to take a
+fiendish pleasure in firing upon hospitals--containing always a
+proportion of their own wounded. An account comes to us from a
+correspondent with the Belgian Army. He tells us that toward the end of
+the day a regrettable incident occurred. The Germans were taking off
+their wounded in motor cars. The Belgian sharpshooters, not noticing the
+red flag in the dusk, kept up a running fire, and a large number of the
+wounded were killed. Had the incident been the other way about it would
+have been cited as a deliberate piece of villainy on the part of the
+Germans. According to other accounts, the Germans always go into action
+with screens of women and children before them. The explanation, of
+course, is that a few poor terrified creatures are rushing along the
+road. They get between the approaching forces, and I expect the bullets
+that put them out of their misery come pretty even from both sides.
+
+The men are mad. Mad with fear, mad with hate, blinded by excitement.
+Take a mere dog fight. If you interfere you have got to be prepared for
+your own dog turning upon you. In war half the time the men do not know
+what they are doing. They are little else than wild beasts. There was
+great indignation at the dropping of bombs into Antwerp. One now hears
+that a French dirigible has been dropping bombs into Luxembourg--a much
+more dignified retort. War is a grim game. Able editors and club-chair
+politicians have been clamoring for it for years past. They thought it
+was all goose-step and bands.
+
+The truth is bad enough, God knows. There is no sense in making things
+out worse than they are. When this war is over we have got to forget it.
+To build up barriers of hatred that shall stand between our children and
+our foemen's children is a crime against the future.
+
+These stories of German naval officers firing on their wounded sailors
+in the water! They are an insult to our intelligence. At Louvain fifty
+of the inhabitants were taken out and shot. On Monday the fifty had
+grown to five hundred; both numbers vouched for by eye-witnesses,
+"Dutchmen who would have had no interest," &c. That the beautiful old
+town has been laid in ashes is undoubted. Some criminal lunatic
+strutting in pipeclay and mustachios was given his hour of authority and
+took the chance of his life. If I know anything of the German people it
+will go hard with him when the war is over, if he has not had the sense
+to get killed. But that won't rear again the grand old stones or wipe
+from Germany's honor the stain of that long line of murdered men and
+women--whatever its actual length may have been. War puts a premium on
+brutality and senselessness. Men with the intelligence and instincts of
+an ape suddenly find themselves possessed of the powers of a god. And we
+are astonished that they do not display the wisdom of a god!
+
+There are other stories that have filtered through to us. There was a
+dying Uhlan who caught a child to his arms and kissed him. One would
+like to be able to kiss one's own child before one dies, but failing
+that--well, after all, there is a sort of family likeness between them.
+The same deep wondering eyes, the same--and then the mist grows deeper.
+Perhaps after all it was Baby Fritz that he kissed.
+
+And of a Belgian woman. She had seen her two sons killed before her
+eyes. She tells of that and of other horrors. Among such, of the German
+lads she had stepped over, their blue eyes quiet in death. The passion
+and the fear and the hate cleansed out of them. Just boys with their
+clothes torn--so like boys.
+
+"They, too, have got mothers, poor lads!" is all she says, thinking of
+them lying side by side with her own.
+
+When the madness and the folly are over, when the tender green is
+creeping in and out among the blackened ruins, it will be well for us to
+think of that dying Uhlan who had to put up with a French baby instead
+of his own; of that Belgian mother to whom the German youngsters were
+just "poor lads"--with their clothes torn.
+
+And the savagery and the cruelty and the guiltiness that go to the
+making of war we will seek to forget.
+
+
+
+
+*"As They Tested Our Fathers"*
+
+*By Rudyard Kipling.*
+
+ _Following is the text of an address by Mr. Kipling to a mass
+ meeting at Brighton, Sept. 8, 1914:_
+
+
+Through no fault nor wish of ours we are at war with Germany, the power
+which owes its existence to three well-thought-out wars; the power which
+for the last twenty years has devoted itself to organizing and preparing
+for this war; the power which is now fighting to conquer the civilized
+world.
+
+For the last two generations the Germans in their books, teachers,
+speeches, and schools have been carefully taught that nothing less than
+this world conquest was the object of their preparations and their
+sacrifices. They have prepared carefully and sacrificed greatly.
+
+We must have men, and men, and men, if we with our allies are to check
+the onrush of organized barbarism.
+
+Have no illusions. We are dealing with a strong and magnificently
+equipped enemy, whose avowed aim is our complete destruction.
+
+The violation of Belgium, the attack on France, and the defense against
+Russia are only steps by the way. The Germans' real objective, as she
+has always told us, is England and England's wealth, trade, and
+worldwide possessions.
+
+If you assume for an instant that that attack will be successful,
+England will not be reduced, as some people say, to the rank of a
+second-rate power, but we shall cease to exist as a nation. We shall
+become an outlying province of Germany, to be administered with what
+severity German safety and interest require.
+
+We arm against such a fate. We enter into a new life in which all the
+facts of war that we had put behind or forgotten for the past hundred
+years have returned to the front and test us as they tested our fathers.
+It will be a long and a hard road, beset with difficulties and
+discouragements, but we tread it together and we will tread it together
+to the end.
+
+Our petty social divisions and barriers have been swept away at the
+outset of our mighty struggle. All the interests of our life of six
+weeks ago are dead. We have but one interest now, and that touches the
+naked heart of every man in this island and in the empire.
+
+If we are to win the right for ourselves and for freedom to exist on
+earth, every man must offer himself for that service and that sacrifice.
+
+
+
+
+*Kipling and "The Truce of the Bear"*
+
+ _STAUNTON, Va., Sept. 25, 1914.--On Sept. 5 The Staunton News
+ printed some verses by Dr. Charles Minor Blackford, an associate
+ editor, addressed to Rudyard Kipling, calling attention to the
+ apparent inconsistency of his attitude of distrust of Russia as
+ shown in his well-known poem, "The Truce of the Bear," and his
+ present advocacy of the alliance between Russia and Great Britain.
+ A copy of the verses was sent to Mr. Kipling and the following
+ reply was received from him:_
+
+Bateman's Burwash, Sussex.
+
+Dear Sir: I am much obliged for your verses of Sept. 4. "The Truce of
+the Bear," to which they refer, was written sixteen years ago, in 1898.
+It dealt with a situation and a menace which have long since passed
+away, and with issues that are now quite dead.
+
+The present situation, as far as England is concerned, is Germany's
+deliberate disregard of the neutrality of Belgium, whose integrity
+Germany as well as England guaranteed. She has filled Belgium with every
+sort of horror and atrocity, not in the heat of passion, but as a part
+of settled policy of terrorism. Her avowed object is the conquest of
+Europe on these lines.
+
+As you may prove for yourself if you will consult her literature of the
+last generation, Germany is the present menace, not to Europe alone, but
+to the whole civilized world. If Germany, by any means, is victorious
+you may rest assured that it will be a very short time before she turns
+her attention to the United States. If you could meet the refugees from
+Belgium flocking into England and have the opportunity of checking their
+statements of unimaginable atrocities and barbarities studiously
+committed, you would, I am sure, think as seriously on these matters as
+we do, and in your unpreparedness for modern war you would do well to
+think very seriously indeed. Yours truly,
+
+RUDYARD KIPLING.
+
+
+
+
+*On the Impending Crisis*
+
+*By Norman Angell.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The London Times:_
+
+Sir: A nation's first duty is to its own people. We are asked to
+intervene in the Continental war because unless we do so we shall be
+"isolated." The isolation which will result for us if we keep out of
+this war is that, while other nations are torn and weakened by war, we
+shall not be, and by that fact might conceivably for a long time be the
+strongest power in Europe, and, by virtue of our strength and isolation,
+its arbiter, perhaps, to useful ends.
+
+We are told that if we allow Germany to become victorious she would be
+so powerful as to threaten our existence by the occupation of Belgium,
+Holland, and possibly the North of France. But, as your article of
+today's date so well points out, it was the difficulty which Germany
+found in Alsace-Lorraine which prevented her from acting against us
+during the South African War. If one province, so largely German in its
+origin and history, could create this embarrassment, what trouble will
+not Germany pile up for herself if she should attempt the absorption of
+a Belgium, a Holland, and a Normandy? She would have created for herself
+embarrassments compared with which Alsace and Poland would be a trifle;
+and Russia, with her 160,000,000, would in a year or two be as great a
+menace to her as ever.
+
+The object and effect of our entering into this war would be to insure
+the victory of Russia and her Slavonic allies. Will a dominant Slavonic
+federation of, say, 200,000,000 autocratically governed people, with a
+very rudimentary civilization, but heavily equipped for military
+aggression, be a less dangerous factor in Europe than a dominant Germany
+of 65,000,000 highly civilized and mainly given to the arts of trade and
+commerce?
+
+The last war we fought on the Continent was for the purpose of
+preventing the growth of Russia. We are now asked to fight one for the
+purpose of promoting it. It is now universally admitted that our last
+Continental war--the Crimean war--was a monstrous error and
+miscalculation. Would this intervention be any wiser or likely to be
+better in its results?
+
+On several occasions Sir Edward Grey has solemnly declared that we are
+not bound by any agreement to support France, and there is certainly no
+moral obligation on the part of the English people so to do. We can best
+serve civilization, Europe--including France--and ourselves by remaining
+the one power in Europe that has not yielded to the war madness.
+
+This, I believe, will be found to be the firm conviction of the
+overwhelming majority of the English people.
+
+Yours faithfully,
+
+NORMAN ANGELL.
+
+4 Kings Bench Walk, Temple, E.C., July 31.
+
+
+
+
+*Why England Came To Be In It*
+
+*By Gilbert K. Chesterton.*
+
+
+*I.*
+
+
+Unless we are all mad, there is at the back of the most bewildering
+business a story; and if we are all mad, there is no such thing as
+madness. If I set a house on fire, it is quite true that I may
+illuminate many other people's weaknesses as well as my own. It may be
+that the master of the house was burned because he was drunk; it may be
+that the mistress of the house was burned because she was stingy, and
+perished arguing about the expense of the fire-escape. It is,
+nevertheless, broadly true that they both were burned because I set fire
+to their house. That is the story of the thing. The mere facts of the
+story about the present European conflagration are quite as easy to
+tell.
+
+Before we go on to the deeper things which make this war the most
+sincere war of human history, it is easy to answer the question of why
+England came to be in it at all; as one asks how a man fell down a coal
+hole, or failed to keep an appointment. Facts are not the whole truth.
+But facts are facts, and in this case the facts are few and simple.
+
+Prussia, France, and England had all promised not to invade Belgium,
+because it was the safest way of invading France. But Prussia promised
+that if she might break in through her own broken promise and ours she
+would break in and not steal. In other words, we were offered at the
+same instant a promise of faith in the future and a proposal of perjury
+in the present.
+
+Those interested in human origins may refer to an old Victorian writer
+of English, who in the last and most restrained of his historical essays
+wrote of Frederick the Great, the founder of this unchanging Prussian
+policy. After describing how Frederick broke the guarantee he had signed
+on behalf of Maria Theresa he then describes how Frederick sought to put
+things straight by a promise that was an insult. "If she would but let
+him have Silesia, he would, he said, stand by her against any power
+which should try to deprive her of her other dominions; as if he was not
+already bound to stand by her, or as if his new promise could be of more
+value than the old one." That passage was written by Macaulay; but so
+far as the mere contemporary facts are concerned, it might have been
+written by me.
+
+
+*Diplomacy That Might Have Been.*
+
+Upon the immediate logical and legal origin of the English interest
+there can be no rational debate. There are some things so simple that
+one can almost prove them with plans and diagrams, as in Euclid. One
+could make a kind of comic calendar of what would have happened to the
+English diplomatist if he had been silenced every time by Prussian
+diplomacy. Suppose we arrange it in the form of a kind of diary:
+
+ July 24--Germany invades Belgium.
+
+ July 25--England declares war.
+
+ July 26--Germany promises not to annex Belgium.
+
+ July 27--England withdraws from the war.
+
+ July 28--Germany annexes Belgium. England declares war.
+
+ July 29--Germany promises not to annex France. England withdraws
+ from the war.
+
+ July 30--Germany annexes France. England declares war.
+
+ July 31--Germany promises not to annex England.
+
+ Aug. 1--England withdraws from the war. Germany invades England.
+
+How long is anybody expected to go on with that sort of game, or keep
+peace at that illimitable price? How long must we pursue a road in which
+promises are all fetiches in front of us and all fragments behind us?
+No; upon the cold facts of the final negotiations, as told by any of the
+diplomatists in any of the documents, there is no doubt about the story.
+And no doubt about the villain of the story.
+
+These are the last facts, the facts which involved England. It is
+equally easy to state the first facts--the facts which involved Europe.
+The Prince who practically ruled Austria was shot by certain persons
+whom the Austrian Government believed to be conspirators from Servia.
+The. Austrian Government piled up arms and armies, but said not a word
+either to Servia, their suspect, or Italy, their ally. From the
+documents it would seem that Austria kept everybody in the dark, except
+Prussia. It is probably nearer the truth to say that Prussia kept
+everybody in the dark, including Austria.
+
+
+*The Demands on Servia.*
+
+But all that is what is called opinion, belief, conviction, or common
+sense, and we are not dealing with it here. The objective fact is that
+Austria told Servia to permit Servian officers to be suspended by the
+authority of Austrian officers, and told Servia to submit to this within
+forty-eight hours. In other words, the Sovereign of Servia was
+practically told to take off not only the laurels of two great
+campaigns, but his own lawful and national crown, and to do it in a time
+in which no respectable citizen is expected to discharge a hotel bill.
+Servia asked for time for arbitration--in short, for peace. But Russia
+had already begun to mobilize, and Prussia, presuming that Servia might
+thus be rescued, declared war.
+
+
+Between these two ends of fact, the ultimatum to Servia, the ultimatum
+to Belgium, any one so inclined can, of course, talk as if everything
+were relative. If any one asks why the Czar should rush to the support
+of Servia, it is easy to ask why the Kaiser should rush to the support
+of Austria. If any one say that that the French would attack the
+Germans, it is sufficient to answer that the Germans did attack the
+French.
+
+There remain, however, two attitudes to consider, even perhaps two
+arguments to counter, which can best be considered and countered under
+this general head of facts. First of all, there is a curious, cloudy
+sort of argument, much affected by the professional rhetoricans of
+Prussia, who are sent out to instruct and correct the minds of Americans
+or Scandinavians. It consists of going into convulsions of incredulity
+and scorn at the mention of Russia's responsibility for Servia or
+England's responsibility for Belgium; and suggesting that, treaty or no
+treaty, frontier or no frontier, Russia would be out to slay Teutons or
+England to steal colonies.
+
+
+*England Kept Her Contracts.*
+
+Here, as elsewhere, I think the professors dotted all over the Baltic
+plain fail in lucidity and in the power of distinguishing ideas. Of
+course, it is quite true that England has material interests to defend,
+and will probably use the opportunity to defend them; or, in other
+words, of course England, like everybody else, would be more comfortable
+if Prussia were less predominant. The fact remains that we did not do
+what the Germans did. We did not invade Holland to seize a naval and
+commercial advantage; and whether they say that we wished to do it in
+our greed or feared to do it in our cowardice, the fact remains that we
+did not do it. Unless this common sense principle be kept in view, I
+cannot conceive how any quarrel can possibly be judged. A contract may
+be made between two persons solely for material advantages on each side;
+but the moral advantage is still generally supposed to lie with the
+person who keeps the contract. Surely, it cannot be dishonest to be
+honest--even if honesty is the best policy. Imagine the most complex
+maze of indirect motives, and still the man who keeps faith for money
+cannot possibly be worse than the man who breaks faith for money.
+
+It will be noted that this ultimate test applies in the same way to
+Servia as to Belgium and Britain. The Servians may not be a very
+peaceful people; but on the occasion under discussion it was certainly
+they who wanted peace. You may choose to think the Serb a sort of a born
+robber; but on this occasion it was certainly the Austrian who was
+trying to rob. Similarly, you may call England perfidious as a sort of
+historical summary, and declare your private belief that Mr. Asquith was
+vowed from infancy to the ruin of the German Empire--a Hannibal and
+hater of the eagles. But when all is said, it is nonsense to call a man
+perfidious because he keeps his promise. It is absurd to complain of the
+sudden treachery of a business man in turning up punctually to his
+appointment, or the unfair shock given to a creditor by the debtor
+paying his debts. Lastly, there is an attitude not unknown in the crisis
+against which I should particularly like to protest. I should address my
+protest especially to those lovers and pursuers of peace who, very
+shortsightedly, have occasionally adopted it. I mean the attitude which
+is impatient of these preliminary details about who did this or that and
+whether it was right or wrong. They are satisfied with saying that an
+enormous calamity called war has been begun by some or all of us, and
+should be ended by some or all of us. To these people this preliminary
+chapter about the precise happenings must appear not only dry (and it
+must of necessity be the dryest part of the task), but essentially
+needless and barren. I wish to tell these people that they are wrong;
+that they are wrong upon all principles of human justice and historic
+continuity; but that they are especially and supremely wrong upon their
+own principles of arbitration and international peace.
+
+
+*As to Certain Peace Lovers.*
+
+These sincere and high-minded peace lovers are always telling us that
+citizens no longer settle their quarrels by private violence, and that
+nations should no longer settle theirs by public violence. They are
+always telling us that we no longer fight duels, and need no longer wage
+wars. In short, they perpetually base their peace proposals on the fact
+that an ordinary citizen no longer avenges himself with an axe.
+
+But how is he prevented from avenging himself with an axe? If he hits
+his neighbor on the head with the kitchen chopper what do we do? Do we
+all join hands, like children playing mulberry bush, and say: "We are
+all responsible for this, but let us hope it will not spread. Let us
+hope for the happy, happy day when he shall leave off chopping at the
+man's head, and when nobody shall ever chop anything forever and ever."
+Do we say: "Let bygones be bygones. Why go back to all the dull details
+with which the business began? Who can tell with what sinister motives
+the man was standing there within reach of the hatchet?"
+
+We do not. We keep the peace in private life by asking for the facts of
+provocation and the proper object of punishment. We do not go into the
+dull details; we do inquire into the origins; we do emphatically inquire
+who it was that hit first. In short, we do what I have done very briefly
+in this place.
+
+Given this, it is indeed true that behind these facts there are
+truths--truths of a terrible, of a spiritual sort. In mere fact the
+Germanic power has been wrong about Servia, wrong about Russia, wrong
+about Belgium, wrong about England, wrong about Italy. But there was a
+reason for its being wrong everywhere, and of that root reason, which
+has moved half the world against it, I shall speak later in this series.
+For that is something too omnipresent to be proved, too indisputable to
+be helped by detail. It is nothing less than the locating, after more
+than a hundred years of recriminations and wrong explanations, of the
+modern European evil--the finding of the fountain from which poison has
+flowed upon all the nations of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+*II.*
+
+*Russian or Prussian Barbarism?*
+
+
+It will hardly be denied that there is one lingering doubt in many who
+recognize unavoidable self-defense in the instant parry of the English
+sword and who have no great love for the sweeping sabre of Sadowa and
+Sedan. That doubt is the doubt of whether Russia, as compared with
+Prussia, is sufficiently decent and democratic to be the ally of liberal
+and civilized powers. I take first, therefore, this matter of
+civilization.
+
+It is vital in a discussion like this that we should make sure we are
+going by meanings and not by mere words. It is not necessary in any
+argument to settle what a word means or ought to mean. But it is
+necessary in every argument to settle what we propose to mean by the
+word. So long as our opponent understands what is the thing of which we
+are talking, it does not matter to the argument whether the word is or
+is not the one he would have chosen. A soldier does not say, "We were
+ordered to go to Mechlin, but I would rather go to Malines." He may
+discuss the etymology and archaeology of the difference on the march,
+but the point is that he knows where to go. So long as we know what a
+given word is to mean in a given discussion, it does not even matter if
+it means something else in some other and quite distinct discussion. We
+have a perfect right to say that the width of a window comes to four
+feet, even if we instantly and cheerfully change the subject to the
+larger mammals and say that an elephant has four feet. The identity of
+the words does not matter, because there is no doubt at all about the
+meanings, because nobody is likely to think of an elephant as four feet
+long, or of a window as having tusks and a curly trunk.
+
+
+*Two Meanings of "Barbarian."*
+
+It is essential to emphasize this consciousness of the thing under
+discussion in connection with two or three words that are, as it were,
+the keywords of this war. One of them is the word "barbarian." The
+Prussians apply it to the Russians, the Russians apply it to the
+Prussians. Both, I think, really mean something that really exists, name
+or no name. Both mean different things. And if we ask what these
+different things are we shall understand why England and France prefer
+Russia, and consider Prussia the really dangerous barbarian of the two.
+
+To begin with, it goes so much deeper even than atrocities; of which, in
+the past, at least, all the three empires of Central Europe have
+partaken pretty equally; as they partook of Poland. An English writer,
+seeking to avert the war by warnings against Russian influence, said
+that the flogged backs of Polish women stood between us and the
+Alliance. But not long before the flogging of women by an Austrian
+General led to that officer being thrashed in the streets of London by
+Barclay and Perkins draymen. And as for the third power, the Prussians,
+it seems clear that they have treated Belgian women in a style compared
+with which flogging might be called an official formality.
+
+But, as I say, something much deeper than any such recrimination lies
+behind the use of the word on either side. When the German Emperor
+complains of our allying ourselves with a barbaric and half Oriental
+power, he is not (I assure you) shedding tears over the grave of
+Kosciusko. And when I say (as I do most heartily) that the German
+Emperor is a barbarian, I am not merely expressing any prejudices I may
+have against the profanation of churches or of children. My countrymen
+and I mean a certain and intelligible thing when we call the Prussians
+barbarians. It is quite different from the thing attributed to Russians;
+and it could not possibly be attributed to Russians. It is very
+important that the neutral world should understand what this thing is.
+
+If the German calls the Russian barbarous, he presumably means
+imperfectly civilized. There is a certain path along which Western
+nations have proceeded in recent times; and it is tenable that Russia
+has not proceeded so far as the others; that she has less of the special
+modern system in science, commerce, machinery, travel, or political
+constitution. The Russ plows with an old plow; he wears a wild beard; he
+adores relics; his life is as rude and hard as that of a subject of
+Alfred the Great. Therefore, he is, in the German sense, a barbarian.
+Poor fellows, like Gorky and Dostoieffsky, have to form their own
+reflections on the scenery, without the assistance of large quotations
+from Schiller on garden seats; or inscriptions directing them to pause
+and thank the All-Father for the finest view in Hesse-Pumpernickel. The
+Russians, having nothing but their faith, their fields, their great
+courage, and their self-governing communes, are quite cut off from what
+is called (in the fashionable street in Frankfort) the true, the
+beautiful, and the good. There is a real sense in which one can call
+such backwardness barbaric, by comparison with the Kaiserstrasse; and in
+that sense it is true of Russia.
+
+Now we, the French and English, do not mean this when we call the
+Prussians barbarians. If their cities soared higher than their flying
+ships, if their trains traveled faster than their bullets, we should
+still call them barbarians. We should know exactly what we meant by it;
+and we should know that it is true. For we do not mean anything that is
+an imperfect civilization by accident. We mean something that is the
+enemy of civilization by design. We mean something that is willfully at
+war with the principles by which human society has been made possible
+hitherto. Of course, it must be partly civilized even to destroy
+civilization. Such ruin could not be wrought by the savages that are
+merely undeveloped or inert. You could not have even Huns without horses
+or horses without horsemanship. You could not have even Danish pirates
+without ships, or ships without seamanship.
+
+
+*The "Positive Barbarian."*
+
+This person, whom I may call the positive barbarian, must be rather more
+superficially up to date than what I may call the negative barbarian.
+Alaric was an officer in the Roman legions, but for all that he
+destroyed Rome. Nobody supposes that Eskimos could have done it at all
+neatly. But (in our meaning) barbarism is not a matter of methods but of
+aims. We say that these veneered vandals have the perfectly serious aim
+of destroying certain ideas which, as they think, the world has
+outgrown; without which, as we think, the world will die.
+
+It is essential that this perilous peculiarity in the Pruss, or positive
+barbarian, should be seized. He has what he fancies is a new idea, and
+he is going to apply it to everybody. As a fact, it is simply a false
+generalization, but he is really trying to make it general. This does
+not apply to the negative barbarian; it does not apply to the Russian or
+the Servian, even if they are barbarians. If a Russian peasant does beat
+his wife, he does it because his fathers did it before him; he is likely
+to beat less rather than more as the past fades away. He does not think,
+as the Prussian would, that he has made a new discovery in physiology in
+finding that a woman is weaker than a man. If a Servian does knife his
+rival without a word, he does it because other Servians have done it. He
+may regard it even as piety--but certainly not as progress. He does not
+think, as the Prussian does, that he founds a new school of horology by
+starting before the word "Go." He does not think he is in advance of the
+world in militarism--merely because he is behind it in morals.
+
+No; the danger of the Pruss is that he is prepared to fight for old
+errors as if they were new truths. He has somehow heard of certain
+shallow simplifications, and imagines that we have never heard of them.
+And, as I have said, his limited but very sincere lunacy concentrates
+chiefly in a desire to destroy two ideas, the twin root ideas, of
+national society. The first is the idea of record and promise; the
+second is the idea of reciprocity.
+
+It is plain that the promise, or extension of responsibility through
+time, is what chiefly distinguishes us, I will not say from savages, but
+from brutes and reptiles. This was noted by the shrewdness of the Old
+Testament when it summed up the dark, irresponsible enormity of
+Leviathan in the words, "Will he make a pact with thee?" The promise,
+like the wind, is unknown in nature and is the first mark of man.
+Referring only to human civilization, it may be said with seriousness
+that in the beginning was the Word. The vow is to the man what the song
+is to the bird or the bark to the dog; his voice, whereby he is known.
+Just as a man who cannot keep an appointment is not fit to fight a duel,
+so the man who cannot keep an appointment with himself is not sane
+enough even for suicide. It is not easy to mention anything on which the
+enormous apparatus of human life can be said to depend. But if it
+depends on anything it is on this frail cord, flung from the forgotten
+hills of yesterday to the invisible mountains of tomorrow. On that
+solitary string hangs everything from Armageddon to an almanac, from a
+successful revolution to a return ticket. On that solitary string the
+barbarian is hacking heavily with a sabre which is fortunately blunt.
+
+
+*Prussia's Great Discovery.*
+
+Any one can see this well enough merely by reading the last negotiations
+between London and Berlin. The Prussians had made a new discovery in
+international politics--that it may often be convenient to make a
+promise, and yet curiously inconvenient to keep it. They were charmed,
+in their simple way, with this scientific discovery and desired to
+communicate it to the world. They therefore promised England a promise
+on condition that she broke a promise, and on the implied condition that
+the new promise might be broken as easily as the old one. To the
+profound astonishment of Prussia, this reasonable offer was refused. I
+believe that the astonishment of Prussia was quite sincere. That is what
+I mean when I say that the barbarian is trying to cut away that cord of
+honesty and clear record on which hangs all that men have made.
+
+The friends of the German cause have complained that Asiatics and
+Africans upon the very verge of savagery have been brought against them
+from India and Algiers. And in ordinary circumstances I should
+sympathize with such a complaint made by a European people. But the
+circumstances are not ordinary. Here again the quite unique barbarism of
+Prussia goes deeper than what we call barbarities. About mere
+barbarities, it is true, the Turco and the Sikh would have very good
+reply to the superior Teuton. The general and just reason for not using
+non-European tribes against Europeans is that given by Chatham against
+the use of the red Indian--that such allies might do very diabolical
+things. But the poor Turco might not unreasonably ask, after a week-end
+in Belgium, what more diabolical things he could do than the highly
+cultured Germans were doing themselves.
+
+Nevertheless, as I say, the justification of any extra-European aid goes
+deeper than by any such details. It rests upon the fact that even other
+civilizations, even much lower civilizations, even remote and repulsive
+civilizations, depend as much as our own on this primary principle on
+which the supermorality of Potsdam declares open war. Even savages
+promise things, and respect those who keep their promises. Even
+Orientals write things down; and though they write them from right to
+left, they know the importance of a scrap of paper. Many merchants will
+tell you that the word of the sinister and almost unhuman Chinaman is
+often as good as his bond; and it was amid palm trees and Syrian
+pavilions that the great utterance opened the tabernacle to him that
+sweareth to his hurt and changeth not. There is doubtless a dense
+labyrinth of duplicity in the East; and perhaps more guile in the
+individual Asiatic than in the individual German. But we are not talking
+of the violations of human morality in various parts of the world.
+
+
+*A Fight Against Anarchy.*
+
+We are talking about a new inhuman morality which denies altogether the
+day of obligation. The Prussians have been told by their literary men
+that everything depends upon "mood," and by their politicians that all
+arrangements dissolve before "necessity." That is the importance of the
+German Chancellor's phrase. He did not allege some special excuse in the
+case of Belgium, which might make it seem an exception that proved the
+rule. He distinctly argued, as on a principle applicable to other cases,
+that victory was a necessity and honor was a scrap of paper. And it is
+evident that the half-educated Prussian imagination really cannot get
+any further than this. It cannot see that if everybody's action were
+entirely incalculable from hour to hour, it would not only be the end of
+all promises but the end of all projects.
+
+In not being able to see that, the Berlin philosopher is really on a
+lower mental level than the Arab who respects the salt, or the Brahmin
+who preserves the caste. And in this quarrel we have a right to come
+with scimitars as well as sabres, with bows as well as rifles, with
+assegai and tomahawk and boomerang, because there is in all these at
+least a seed of civilization that these intellectual anarchists would
+kill. And if they should find us in our last stand girt with such
+strange swords and following unfamiliar ensigns and ask us for what we
+fight in so singular a company, we shall know what to reply: "We fight
+for the trust and for the tryst; for fixed memories and the possible
+meeting of men; for all that makes life anything but an uncontrollable
+nightmare. We fight for the long arm of honor and remembrance; for all
+that can lift a man above the quicksands of his needs and give him the
+mastery of time."
+
+
+
+
+*III.*
+
+*Disposing of Germany's Civilizing Mission*
+
+
+In the last summary I suggested that barbarism, as we mean it, is not
+mere ignorance or even mere cruelty. It has a more precise sense, and
+means militant hostility to certain necessary human ideas. I took the
+case of the vow or the contract which Prussian intellectualism would
+destroy. I urged that the Prussian is a spiritual barbarian, because he
+is not bound by his own past, any more than a man in a dream. He avows
+that when he promised to respect a frontier on Monday he did not foresee
+what he calls "the necessity" of not respecting it on Tuesday. In short,
+he is like a child who at the end of all reasonable explanations and
+reminders of admitted arrangements has no answer except "But I want to."
+
+There is another idea in human arrangements so fundamental as to be
+forgotten, but now for the first time denied. It may be called the idea
+of reciprocity; or, in better English, of give and take. The Prussian
+appears to be quite intellectually incapable of this thought. He cannot,
+I think, conceive the idea that is the foundation of all comedy--that in
+the eyes of the other man he is only the other man. And if we carry this
+clue through the institutions of Prussianized Germany we shall find how
+curiously his mind has been limited in the matter. The German differs
+from other patriots in the inability to understand patriotism. Other
+European peoples pity the Poles or the Welsh for their violated borders,
+but Germans only pity themselves. They might take forcible possession of
+the Severn or the Danube, of the Thames or the Tiber, of the Garry or
+the Garonne--and they would still be singing sadly about how fast and
+true stands the watch on the Rhine and what a shame it would be if any
+one took their own little river away from them. That is what I mean by
+not being reciprocal; and you will find it in all that they do, as in
+all that is done by savages.
+
+
+*"Laughs When He Hurts You."*
+
+Here again it is very necessary to avoid confusing this soul of the
+savage with mere savagery in the sense of brutality or butchery, in
+which the Greeks, the French, and all the most civilized nations have
+indulged in hours of abnormal panic or revenge. Accusations of cruelty
+are generally mutual. But it is the point about the Prussian that with
+him nothing is mutual. The definition of the true savage does not
+concern itself even with how much more he hurts strangers or captives
+than do the other tribes of men. The definition of the true savage is
+that he laughs when he hurts you and howls when you hurt him. This
+extraordinary inequality in the mind is in every act and word that comes
+from Berlin.
+
+For instance, no man of the world believes all he sees in the
+newspapers, and no journalist believes a quarter of it. We should
+therefore be quite ready in the ordinary way to take a great deal off
+the tales of German atrocities; to doubt this story or deny that. But
+there is one thing that we cannot doubt or deny--the seal and authority
+of the Emperor. In the imperial proclamation the fact that certain
+"frightful" things have been done is admitted and justified on the
+ground of their frightfulness. It was a military necessity to terrify
+the peaceful populations with something that was not civilized,
+something that was hardly human.
+
+
+*"Howls When You Hurt Him."*
+
+Very well. That is an intelligible policy; and in that sense an
+intelligible argument. An army endangered by foreigners may do the most
+frightful things. But then we turn the next page of the Kaiser's public
+diary, and we find him writing to the President of the United States to
+complain that the English are using dumdum bullets and violating various
+regulations of The Hague Conference. I pass for the present the question
+of whether there is a word of truth in these charges. I am content to
+gaze rapturously at the blinking eyes of the true, or positive,
+barbarian. I suppose he would be quite puzzled if we said that violating
+The Hague Conference was "a military necessity" to us; or that the rules
+of the conference were only a scrap of paper. He would be quite pained
+if we said that dumdum bullets "by their very frightfulness" would be
+very useful to keep conquered Germans in order. Do what he will, he
+cannot get outside the idea that he, because he is he and not you, is
+free to break the law and also to appeal to the law. It is said that the
+Prussian officers play at a game called Kriegspiel, or the war game. But
+in truth they could not play at any game, for the essence of every game
+is that the rules are the same on both sides.
+
+But, taking every German institution in turn, the case is the same; and
+it is not a case of mere bloodshed or military bravado. The duel, for
+example, can legitimately be called a barbaric thing, but the word is
+here used in another sense. There are duels in Germany; but so there are
+in France, Italy, Belgium, Spain; indeed, there are duels wherever there
+are dentists, newspapers, Turkish baths, time tables, and all the curses
+of civilization--except in England and a corner of America. You may
+happen to regard the duel as a historic relic of the more barbaric
+States on which these modern States were built. It might equally well be
+maintained that the duel is everywhere the sign of high civilization,
+being the sign of its more delicate sense of honor, its more vulnerable
+vanity, or its greater dread of social disrepute. But whichever of the
+two views you take, you must concede that the essence of the duel is an
+armed equality. I should not, therefore, apply the word barbaric, as I
+am using it, to the duels of German officers, or even the broadsword
+combats that are conventional among the German students. I do not see
+why a young Prussian should not have scars all over his face if he likes
+them; nay, they are often the redeeming points of interest on an
+otherwise somewhat unenlightening countenance. The duel may be defended;
+the sham duel may be defended.
+
+
+*The One-Sided Prussian Duel.*
+
+What cannot be defended is something really peculiar to Prussia, of
+which we hear numberless stories, some of them certainly true. It might
+be called the one-sided duel. I mean the idea that there is some sort of
+dignity in drawing the sword upon a man who has not got a sword--a
+waiter, or a shop assistant, or even a schoolboy. One of the officers of
+the Kaiser in the affair at Zabern was found industriously hacking at a
+cripple. In all these matters I would avoid sentiment. We must not lose
+our tempers at the mere cruelty of the thing, but pursue the strict
+psychological distinction. Others besides German soldiers have slain the
+defenseless, for loot or lust or private malice, like any other
+murderer. The point is that nowhere else but in Prussian Germany is any
+theory of honor mixed up with such things, any more than with poisoning
+or picking pockets. No French, English, Italian, or American gentleman
+would think he had in some way cleared his own character by sticking his
+sabre through some ridiculous greengrocer who had nothing in his hand
+but a cucumber. It would seem as if the word which is translated from
+the German as "honor" must really mean something quite different in
+German. It seems to mean something more like what we should call
+"prestige."
+
+
+*Absence of the Reciprocal Idea.*
+
+The fundamental fact, however, is the absence of the reciprocal idea.
+The Prussian is not sufficiently civilized for the duel. Even when he
+crosses swords with us his thoughts are not as our thoughts; when we
+both glorify war we are glorifying different things. Our medals are
+wrought like his, but they do not mean the same thing; our regiments are
+cheered as his are, but the thought in the heart is not the same; the
+Iron Cross is on the bosom of his King, but it is not the sign of our
+God. For we, alas! follow our God with many relapses and
+self-contradictions, but he follows his very consistently. Through all
+the things that we have examined, the view of national boundaries, the
+view of military methods, the view of personal honor and self-defense,
+there runs in their case something of an atrocious simplicity; something
+too simple for us to understand; the idea that glory consists in holding
+the steel, and not in facing it.
+
+If further examples were necessary it would be easy to give hundreds of
+them. Let us leave, for the moment, the relations between man and man in
+the thing called the duel. Let us take the relation between man and
+woman, in that immortal duel which we call a marriage. Here again we
+shall find that other Christian civilizations aim at some kind of
+equality, even if the balance be irrational or dangerous. Thus, the two
+extremes of the treatment of women might be represented by what are
+called the respectable classes in America and in France. In America they
+choose the risk of comradeship, in France the compensation of courtesy.
+In America it is practically possible for any young gentleman to take
+any young lady for what he calls (I deeply regret to say) a joy ride;
+but at least the man goes with the woman as much as the woman with the
+man. In France the young woman is protected like a nun while she is
+unmarried; but when she is a mother she is really a holy woman; and when
+she is a grandmother she is a holy terror.
+
+By both extremes the woman gets something back out of life. There is
+only one place where she gets little or nothing back, and that is the
+north of Germany. France and America aim alike at equality; America by
+similarity, France by dissimilarity. But North Germany does definitely
+aim at inequality. The woman stands up with no more irritation than a
+butler; the man sits down with no more embarrassment than a guest. This
+is the cool affirmation of inferiority, as in the case of the sabre and
+the tradesmen. "Thou goest with women; forget not thy whip," said
+Nietzsche. It will be observed that he does not say "poker," which might
+come more naturally to the mind of a more common or Christian
+wife-beater. But, then, a poker is a part of domesticity, and might be
+used by the wife as well as the husband. In fact, it often is. The sword
+and the whip are the weapons of a privileged caste.
+
+Pass from the closest of all differences, that between husband and wife,
+to the most distant of all differences, that of the remote and unrelated
+races who have seldom seen each other's faces, and never been tinged
+with each other's blood. Here we still find the same unvarying Prussian
+principle. Any European might feel a genuine fear of the Yellow Peril,
+and many Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Russians have felt and expressed it.
+Many might say, and have said, that the heathen Chinee is very heathen
+indeed; that if he ever advances against us he will trample and torture
+and utterly destroy, in a way that Eastern people do, but Western people
+do not. Nor do I doubt the German Emperor's sincerity when he sought to
+point out to us how abnormal and abominable such a nightmare campaign
+would be, supposing that it could come.
+
+But now comes the comic irony, which never fails to follow on the
+attempt of the Prussian to be philosophic. For the Kaiser, after
+explaining to his troops how important it was to avoid Eastern
+barbarism, instantly commanded them to become Eastern barbarians. He
+told them, in so many words, to be Huns, and leave nothing living or
+standing behind them. In fact, he frankly offered a new army corps of
+aboriginal Tartars to the Far East, within such time as it may take a
+bewildered Hanoverian to turn into a Tartar. Any one who has the painful
+habit of personal thought will perceive here at once the non-reciprocal
+principle again. Boiled down to its bones of logic, it means simply
+this: "I am a German and you are a Chinaman. Therefore, I being a
+German, have a right to be a Chinaman. But you have no right to be a
+Chinaman, because you are only a Chinaman." This is probably the highest
+point to which the German culture has risen.
+
+
+*"The Principle of Being Unprincipled."*
+
+The principle here neglected, which may be called mutuality by those who
+misunderstand and dislike the word equality, does not offer so clear a
+distinction between the Prussian and the other peoples as did the first
+Prussian principle of an infinite and destructive opportunism; or, in
+other words, the principle of being unprincipled. Nor upon this second
+can one take up so obvious a position touching the other civilizations
+or semi-civilizations of the world. Some idea of oath and bond there is
+in the rudest tribes, in the darkest continents. But it might be
+maintained, of the more delicate and imaginative element of reciprocity,
+that a cannibal in Borneo understands it almost as little as a professor
+in Berlin. A narrow and one-sided seriousness is the fault of barbarians
+all over the world. This may have been the meaning, for aught I know, of
+the one eye of the Cyclops; that the barbarian cannot see around things
+or look at them from two points of view, and thus becomes a blind beast
+and an eater of men. Certainly there can be no better summary of the
+savage than this, which, as we have seen, unfits him for the duel. He is
+the man who cannot love--no, nor even hate--his neighbor as himself.
+
+But this quality in Prussia does have one effect which has reference to
+the same question of the lower civilizations. It disposes once and for
+all at least of the civilizing mission of Germany. Evidently the Germans
+are the last people in the world to be trusted with the task. They are
+as short-sighted morally as physically. What is their sophism of
+"necessity" but an inability to imagine tomorrow morning? What is their
+non-reciprocity but an inability to imagine, not a god or devil, but
+merely another man? Are these to judge mankind? Men of two tribes in
+Africa not only know that they are all men but can understand that they
+are all black men. In this they are quite seriously in advance of the
+intellectual Prussian, who cannot be got to see that we are all white
+men. The ordinary eye is unable to perceive in the Northeast Teuton
+anything that marks him out especially from the more colorless classes
+of the rest of Aryan mankind. He is simply a white man, with a tendency
+to the gray or the drab. Yet he will explain in serious official
+documents that the difference between him and us is a difference between
+"the master race and the inferior race."
+
+
+*How to Know "The Master Race."*
+
+The collapse of German philosophy always occurs at the beginning rather
+than the end of an argument, and the difficulty here is that there is no
+way of testing which is a master race except by asking which is your own
+race. If you cannot find out, (as is usually the case,) you fall back on
+the absurd occupation of writing history about prehistoric times. But I
+suggest quite seriously that if the Germans can give their philosophy to
+the Hottentots there is no reason why they should not give their sense
+of superiority to the Hottentots. If they can see such fine shades
+between the Goth and the Gaul, there is no reason why similar shades
+should not lift the savage above other savages; why any Ojibway should
+not discover that he is one tint redder than the Dakotas, or any nigger
+in the Kameruns say he is not so black as he is painted. For this
+principle of a quite unproved racial supremacy is the last and worst of
+the refusals of reciprocity. The Prussian calls all men to admire the
+beauty of his large blue eyes. If they do, it is because they have
+inferior eyes; if they don't, it is because they have no eyes.
+
+Wherever the most miserable remnant of our race, astray and dried up in
+deserts or buried forever under the fall of bad civilization, has some
+feeble memory that men are men, that bargains are bargains, that there
+are two sides to a question, or even that it takes two to make a
+quarrel--that remnant has the right to assist the New Culture, to the
+knife and club and the splintered stone. For the Prussian begins all his
+culture by that act which is the destruction of all creative thought and
+constructive action. He breaks that mirror in the mind in which a man
+can see the face of his friend or foe.
+
+
+
+
+*IV.*
+
+*Russia Less Despotic Than Prussia*
+
+
+The German Emperor has reproached this country (England) with allying
+itself with "barbaric and semi-Oriental power." We have already
+considered in what sense we use the word barbaric; it is in the sense of
+one who is hostile to civilization, not one who is insufficient in it.
+But when we pass from the idea of the barbaric to the idea of the
+Oriental, the case is even more curious. There is nothing particularly
+Tartar in Russian affairs, except the fact that Russia expelled the
+Tartars. The Eastern invader occupied and crushed the country for many
+years; but that is equally true of Greece, of Spain, and even of
+Austria. If Russia has suffered from the East, she has suffered in order
+to resist it; and it is rather hard that the very miracle of her escape
+should make a mystery about her origin. Jonah may or may not have been
+three days inside a fish; but that does not make him a merman. And in
+all the other cases of European nations who escaped the monstrous
+captivity, we do admit the purity and continuity of the European type.
+We consider the old Eastern rule as a wound, but not as a stain.
+Copper-colored men out of Africa overruled for centuries the religion
+and patriotism of Spaniards. Yet I have never heard that "Don Quixote"
+was an African fable on the lines of "Uncle Remus." I have never heard
+that the heavy black in the pictures of Velasquez was due to a negro
+ancestry. In the case of Spain, which is close to us, we can recognize
+the resurrection of a Christian and cultured nation after its age of
+bondage. But Russia is rather remote; and those to whom nations are but
+names in newspapers can really fancy, like Mr. Baring's friend, that all
+Russian churches are "mosques." Yet the land of Turgenev is not a
+wilderness of fakirs; and even the fanatical Russian is as proud of
+being different from the Mongol as the fanatical Spaniard was proud of
+being different from the Moor.
+
+
+*"Scratch a Russian."*
+
+The town of Reading, as it exists, offers few opportunities for piracy
+on the high seas; yet it was the camp of the pirates in Alfred's days. I
+should think it hard to call the people of Berkshire half Danish merely
+because they drove out the Danes. In short, some temporary submergence
+under the savage flood was the fate of many of the most civilized States
+of Christendom, and it is quite ridiculous to argue that Russia, which
+wrestled hardest, must have recovered least. Everywhere, doubtless, the
+East spread a sort of enamel over the conquered countries; but
+everywhere the enamel cracked. Actual history, in fact, is exactly
+opposite to the cheap proverb invented against the Muscovite. It is not
+true to say, "Scratch a Russian and you find a Tartar." In the darkest
+hour of the barbaric dominion it was truer to say, "Scratch a Tartar and
+you find a Russian." It was the civilization that survived under all the
+barbarism. This vital romance of Russia, this revolution against Asia,
+can be proved in pure fact; not only from the almost superhuman activity
+of Russia during the struggle, but also (which is much rarer as human
+history goes) by her quite consistent conduct since. She is the only
+great nation which has really expelled the Mongol from her country and
+continued to protest against presence of the Mongol in her continent.
+Knowing what he had been in Russia, she knew what he would be in Europe.
+In this she pursued a logical line of thought, which was, if anything,
+too unsympathetic with the energies and religions of the East. Every
+other country, one may say, has been an ally of the Turk--that is, of
+the Mongol and the Moslem. The French played them as pieces against
+Austria; the English warmly supported them under the Palmerston regime;
+even the young Italians sent troops to the Crimea; and of Russia and her
+Austrian vassal it is nowadays needless to speak. For good or evil, it
+is the fact of history that Russia is the only power in Europe that has
+never supported the Crescent against the Cross.
+
+That doubtless will appear an unimportant matter, but it may become
+important under certain peculiar conditions. Suppose, for the sake of
+argument, that there were a powerful Prince in Europe who had gone
+ostentatiously out of his way to pay reverence to the remains of the
+Tartar, Mongol, and Moslem left as an outpost in Europe. Suppose there
+were a Christian Emperor who could not even go to the tomb of the
+crucified without pausing to congratulate the last and living crucifier.
+If there were an Emperor who gave guns and guides and maps and drill
+instructors to defend the remains of the Mongol in Christendom, what
+would we say to him? I think at least we might ask him what he meant by
+his impudence when he talked about supporting a semi-Oriental power.
+That we support a semi-Oriental power we deny. That he has supported an
+entirely Oriental power cannot be denied, no, not even by the man who
+did it.
+
+
+_Whom Has Prussia Emancipated?_
+
+But here is to be noted the essential difference between Russia and
+Prussia; especially by those who use the ordinary liberal arguments
+against the latter Russia has a policy, which she pursues, if you will,
+through evil and good; but at least so as to produce good as well as
+evil. Let it be granted that the policy has made her oppressive to the
+Finns, the Poles--though the Russian Poles feel far less oppressed than
+do the Prussian Poles. But it is a mere historic fact, that if Russia
+has been a despot to some small nations, she has been a deliverer to
+others. She did, so far as in her lay, emancipate the Servians or the
+Montenegrins. But whom did Prussia ever emancipate--even by accident? It
+is, indeed, somewhat extraordinary that in the perpetual permutations of
+international politics the Hohenzollerns have never gone astray into the
+path of enlightenment. They have been in alliance with almost everybody
+off and on; with France, with England, with Austria, with Russia. Can
+any one candidly say that they have left on any one of these people the
+faintest impress of progress or liberation? Prussia was the enemy of the
+French monarchy, but a worse enemy of the French Revolution. Prussia had
+been an enemy of the Czar, but she was a worse enemy of the Duma.
+Prussia totally disregarded Austrian rights; but she is today quite
+ready to inflict Austrian wrongs. This is the strong particular
+difference between the one empire and the other. Russia is pursuing
+certain intelligible and sincere ends, which to her at least are ideals,
+and for which, therefore, she will make sacrifices and will protect the
+weak. But the North German soldier is a sort of abstract tyrant;
+everywhere and always on the side of materialistic tyranny. This Teuton
+in uniform has been found in strange places; shooting farmers before
+Saratoga and flogging soldiers in Surrey, hanging niggers in Africa and
+raping girls in Wicklow, but never, by some mysterious fatality, lending
+a hand to the freeing of a single city or the independence of one
+solitary flag. Wherever scorn and prosperous oppression are, there is
+the Prussian; unconsciously consistent, instinctively restrictive,
+innocently evil; "following darkness like a dream."
+
+
+*Disinterested Despotism.*
+
+Suppose we heard of a person (gifted with some longevity) who had helped
+Alva to persecute Dutch Protestants, then helped Cromwell to persecute
+Irish Catholics, and then helped Claverhouse to persecute Scotch
+Puritans--we should find it rather easier to call him a persecutor than
+to call him a Protestant or a Catholic. Curiously enough, this is
+actually the position in which the Prussian stands in Europe. No
+arguments can alter the fact that in three converging and conclusive
+cases he has been on the side of three distinct rulers of different
+religions, who had nothing whatever in common except that they were
+ruling oppressively. In these three Governments, taken separately, one
+can see something excusable, or at least human. When the Kaiser
+encouraged the Russian rulers to crush the revolution, the Russian
+rulers undoubtedly believed they were wrestling with an inferno of
+atheism and anarchy. A Socialist of the ordinary English kind cried out
+upon me when I spoke of Stolypin and said he was chiefly known by the
+halter called "Stolypin's Necktie." As a fact, there were many other
+things interesting about Stolypin besides his necktie--his policy of
+peasant proprietorship, his extraordinary personal courage, and
+certainly none more interesting than that movement in his death agony,
+when he made the sign of the cross toward the Czar, as the crown and
+captain of his Christianity. But the Kaiser does not regard the Czar as
+the captain of Christianity. Far from it. What he supported in Stolypin
+was the necktie, and nothing but the necktie; the gallows, and not the
+cross. The Russian ruler did believe that the Orthodox Church was
+orthodox. The Austrian Archduke did really desire to make the Catholic
+Church catholic. He did really believe that he was being pro-Catholic in
+being pro-Austrian. But the Kaiser cannot be pro-Catholic, and,
+therefore, cannot have been really pro-Austrian; he was simply and
+solely anti-Servian; nay, even in the cruel and sterile strength of
+Turkey, any one with imagination can see something of the tragedy, and,
+therefore, of the tenderness of true belief. The worst that can be said
+of the Moslems is, as the poet put it, they offered to man the choice of
+the Koran or the sword. The best that can be said for the German is that
+he does not care about the Koran, but is satisfied if he can have the
+sword. And for me, I confess, even the sins of these three other
+striving empires take on, in comparison, something that is sorrowful and
+dignified; and I feel they do not deserve that this little Lutheran
+lounger should patronize all that is evil in them, while ignoring all
+that is good. He is not Catholic; he is not Orthodox; he is not
+Mohammedan. He is merely an old gentleman who wishes to share the crime,
+though he cannot share the creed. He desires to be a persecutor by the
+pang without the palm. So strongly do all the instincts of the Prussian
+drive against liberty that he would rather oppress other peoples'
+subjects than think of anybody going without the benefits of oppression.
+He is a sort of disinterested despot. He is as disinterested as the
+devil, who is ready to do any one's dirty work.
+
+
+*The Paradox of Prussia.*
+
+This would seem obviously fantastic were it not supported by solid facts
+which cannot be explained otherwise. Indeed it would be inconceivable if
+we were thinking of a whole people, consisting of free and varied
+individuals. But in Prussia the governing class is really a governing
+class, and a very few people are needed to think along these lines to
+make all the other people act along them. And the paradox of Prussia is
+this: That while its princes and nobles have no other aim on this earth
+but to destroy democracy wherever it shows itself, they have contrived
+to get themselves trusted, not as wardens of the past, but as
+forerunners of the future. Even they cannot believe that their theory is
+popular, but they do believe that it is progressive. Here again we find
+the spiritual chasm between the two monarchies in question. The Russian
+institutions are, in many cases, really left in the rear of the Russian
+people, and many of the Russian people know it. But the Prussian
+institutions are supposed to be in advance of the Prussian people, and
+most of the Prussian people believe it. It is thus much easier for the
+war lords to go everywhere and impose a hopeless slavery upon every one,
+for they have already imposed a sort of hopeful slavery on their own
+simple race.
+
+
+*A Factory of Thumbscrews.*
+
+And when men shall speak to us of the hoary iniquities of Russia and of
+how antiquated is the Russian system we shall answer, "Yes; that is the
+superiority of Russia." Their institutions are part of their history,
+whether as relics or fossils. Their abuses have really been uses; that
+is to say, they have been used up. If they have old engines of terror or
+torment, they may fall to pieces from mere rust, like an old coat of
+armor. But in the case of the Prussian tyranny, if it be tyranny at all,
+it is the whole point of its claim that it is not antiquated, but just
+going to begin, like the showman. Prussia has a whole thriving factory
+of thumbscrews, a whole humming workshop of wheels and racks, of the
+newest and neatest pattern, with which to win Europe back to reaction
+* * * infandum renovare dolorem. And if we wish to test the truth of this,
+it can be done by the same method which showed us that Russia, if her
+race or religion could sometimes make her an invader and an oppressor,
+could also be made an emancipator and a knight errant. In the same way,
+if the Russian institutions are old-fashioned, they honestly exhibit the
+good as well as the bad that can be found in old-fashioned things. In
+their police system they have an inequality which is against our ideas
+of law. But in their commune system they have an equality that is older
+than law itself. Even when they flogged each other like barbarians, they
+called each other by their Christian names like children. At their
+worst, they retained all the best of a rude society. At their best, they
+are simply good, like good children or good nuns. But in Prussia, all
+that is best in the civilized machinery is put at the service of all
+that is worst in the barbaric mind. Here again the Prussian has no
+accidental merits, none of those lucky survivals, none of those late
+repentances, which make the patchwork glory of Russia. Here all is
+sharpened to a point and pointed to a purpose; and that purpose, if
+words and acts have any meaning at all, is the destruction of liberty
+throughout the world.
+
+
+
+
+*V.*
+
+*The "Bond of Teutonism"*
+
+
+In considering the Prussian point of view we have been considering what
+seems to be mainly a mental limitation--a kind of knot in the brain.
+Toward the problem of Slav population, of English colonization, of
+French armies, and of reinforcements it shows the same strange
+philosophic sulks. So far as I can follow it, it seems to amount to
+saying, "It is very wrong that you should be superior to me, because I
+am superior to you." The spokesman of this system seems to have a
+curious capacity for concentrating this entanglement or contradiction
+sometimes into a single paragraph, or even a single sentence. I have
+already referred to the German Emperor's celebrated suggestion that in
+order to avert the peril of Hunnishness we should all become Huns. A
+much stronger instance is his more recent order to his troops touching
+the war in Northern France. As most people know, his words ran: "It is
+my royal and imperial command that you concentrate your energies, for
+the immediate present, upon one single purpose, and that is that you
+address all your skill and all the valor of my soldiers to exterminate
+first the treacherous English and to walk over Gen. French's
+contemptible little army." The rudeness of the remark an Englishman can
+afford to pass over. What I am interested in is the mentality, the train
+of thought that can manage to entangle itself even in so brief a space.
+If French's little army is contemptible it would seem clear that all the
+skill and valor of the German Army had better not be concentrated on it,
+but on the larger and less contemptible allies. If all the skill and
+valor of the German Army are concentrated on it it is not being treated
+as contemptible. But the Prussian rhetorician had two incompatible
+sentiments in his mind, and he insisted on saying them both at once. He
+wanted to think of an English Army as a small thing; but he also wanted
+to think of an English defeat as a big thing. He wanted to exult, at the
+same moment, in the utter weakness of the British Nation in their attack
+and the supreme skill and valor of the Germans in repelling such an
+attack. Somehow it must be made a common and obvious collapse for
+England and yet a daring and unexpected triumph for Germany. In trying
+to express these contradictory conceptions simultaneously he got rather
+mixed. Therefore he bade Germania fill all her vales and mountains with
+the dying agonies of this almost invisible earwig, and let the impure
+blood of this cockroach redden the Rhine down to the sea.
+
+
+*Prof. Harnack's Reproach*.
+
+But it would be unfair to base the criticism on the utterance of any
+accidental and hereditary Prince; and it is quite equally clear in the
+case of the philosophers who have been held up to us, even in England,
+as the very prophets of progress. And in nothing is it shown more
+sharply than in the curious, confused talk about race, and especially
+about the Teutonic race. Prof. Harnack and similar people are
+reproaching us, I understand, for having broken "the bond of
+Teutonism"--a bond which the Prussians have strictly observed, both in
+breach and observance. We note it in the open annexation of lands wholly
+inhabited by negroes, such as Denmark. We note it equally in their
+instant and joyful recognition of the flaxen hair and light blue eyes of
+the Turks. But it is still the abstract principle of Prof. Harnack which
+interests me most, and in following it I have the same complexity of
+inquiry, but the same simplicity of result. Comparing the professor's
+concern about "Teutonism" with his unconcern about Belgium, I can only
+reach the following result: "A man need not keep a promise he has made.
+But a man must keep a promise he has not made." There certainly was a
+treaty binding Britain to Belgium, if it was only a scrap of paper. If
+there was any treaty binding Britain with Teutonism it is, to say the
+least of it, a lost scrap of paper--almost what one might call a scrap
+of waste paper. Here again the pedants under consideration exhibit the
+illogical perversity that makes the brain reel. There is obligation and
+there is no obligation; sometimes it appears that Germany and England
+must keep faith with each other; sometimes that Germany need not keep
+faith with anybody and anything; sometimes that we, alone among European
+peoples, are almost entitled to be Germans; sometimes that besides us
+Russians and Frenchmen almost rise to a Germanic loveliness of
+character. But through all there is, hazy but not hypocritical, this
+sense of some common Teutonism.
+
+Prof. Haeckel, another of the witnesses raised up against us, attained
+to some celebrity at one time through proving the remarkable resemblance
+between two different things by printing duplicate pictures of the same
+thing. Prof. Haeckel's contribution to biology, in this case, was
+exactly like Prof. Harnack's contribution to ethnology. Prof. Harnack
+knows what a German is like. When he wants to imagine what an Englishman
+is like he simply photographs the same German over again. In both cases
+there is probably sincerity, as well as simplicity. Haeckel was so
+certain that the species illustrated in embryo really are closely
+related and linked up that it seemed to him a small thing to simplify it
+by mere repetition. Harnack is so certain that the German and Englishman
+are almost alike that he really risks the generalization that they are
+exactly alike. He photographs, so to speak, the same fair and foolish
+face twice over, and calls it a remarkable resemblance between cousins.
+Thus he can prove the existence of Teutonism just about as conclusively
+as Haeckel has proved the more tenable proposition of the non-existence
+of God.
+
+
+*Germans and English.*
+
+Now, the German and the Englishman are not in the least alike--except in
+the sense that neither of them are negroes. They are, in everything good
+and evil, more unlike than any other two men we can take at random from
+the great European family. They are opposite from the roots of their
+history--nay, of their geography. It is an understatement to call
+Britain insular. Britain is not only an island, but an island slashed by
+the sea till it nearly splits into three islands, and even the midlands
+can almost smell the salt. Germany is a powerful, beautiful, and fertile
+inland country, which can only find the sea by one or two twisted and
+narrow paths, as people find a subterranean lake. Thus the British Navy
+is really national because it is natural. It has cohered out of hundreds
+of accidental adventures of ships and shipmen before Chaucer's time and
+after it. But the German Navy is an artificial thing, as artificial as a
+constructed Alp would be in England. William II. has simply copied the
+British Navy, as Frederick II. copied the French Army, and this Japanese
+or antlike assiduity in imitation is one of the hundred qualities which
+the Germans have and the English markedly have not. There are other
+German superiorities which are very much superior. The one or two really
+jolly things that the Germans have got are precisely the things which
+the English haven't got, notably a real habit of popular music and of
+the ancient songs of the people; not merely spreading from the towns or
+caught from the professionals. In this the Germans rather resemble the
+Welsh, though heaven knows what becomes of Teutonism if they do. But the
+difference between the Germans and the English goes deeper than all
+these signs of it. They differ more than any other two Europeans in the
+normal posture of the mind.
+
+Above all, they differ in what is the most English of all English
+traits--that shame which the French may be right in calling "the bad
+shame," for it is certainly mixed up with pride and suspicion, the
+upshot of which we call shyness. Even an Englishman's rudeness is often
+rooted in his being embarrassed. But a German's rudeness is rooted in
+his never being embarrassed. He eats and makes love noisily. He never
+feels a speech or a song or a sermon or a large meal to be what the
+English call "out of place" in particular circumstances. When Germans
+are patriotic and religious they have no reactions against patriotism
+and religion, as have the English and the French. Nay, the mistake of
+Germany in the modern disaster largely arose from the facts that she
+thought England was simple, when England is very subtle. She thought
+that because our politics have become largely financial they had become
+wholly financial; that because our aristocrats had become pretty cynical
+they had become entirely corrupt. They could not seize the subtlety by
+which a rather used-up English gentleman might sell a coronet when he
+could not sell a fortress; might lower the public standards and yet
+refuse to lower the flag. In short, the Germans are quite sure that they
+understand us entirely because they do not understand us at all.
+Possibly, if they began to understand us they might hate us even more,
+but I would rather be hated for some small but real reason than pursued
+with love on account of all kinds of qualities which I do not possess
+and which I do not desire. And when the Germans get their first genuine
+glimpses of what modern England is like they will discover that England
+has a very broken, belated, and inadequate sense of having an obligation
+to Europe; but no sort of sense whatever of having any obligation to
+Teutonism.
+
+
+*Slippery Strength of Stupidity.*
+
+This is the last and strongest of the Prussian qualities we have here
+considered. There is in stupidity of this sort a strange, slippery
+strength, because it can be not only outside rules, but outside reason.
+The man who really cannot see that he is contradicting himself has a
+great advantage in controversy, though the advantage breaks down when he
+tries to reduce it to simple addition, to chess--or to the game called
+war. It is the same about the stupidity of the one-sided kinship. The
+drunkard who is quite certain that a total stranger is his long-lost
+brother has a great advantage until it comes to matters of detail. "We
+must have chaos within," said Nietzsche, "that we may give birth to a
+dancing star."
+
+In these slight notes I have suggested the principal strong points of
+the Prussian character--a failure in honor which almost amounts to a
+failure in memory; an egomania that is honestly blind to the fact that
+the other party is an ego, and, above all, an actual itch for tyranny
+and interference, the devil which everywhere torments the idle and the
+proud. To these must be added a certain mental shapelessness, which can
+expand or contract without reference to reason or record--a potential
+infinity of excuses. If the English had been on the German side the
+German professors would have noted what irresistible energies had
+evolved the Teutons. As the English are on the other side, the German
+professors will say that these Teutons were not sufficiently evolved; or
+they will say they were just sufficiently evolved to show that they were
+not Teutons. Probably they will say both. But the truth is that all that
+they call evolution should rather be called evasion. They tell us they
+are opening windows of enlightenment and doors of progress. The truth is
+that they are breaking up the whole house of the human intellect that
+they may abscond in any direction. There is an ominous and almost
+monstrous parallel between the position of their overrated philosophers
+and of their comparatively underrated soldiers. For what their
+professors call roads of progress are really routes of escape.
+
+
+
+
+*South Africa's Boers and Britons*
+
+*By H. Rider Haggard.*
+
+
+The heart of South Africa, Boer and Briton, is with England in this war.
+Here and there you will find an individual who cherishes bitter and
+hostile memories, of which there has been an example in Mr. Beyers
+letter the other day, so effectually answered by Gen. Botha. But such
+instances, I believe, are so rare that really they are the exceptions
+which seem to prove the rule. Of course, it goes without saying that
+every person of English descent is heartily with the mother country, and
+I do not suppose it would be an overestimate to add that quite 80 per
+cent, of the Dutch are of the same way of thinking.
+
+Still, there is a party among the South African Dutch that sees no
+necessity for the invasion of German Southwest Africa. This party
+overlooks the fact that the Germans have for long been preparing to
+invade them; also that if by any chance Germany should conquer in this
+war South Africa would be one of the first countries that they would
+seize.
+
+In speaking of this I talk of what I understand, since for the last two
+and a half years it has been my duty to travel around the British Empire
+upon the service of his Majesty. In addition to South Africa, I have
+visited India, Australia, New Zealand, Newfoundland, and Canada. I have
+recently traveled throughout South Africa as a member of the Dominion's
+Royal Commission. It was my first visit there after the lapse of a whole
+generation, and I can only say that everywhere I have found the most
+intense loyalty and devotion to the old mother land. The empire is one
+and indivisible; together it will stand or together it will fall.
+
+South Africa is united; it has forgotten its recent labor troubles. I
+answer "absolutely" all such things are past history, blown away and
+destroyed by this great wind of war. South Africa, down to its lowest
+Hottentot, has, I believe, but one object, to help England to win in
+this vast battle of the nations. Why, even the natives, as you may have
+noticed, are sending subscriptions from their scanty hoards and praying
+to be allowed "to throw a few stones for the King." Did not Poutsma say
+as much the other day?
+
+In the old days, of course, there were very strained relations between
+the English and Boers, which had their roots in foolish and inconsistent
+acts carried out by the Home Government, generally to forward party
+ends. I need not go into them because they are too long.
+
+Then came the Boer war, which, as you know, proved a much bigger
+enterprise than the Home Government had anticipated. It cost Britain
+20,000 lives and L300,000,000 of English money before the Boers were
+finally subdued. Only about half a score of years have gone by since
+peace was declared. Within two or three years of that peace the British
+Government made up its mind to a very bold step and one which was viewed
+with grave doubts by many people--namely, to give full self-government
+to the Transvaal and the Orange River Colonies.
+
+
+*Astonished at Results.*
+
+When I traveled through South Africa the other day this new Constitution
+had been working for a few years, and I can only say that I was
+astonished at the results. Here and there in the remoter districts, it
+is true, some racial feeling still prevailed, but taken as a whole this
+seems absolutely to have died away. Briton and Boer have come together
+in a manner for which I believe I am right in saying there is no
+precedent in the history of the world, so shortly, at any rate, after a
+prolonged and bitter struggle to the death. I might give many instances,
+but I will only take one. At Pretoria I was asked to inspect a company
+of Boy Scouts, and there I found English and Dutch lads serving side by
+side with the utmost brotherhood. Again I met most of the men who had
+been leaders of the Boers in the war. One and all professed the greatest
+loyalty to England. Moreover, I am certain that this was not lip
+loyalty; it was from the heart. Especially was I impressed by that great
+man, Gen. Botha, with whom I had several conversations. I am convinced
+that at this moment the King has no truer or more faithful servant than
+Gen. Botha. Again and again did I hear from prominent South Africans of
+Dutch or Huguenot extraction that never more was there any chance of
+trouble between Boer and Briton.
+
+I know it is alleged by some that this is because the Dutch feel that
+they have on the whole made a good bargain, having won absolute
+constitutional liberty and the fullest powers of self-government, plus
+the protection of the British fleet. There may be something in this
+view, but I am sure that the feeling goes a great deal deeper than
+self-interest. Mutual respect has arisen between those who ten years ago
+were enemies fighting each other.
+
+
+*Appeal to People's Imagination.*
+
+Moreover, the Boer now knows a great deal more of the British Empire and
+what it means than he did then. Lastly, the supreme generosity evinced
+by Britain in giving their enemy of the day before every right and
+privilege that is owned by her other oversea dominions with whom she has
+never had a quarrel appeals deeply to the imagination of the Dutch
+people. Now, the world sees the results. Germany, which has
+miscalculated so much in connection with this war and the part that the
+British Empire would play in it, miscalculated nowhere more than it did
+in the case of South Africa. The German war lords hoped that India and
+Egypt would rise, they trusted that Canada and Australia would prove
+lukewarm, but they were certain that South Africa would seize the
+opportunity to rebel. How could it be otherwise, they thought, seeing
+that but yesterday she was at death grips with us. Then came the great
+surprise. Lo and behold! instead of rebelling, South Africa promptly
+cabled to England saying that every British soldier might be withdrawn
+from her shores, and, further, that the burghers of the land would
+themselves undertake the conquest of the German possessions of Southwest
+Africa for the Crown. They are doing so at this moment. I believe that
+today there is no British soldier left at the Cape, and I know that now
+a great force is moving on Southwest Africa furnished by Boer and Briton
+alike. Can the history of the world tell us of any parallel case to
+this--that a country conquered within a dozen years should not only need
+no garrison, but by its own free will undertake war against the enemies
+of its late victor? Surely this is something of which Britain may feel
+proud.
+
+
+*Deep Distrust of Germany.*
+
+Now, some of your readers may ask: "Why is it? How did this miracle, for
+it is little less, happen?" My answer is that it has been caused first
+by a supreme and glorious trust in the justice and generosity of
+England, which knows how to rule colonies as no other nation has done in
+the history of the earth, and secondly by a deep distrust of Germany. To
+my own knowledge, Germany has been intriguing in South Africa for the
+last quarter of a century. I remember, I suppose it must be almost
+twenty years ago, sending to the late Mr. Chamberlain, who was then
+Colonial Secretary, information to this effect which reached me from
+undoubted sources in South Africa. Again, not long ago, I was shown a
+document which was found among the papers of the Zulu Prince Dinizulu,
+son of King Cetewayo, who died the other day. It was concluded between
+himself and Germans, and under it the poor man had practically sold his
+country nominally to a German firm, but doubtless to more powerful
+persons behind. In short, there is no question that for many years
+Germany has had its eye upon South Africa as a desirable field of
+settlement for its subjects under the German and not the British flag.
+Now, the Boers are perfectly well acquainted with this fact and have no
+wish to exchange the beneficent rule of Britain for that of Potsdam, the
+King Log of George V. for the King Stork of Kaiser Wilhelm.
+
+You ask me if I think that the Boers are likely to succeed in their
+attack on Southwest Africa, where it must be remembered that the Germans
+have a very formidable force; indeed, I have been told, I do not know
+with what accuracy, that they have accumulated there the vast arsenal of
+war material that was obviously intended to be used on some future
+occasion in the invasion of the Cape. I answer: "Certainly, they will
+succeed, though not easily." Remember what stock these Boers come from.
+They are descendants of the men who withstood and beat Alva in the
+sixteenth century.
+
+
+*Botha of Huguenot Descent.*
+
+I happen to be well acquainted with that period of history. I wrote a
+story called "Lysbeth" concerning it, and to do this I found it
+necessary not only to visit Holland on several occasions, but to read
+all the contemporary records. In the light of the information which I
+thus obtained, I state positively that the world has no record of a more
+glorious and heroic struggle than that made by the Dutch against all the
+power of Spain. Well, the Boers are descended from these men and women
+(for both fought). Also, they include a very large dash of some of the
+best blood of Europe, namely, that of the Huguenots. For instance, Botha
+himself is of Huguenot descent. It is impossible for a person like
+myself, who have that same blood in me, to talk with him for five
+minutes without becoming aware of his origin. Long before he told me so
+I knew that he was in part a Frenchman. Men so great are not easily
+conquered, as we know to our cost. Why, it took quite 250,000 soldiers
+and three years of strenuous guerrilla warfare to enable Britain to
+defeat 40,000 or 50,000 Dutch farmers. Therefore I have personally not
+the least fear of the ultimate result of the campaign against Southwest
+Africa.
+
+I went as a lad as Secretary to the Governor of Natal. That was in 1875.
+Subsequently I accompanied Sir Theophilus Shepstone, one of the greatest
+men that ever lived in South Africa, on his famous mission to the
+Transvaal. I am now, I believe, the only survivor of that mission, and
+certainly the only man who knows all the inner political history of that
+event. Afterward I held office in the Transvaal, and was in the country
+during all the disastrous period of the first Boer war. For instance, I
+dined with Gen. Colley the night before he started on his ill-fated
+expedition. I think there were thirteen of us present at that historical
+dinner. Within a few weeks six or eight of these were dead, including
+Colley himself, killed in the fight of Majuba, of which I heard the
+guns. Of those present at that dinner party there now survive only Lady
+Colley, my wife, and myself.
+
+
+*Felt Like Rip Van Winkle.*
+
+After this I left Africa, and more than thirty years went by before I
+returned as a commissioner in the service of the Crown. It was a very
+extraordinary experience; indeed, I felt like a new Rip Van Winkle, for
+nearly all my old chiefs and colleagues were dead, and another
+generation had arisen. I can only say that I was deeply touched by the
+reception which I received throughout the country. It was with strange
+feelings that almost on the very spot where I helped to read the
+proclamation of annexation of the Transvaal, in 1877, and with my own
+hands hoisted the British flag over the land, I listened to my health
+being proposed by the Dutch Chief Justice of the Transvaal territory,
+once more a part of the British Empire. Such was my greeting everywhere.
+Three and thirty years before I had left the shores of Africa, believing
+that soon or late the British power was doomed to failure and probably
+to extinction there. When I left them again, six months ago, it was with
+the glad knowledge that, by the united wish of the inhabitants of South
+Africa, it was re-established, never again to pass away. It is a
+wonderful thing for a man in his own lifetime to see a country pass
+through so many vicissitudes, and in the end to appear in the face of
+the world no longer as England's enemy, but as a constituent part of the
+great British Empire, one of her best friends and supporters, glorying
+in her flag, which now floats from Cape Agalhas to the Zambesi, and soon
+will float over those contingent regions that have been seized by the
+mailed fist of Germany.
+
+
+
+
+*Capt. Mark Haggard's Death in Battle*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: In various papers throughout England has appeared a letter, or part
+of a letter, written by Private C. Derry of the Second Battalion, Welsh
+Regiment. It concerns the fall of my much-loved nephew, Capt. Mark
+Haggard, of the same regiment, on Sept. 13 in the battle of the Aisne.
+
+Since this letter has been published and, vivid, pathetic, and
+pride-inspiring as it is, does not tell all the tale, I have been
+requested, on behalf of Mark's mother, young widow, and other members of
+our family, to give the rest of it as it was collected by them from the
+lips of Lieut. Somerset, who lay wounded by him when he died. Therefore
+I send this supplementary account to you in the hope that the other
+journals which have printed the first part of the story will copy it
+from your columns.
+
+It seems that after he had given the order to fix bayonets, as told by
+Private Derry, my nephew charged the German Maxims at the head of his
+company, he and his soldier servant outrunning the other men. Arrived at
+the Maxim in front of him, with the rifle which he was using as Derry
+describes, he shot and killed
+
+[Illustration: GERHART HAUPTMANN
+
+_See Page_ 175]
+
+[Illustration: LUDWIG FULDA.
+
+_See Page 180_ ]
+
+the three soldiers who were serving it, and then was seen "fighting and
+laying out" the Germans with the butt end of his empty gun, "laughing"
+as he did so, until he fell mortally wounded in the body and was carried
+away by his servant.
+
+His patient and heroic end is told by Private Derry, and I imagine that
+the exhortation to "Stick it, Welsh!" which from time to time he uttered
+in his agony, will not soon be forgotten in his regiment. Of that end we
+who mourn him can only say in the simple words of Derry's letter, that
+he "died as he had lived--an officer and a gentleman."
+
+Perhaps it would not be inappropriate to add as a thought of consolation
+to those throughout the land who day by day see their loved ones thus
+devoured by the waste of war, that of a truth these do not vainly die.
+Not only are they crowned with fame, but by the noble manner of their
+end they give the lie to Bernhardi and his school, who tell us that we
+English are an effete and worn-out people, befogged with mean ideals;
+lost in selfishness and the lust of wealth and comfort. Moreover, the
+history of these deeds of theirs will surely be as a beacon to those
+destined to carry on the traditions of our race in that new England
+which shall arise when the cause of freedom for which we must fight and
+die has prevailed--to fall no more.
+
+I am, Sir, your obedient servant,
+
+H. RIDER HAGGARD.
+
+Ditchingham, Norfolk, Oct. 9.
+
+
+
+
+*An Anti-Christian War*
+
+*By Robert Bridges.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of The [London] Times_:
+
+Sir: Since the beginning of this war the meaning of it has in one
+respect considerably changed, and I hope that our people will see that
+it is primarily a holy war. It is manifestly a war declared between
+Christ and the devil.
+
+The conduct of the German conscripts has demonstrated that they have
+been instructed to adopt in full practice the theories of their
+political philosophers, and that they have heartily consented to do this
+and freely commit every cruelty that they think will terrorize the
+people whom they intend to crush. The details of their actions are too
+beastly to mention.
+
+Their philosophers, as I read them, teach openly that the law of love is
+silly and useless, but that brutal force and cruelty are the useful and
+proper means of attaining success in all things. Shortly, you are not to
+do to others as you wish they should do to you, but you should do
+exactly what you wish they should not do to you; that is, you should cut
+their throats and seize their property, and then you will get on.
+
+As for these enlightened philosophers, their doctrines are plainly an
+apostasy from the Gospel--and this they do not scruple to avow; and
+their tenets are only a recrudescence or reassertion of the barbarism
+which we hoped we had grown out of; it is all merely damnable. But it
+seems to me that, judged only as utilitarian policy, it is stupid; and
+that they blundered in neglecting the moral force (for that is also a
+force) of the antagonism that they were bound to arouse in all gentle
+minds, whether simple or cultured. It was stupid of them not to perceive
+that their hellish principles would shock everything that is most
+beloved and living in modern thought, both the "humanitarian" tendency
+of the time and the respect which has grown up for the rights of
+minorities and nationalities. Now, not to reckon with such things was
+stupid, unless they can win temporary justification by immediate
+success.
+
+What success is possible for those who thus openly outrage humanity
+remains to be seen; but they cannot be allowed the advantage of any
+doubt as to what they are about. Those who fight for them will fight for
+"the devil and all his works"; and those who fight against them will be
+fighting in the holy cause of humanity and the law of love. If the
+advocacy of their bad principles and their diabolical conduct do not set
+the whole world against them, then the world is worse than I think. My
+belief is that there are yet millions of their own countrymen who have
+not bowed the knee to Satan, and who will be as much shocked as we are;
+and that this internal moral disruption will much hamper them. This
+morning I have a legal notice sent me from a German resident in England
+announcing that he has changed his name, for shame (I suppose) of his
+Fatherland.
+
+All their apology throughout has been a clumsy tissue of
+self-contradictory lies, and their occasional hypocrisy has been hastily
+pretended and ill-conceived. The particular contention against us--that
+we were betraying the cause of civilization by supporting the barbarous
+Slav--does not come very convincingly from them if their apostle is
+Nietzsche, while the Russian prophet is Tolstoy.
+
+The infernal machine which has been scientifically preparing for the
+last twenty-five years is now on its wild career like one of Mr. Wells's
+inventions, and wherever it goes it will leave desolation behind it and
+put all material progress back for at least half a century. There was
+never anything in the world worthier of extermination, and it is the
+plain duty of all civilized nations to unite to drive it back into its
+home and exterminate it there. I am, &c.,
+
+ROBERT BRIDGES.
+
+Sept. 1.
+
+
+
+
+*English Artists' Protest*
+
+
+ _Art lovers in Great Britain have drawn up a protest against the
+ vandalism of German soldiers. Copies of this protest have been sent
+ to the Comte de Lalaing, Belgian Minister in London; the American
+ Ambassador, with a humble request that it may be forwarded to the
+ President of the United States; and Baron Kervyn de Lettenhove, Art
+ Adviser to the Belgian Government. Those who have signed include
+ well-known collectors, Trustees of the British Museum, the National
+ Gallery, the National Portrait Gallery, and the National Galleries
+ of Scotland; the Director and Principal Librarian of the British
+ Museum; the Directors of the National Gallery, the Victoria and
+ Albert Museum, and the National Galleries of Scotland and Ireland;
+ the Keepers of the Wallace Collection and the National Gallery of
+ British Art; Keepers in the British Museum; the Joint Honorary
+ Secretaries of the National Art Collections Fund, and many critics
+ and others prominent in the art world._
+
+The whole civilized world has witnessed with horror the terrible effects
+of modern warfare on helpless inhabitants of Belgium and France, and on
+ancient buildings and other works of art which are the abiding monuments
+of the piety and culture of their ancestors.
+
+Some of the acts of the invading German army against buildings may be
+defensible from the military standpoint; but it seems certain from
+present information that in some signal instances, notably at Louvain
+and Rheims, this defense cannot hold good against the mass of evidence
+to the contrary.
+
+The signatories of this protest claim that they are in no sense a
+partisan body. Their contention in this matter is that the splendid
+monuments of the arts of the Middle Ages which have been destroyed or
+damaged are the inheritance of the whole world, and that it is the duty
+of all civilized communities to endeavor to preserve them for the
+benefit and instruction of posterity. While France and Belgium are
+individually the poorer from such wanton destruction, the world at large
+is no less impoverished.
+
+On these grounds, therefore, we desire to express our strong indignation
+and abhorrence at the gratuitous destruction of ancient buildings that
+has marked the invasion of Belgium and France by the German Army, and we
+wish to enter a protest in the strongest terms against the continuance
+of so barbarous and reckless a policy. That it is the result of a
+policy, and not of an accident, is shown by the similarity of the fate
+of Louvain, Malines, Termonde, Senlis, and finally Rheims.
+
+Many of us have had the opportunity of showing that our love and respect
+for art are not bounded by our nationality, but we feel compelled to
+publish to the world our horror and detestation of the barbarous acts
+committed by the army that represents a country which has done so much
+to promote and advance the study of art and its history.
+
+The signatories are:
+
+ DEVONSHIRE.
+ CHOLMONDELEY.
+ LANSDOWNE.
+ FEVERSHAM.
+ MABEL FEVERSHAM.
+ LEICESTER.
+ LONSDALE.
+ NORMANTON.
+ NORTHBROOK.
+ PLYMOUTH.
+ DILLON.
+ ALINGTON.
+ D'ABERNON.
+ ISABEL SOMERSET.
+ FREDERICK L. COOK.
+ AUDLEY D. NEELD.
+ HERBERT RAPHAEL.
+ SIDNEY COLVIN.
+ MARTIN CONWAY.
+ CHARLES HOLROYD.
+ FREDERIC G. KENYON.
+ HUGH LANE.
+ FRANCIS BEAUFORT PALMER.
+ C. HERCULES READ.
+ CECIL HARCOURT SMITH.
+ ISIDORE SPIELMANN.
+ HERBERT B. TREE.
+ WHITWORTH WALLIS.
+ CHARLES AITKEN.
+ OTTO BEIT.
+ MAURICE W. BROCKWELL.
+ A.H. BUTTERY.
+ C.S. CARSTAIRS.
+ JAMES L. CAW.
+ HERBERT COOK.
+ D.H.S. CRANAGE.
+ LIONEL CUST.
+ CAMPBELL DODGSON.
+ CHARLES DOWDESWELL.
+ DAVID ERSKINE.
+ H.A.L. FISHER.
+ J.L. GARVIN.
+ PERCIVAL GASKELL.
+ ALGERNON GRAVES.
+ JAMES GREIG.
+ O. GUTEKUNST.
+ EDWARD HUTTON.
+ G.B. CROFT-LYONS.
+ D.S. MACCOLL.
+ ERIC MACLAGAN.
+ G. MAYER.
+ MORTIMER MENPES.
+ ALMERIC H. PAGET.
+ J.S.R. PHILLIPS.
+ G.N. COUNT PLUNKETT.
+ JANET ROSS.
+ ROBERT ROSS.
+ M.E. SADLER.
+ MARION SPIELMANN.
+ A.J. SULLEY.
+ D. CROAL THOMSON.
+ T. HUMPHRY WARD.
+ W.H. JAMES WEALE.
+ FREDERICK A. WHITE.
+ R.C. WITT.
+
+
+
+
+*To Arms!*
+
+*By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.*
+
+
+Is it possible that there are still some of our people who do not
+understand the causes of this war, and are ignorant of the great stakes
+at issue which will speedily have so important a bearing upon the lives
+of each and all of them? It is hard to believe it, and yet it is so
+stated by some who profess to know. Let me try, in the shortest space
+and in the clearest words that I can command, to lay before them both
+the causes and the possible effects, and to implore them now, now, at
+this very moment, before it is too late, to make those efforts and
+sacrifices which the occasion demands. In Germany, every man from the
+ages of sixteen to fifty-five is with the colors. The last man has been
+called up. And yet we hear--we could not bear to see--that young
+athletic men in this country are playing football or cricket, while our
+streets are full of those who should be in our camps. All our lives have
+been but a preparation for this supreme moment. All our future lives
+will be determined by how we bear ourselves in these few months to come.
+Shame, shame on the man who fails his country in this its hour of need!
+I would not force him to serve. I could not think that the service of
+such a man was of any avail. Let the country be served by free men, and
+let them deal with the coward or the sluggard who flinches.
+
+The causes of the war are only of moment to us, at this stage, in that
+we gain more strength in our arms and more iron in our souls by a
+knowledge that it is for all that is honorable and sacred for which we
+fight. What really concerns us is that we are in a fight for our
+national life, that we must fight through to the end, and that each and
+all of us must help, in his own fashion, to the last ounce of his
+strength, that this end may be victory. That is the essence of the
+situation. It is not words and phrases that we need, but men, men--and
+always more men. If words can bring the men then they are of avail. If
+not they may well wait for the times to mend. But if there is a doubt in
+the mind of any man as to the justice of his country's quarrel, then
+even a writer may find work ready to his hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let us cast our minds back upon the events which have led up to this
+conflict. They may be divided into two separate classes, those which
+prepared the general situation, and those which caused the special
+quarrel. Each of these I will treat in its turn.
+
+
+*Teuton Intoxication.*
+
+It is a matter of common knowledge, one which a man must be blind and
+deaf not to understand, that for many years Germany, intoxicated by her
+success in war and by her increase of wealth, has regarded the British
+Empire with eyes of jealousy and hatred. It has never been alleged by
+those who gave expression to this almost universal national passion that
+Great Britain had in any way, either historically or commercially, done
+Germany a mischief. Even our most bitter traducers, when asked to give
+any definite historical reasons for their dislike, were compelled to put
+forward such ludicrous excuses as that the British had abandoned the
+Prussian King in the year 1761, quite oblivious of the fact that the
+same Prussian King had abandoned his own allies in the same war under
+far more damaging circumstances, acting up to his own motto that no
+promises are binding where the vital interests of a State are in
+question. With all their malevolence they could give no examples of any
+ill turn done by us until their deliberate policy had forced us into
+antagonism. On the other hand, a long list of occasions could very
+easily be compiled on which we had helped them in some common cause,
+from the days of Marlborough to those of Blucher. Until the twentieth
+century had turned they had no possible cause for political hatred
+against us. In commerce our record was even more clear. Never in any way
+had we interfered with that great development of trade which has turned
+them from one of the poorest to one of the richest of European States.
+Our markets were open to them untaxed, while our own manufactures paid
+20 per cent. in Germany. The markets of India, of Egypt, and of every
+portion of the empire which had no self-appointed tariff, were as open
+to German goods as to British ones. Nothing could possibly have been
+more generous than our commercial treatment. No doubt there was some
+grumbling when cheap imitations of our own goods were occasionally found
+to oust the originals from their markets. Such a feeling was but natural
+and human. But in all matters of commerce, as in all matters political
+before the dawn of this century, they have no shadow of a grievance
+against us.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And yet they hated us with a most bitter hatred, a hatred which long
+antedates the days when we were compelled to take a definite stand
+against them. In all sorts of ways this hatred showed itself, in the
+diatribes of professors, in the pages of books, in the columns of the
+press. Usually it was a sullen, silent dislike. Sometimes it would flame
+up suddenly into bitter utterance, as at the time of the unseemly
+dispute around the deathbed of the Emperor's father, or on the occasion
+of the Jameson Raid. And yet this bitter antagonism was in no way
+reciprocated in this country. If a poll had been taken at any time up to
+the end of the century as to which European country was our natural
+ally, the vote would have gone overwhelmingly for Germany. "America
+first and then Germany" would have been the verdict of nine men out of
+ten. But then occurred two events which steadied the easy-going Briton,
+and made him look more intently and with a more questioning gaze at his
+distant cousin over the water. Those two events were the Boer war and
+the building of the German fleet. The first showed us, to our amazement,
+the bitter desire which Germany had to do us some mischief, the second
+made us realize that she was forging a weapon with which that desire
+might be fulfilled.
+
+
+_The Boer War and Germany._
+
+We are most of us old enough to remember the torrent of calumny and
+insult which was showered upon us in the day of our temporary distress
+by the nation to whom we had so often been a friend and an ally. It is
+true that other nations treated us little better, and yet their
+treatment hurt us less. The difference as it struck men at the time may
+be summarized in this passage from a British writer of the period.
+
+"But it was very different with Germany," he says. "Again and again in
+the world's history we have been the friends and the allies of these
+people. It was so in the days of Marlborough, in those of the Great
+Frederick, and in those of Napoleon. When we could not help them with
+men we helped them with money. Our fleet has crushed their enemies. And
+now, for the first time in history, we have had a chance of seeing who
+were our friends in Europe, and nowhere have we met more hatred and more
+slander than from the German press and the German people. Their most
+respectable journals have not hesitated to represent the British
+troops--troops every bit as humane and as highly disciplined as their
+own--not only as committing outrages on person and property, but even as
+murdering women and children.
+
+"At first this unexpected phenomenon merely surprised the British
+people, then it pained them, and finally, after two years of it, it has
+roused a deep, enduring anger in their minds."
+
+He goes on to say: "The continued attacks upon us have left an enduring
+feeling of resentment, which will not and should not die away in this
+generation. It is not too much to say that five years ago a complete
+defeat of Germany in a European war would have certainly caused British
+intervention. Public sentiment and racial affinity would never have
+allowed us to see her really go to the wall. And now it is certain that
+in our lifetime no British guinea and no soldier's life would under any
+circumstances be spent for such an end. That is one strange result of
+the Boer war, and in the long run it is possible that it may prove not
+the least important."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such was the prevailing mood of the nation when they perceived Germany,
+under the lead of her Emperor, following up her expressions of enmity by
+starting with restless energy to build up a formidable fleet, adding
+programme to programme, out of all possible proportion to the German
+commerce to be defended or to the German coastline exposed to attack.
+Already vainglorious boasts were made that Germany was the successor to
+Britain upon the seas. "The Admiral of the Atlantic greets the Admiral
+of the Pacific," said the Kaiser later in a message to the Czar. What
+was Britain to do under this growing menace? So long as she was isolated
+the diplomacy of Germany might form some naval coalition against her.
+She took the steps which were necessary for her own safety, and without
+forming an alliance she composed her differences with France and Russia
+and drew closer the friendship which united her with her old rival
+across the Channel. The first fruit of the new German fleet was the
+entente cordiale. We had found our enemy. It was necessary that we
+should find our friends. Thus we were driven into our present
+combination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And now we had to justify our friendship. For the first time we were
+compelled to openly oppose Germany in the deep and dangerous game of
+world politics. They wished to see if our understanding was a reality or
+a sham. Could they drive a wedge between us by showing that we were a
+fair-weather friend whom any stress would alienate? Twice they tried it,
+once in 1906 when they bullied France into a conference at Algeciras but
+found that Britain was firm at her side, and again in 1911 when in a
+time of profound peace they stirred up trouble by sending a gunboat to
+Agadir, and pushed matters to the very edge of war. But no threats
+induced Britain to be false to her mutual insurance with France. Now for
+the third and most fatal time they have demanded that we forswear
+ourselves and break our own bond lest a worse thing befall us. Blind and
+foolish, did they not know by past experience that we would keep our
+promise given? In their madness they have wrought an irremediable evil
+to themselves, to us, and to all Europe.
+
+I have shown that we have in very truth never injured nor desired to
+injure Germany in commerce nor have we opposed her politically until her
+own deliberate actions drove us into the camp of her opponents. But it
+may well be asked why then did they dislike us, and why did they weave
+hostile plots against us? It was that, as it seemed to them, and as
+indeed it actually may have been, we, independently of our own wills,
+stood between Germany and that world empire of which she dreamed. This
+was caused by circumstances over which we had no control and which we
+could not modify if we had wished to do so. Britain, through her
+maritime power and the energy of her merchants and people, had become a
+great world power when Germany was still unformed. Thus, when she had
+grown to her full stature, she found that the choice places of the world
+and those most fitted for the spread of a transplanted European race
+were already filled up. It was not a matter which we could help nor
+could we alter it, since Canada, Australia, and South Africa would not,
+even if we could be imagined to have wished it, be transferred to German
+rule. And yet the Germans chafed, and if we can put ourselves in their
+places we may admit that it was galling that the surplus of their
+manhood should go to build up the strength of an alien and possibly a
+rival State. So far we could see their grievance, or, rather their
+misfortune, since no one was in truth to blame in the matter. Had their
+needs been openly and reasonably expressed, and had the two States moved
+in concord in the matter, it is difficult to think that no helpful
+solution of any kind could have been found.
+
+
+*As Germans See England.*
+
+But the German method of approaching the problem has never been to ask
+sympathy and co-operation, but to picture us as a degenerate race from
+whom anything might be gained by playing upon our imagined weakness and
+cowardice. A nation which attends quietly to its own sober business
+must, according to their mediaeval notions, be a nation of decadent
+poltroons. If we fight our battles by means of free volunteers instead
+of enforced conscripts then the military spirit must be dead among us.
+Perhaps, even in this short campaign, they have added this delusion also
+to the dust-bin of their many errors. But such was their absurd
+self-deception about the most virile of European races. Did we propose
+disarmament, then it was not humanitarianism but cowardice that prompted
+us, and their answer was to enlarge their programme. Did we suggest a
+navy-building holiday, it was but a cloak for our weakness and an
+incitement that they should redouble their efforts. Our decay had become
+a part of their national faith. At first the wish may have been the
+father to the thought, but soon under the reiterated assertions of their
+crazy professors the proposition became indisputable. Bernhardi in his
+book upon the next war cannot conceal the contempt in which he has
+learned to hold us. Neibuhr long ago had prophesied the coming fall of
+Britain, and every year was believed to bring it nearer and to make it
+more certain. To these jaundiced eyes all seemed yellow, when the
+yellowness lay only in themselves. Our army, our navy, our colonies, all
+were equally rotten. "Old England, old, indeed, and corrupt, rotten
+through and through." One blow and the vast sham would fly to pieces,
+and from those pieces the victor could choose his reward. Listen to
+Prof. Treitschke, a man who, above all others, has been the evil genius
+of his country, and has done most to push it toward this abyss: "A thing
+that is wholly a sham," he cried, in allusion to our empire, "cannot, in
+this universe of ours, endure forever. It may endure for a day, but its
+doom is certain." Were ever words more true when applied to the narrow
+bureaucracy and swaggering Junkerdom of Prussia, the most artificial and
+ossified sham that ever our days have seen? See which will crack first,
+our democracy or this, now that both have been plunged into the furnace
+together. The day of God's testing has come, and we shall see which can
+best abide it.
+
+
+*The Blame Not England's.*
+
+I have tried to show that we are in no way to blame for the hostility
+which has grown up between us. So far as it had any solid cause at all
+it has arisen from fixed factors, which could no more be changed by us
+than the geographical position which has laid us right across their exit
+to the oceans of the world. That this deeply rooted national sentiment,
+which forever regarded us as the Carthage to which they were destined to
+play the part of Rome, would, sooner or later, have brought about war
+between us, is, in my opinion, beyond all doubt. But it was planned to
+come at the moment which was least favorable for Britain. "Even English
+attempts at a rapprochement must not blind us to the real situation,"
+says Bernhardi. "We may, at most, use them to delay the necessary and
+inevitable war until we may fairly imagine we have some prospect of
+success." A more shameless sentence was never penned, and one stands
+marveling which is the more grotesque--the cynicism of the sentiment or
+the folly which gave such a warning to the victim. For be it remembered
+that Bernhardi's words are to be taken very seriously, for they are not
+the ravings of some Pan-German monomaniac, but the considered views of
+the foremost military writer of Germany, one who is in touch with those
+inner circles whose opinions are the springs of national policy. "Our
+last and greatest reckoning is to be with Great Britain," said the
+bitter Treitschke. Sooner or later the shock was to come. Germany sat
+brooding over the chessboard of the world waiting for the opening which
+should assure a winning game.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was clear that she should take her enemies separately rather than
+together. If Britain were attacked it was almost certain that France and
+Russia would stand by her side. But if, on the contrary, the quarrel
+could be made with these two powers, and especially with Russia, in the
+first instance, then it was by no means so certain that Great Britain
+would be drawn into the struggle. Public opinion has to be strongly
+moved before our country can fight, and public opinion under a Liberal
+Government might well be divided upon the subject of Russia. Therefore,
+if the quarrel could be so arranged as to seem to be entirely one
+between Teuton and Slav there was a good chance that Britain would
+remain undecided until the swift German sword had done its work. Then,
+with the grim acquiescence of our deserted allies, the still bloody
+sword would be turned upon ourselves, and that great final reckoning
+would have come.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such was the plan, and fortune favored it. A brutal murder had, not for
+the first time, put Servia into a position where a State may be blamed
+for the sins of individuals. An ultimatum was launched so phrased that
+it was impossible for any State to accept it as it stood and yet remain
+an independent State. At the first sign of argument or remonstrance the
+Austrian Army marched upon Belgrade. Russia, which had been already
+humiliated in 1908 by the forcible annexation of Bosnia, could not
+possibly submit a second time to the Caudine Forks. She laid her hand
+upon her sword hilt. Germany sprang to the side of her ally. France
+ranged herself with Russia. Like a thunderclap the war of the nations
+had begun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So far all had worked well for German plans. Those of the British public
+who were familiar with the past and could look into the future might be
+well aware that our interests were firmly bound with those of France,
+and that if our faggots were not tied together they would assuredly be
+snapped each in its turn. But the unsavory assassination which had been
+so cleverly chosen as the starting point of the war bulked large in the
+eyes of our people, and, setting self-interest to one side, the greater
+part of the public might well have hesitated to enter into a quarrel
+where the cause seemed remote and the issues ill-defined. What was it to
+us if a Slav or a Teuton collected the harbor due of Saloniki! So the
+question might have presented itself to the average man who in the long
+run is the ruler of this country and the autocrat of its destinies. In
+spite of all the wisdom of our statesmen, it is doubtful if on such a
+quarrel we could have gained that national momentum which might carry us
+to victory. But at that very moment Germany took a step which removed
+the last doubt from the most cautious of us and left us in a position
+where we must either draw our sword or stand forever dishonored and
+humiliated before the world. The action demanded of us was such a
+compound of cowardice and treachery that we ask ourselves in dismay what
+can we ever have done that could make others for one instant imagine us
+to be capable of so dastardly a course. Yet that it was really supposed
+that we could do it, and that it was not merely put forward as an excuse
+for drawing us into war, is shown by the anger and consternation of the
+Kaiser and his Chancellor when we drew back from what the British Prime
+Minister had described as "an infamous proposal." One has only to read
+our Ambassador's description of his interview with the German Chancellor
+after our decision was announced, "so evidently overcome by the news of
+our action," to see that through some extraordinary mental aberration
+the German rulers did actually believe that a vital treaty with
+Britain's signature upon it could be regarded by this country as a mere
+"scrap of paper."
+
+
+*The Treaty of 1839.*
+
+What was this treaty which it was proposed so lightly to set aside? It
+was the guarantee of the neutrality of Belgium signed in 1839 (confirmed
+verbally and in writing by Bismarck in 1870) by Prussia, France, and
+Britain, each of whom pledged their word to observe and to enforce it.
+On the strength of it Belgium had relied for her security amid her
+formidable neighbors. On the strength of it also France had lavished all
+her defenses upon her eastern frontier, and left her northern exposed to
+attack. Britain had guaranteed the treaty, and Britain could be relied
+upon. Now, on the first occasion of testing the value of her word it was
+supposed that she would regard the treaty as a worthless scrap of paper,
+and stand by unmoved while the little State which had trusted her was
+flooded by the armies of the invader. It was unthinkable, and yet the
+wisest brains of Germany seem to have persuaded themselves that we had
+sunk to such depths of cowardly indolence that even this might go
+through. Surely they also have been hypnotized by those foolish dreams
+of Britain's degeneration, from which they will have so terrible an
+awakening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As a matter of fact the General Staff had got ahead of the diplomatists,
+and the German columns were already over the border while the point was
+being debated at Berlin. There was no retreat from the position which
+had been taken up. "It is to us a vital matter of strategy and is beyond
+argument," said the German soldier. "It is to us a vital matter of honor
+and, is beyond argument," answered the British statesman. The die was
+cast. No compromise was possible. Would Britain keep her word or would
+she not? That was the sole question at issue. And what answer save one
+could any Briton give to it? "I do not believe," said our Prime
+Minister, "that any nation ever entered into a great controversy with a
+clearer conscience and stronger conviction that it is fighting, not for
+aggression, not for the maintenance of its own selfish interest, but in
+defense of principles the maintenance of which is vital to the
+civilization of the world." So he spoke, and history will indorse his
+words, for we surely have our quarrel just.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So much for the events which have led us to war. Now for a moment let us
+glance at what we may have to hope for, what we may have to fear, and,
+above all, what we must each of us do that we win through to a lasting
+peace.
+
+What have we to gain if we win? That we have nothing material to gain,
+no colonies which we covet, no possessions of any sort that we desire,
+is the final proof that the war has not been provoked by us. No nation
+would deliberately go out of its way to wage so hazardous and costly a
+struggle when there is no prize for victory. But one enormous indirect
+benefit we will gain if we can make Germany a peaceful and harmless
+State. We will surely break her naval power and take such steps that it
+shall not be a menace to us any more. It was this naval power, with its
+rapid increase and the need that we should ever, as Mr. Churchill has so
+well expressed it, be ready at our average moment to meet an attack at
+their chosen moment--it was this which has piled up our war estimates
+during the last ten years until they have bowed us down. With such
+enormous sums spent upon ships and guns, great masses of capital were
+diverted from the ordinary channels of trade, while an even more serious
+result was that our programmes of social reform had to be curtailed from
+want of the money which could finance them. Let the menace of that
+lurking fleet be withdrawn--the nightmare of those thousand hammers
+working day and night in forging engines for our destruction--and our
+estimates will once again be those of a civilized Christian country,
+while our vast capital will be turned from measures of self-protection
+to those of self-improvement. Should our victory be complete, there is
+little which Germany can yield to us save the removal of that shadow
+which has darkened us so long. But our children and our children's
+children will never, if we do our work well now, look across the North
+Sea with the sombre thoughts which have so long been ours, while their
+lives will be brightened and elevated by money which we, in our darker
+days, have had to spend upon our ships and our guns.
+
+Consider, on the other hand, what we should suffer if we were to lose.
+All the troubles of the last ten years would be with us still, but in a
+greatly exaggerated form. A larger and stronger Germany would dominate
+Europe and would overshadow our lives. Her coast line would be
+increased, her ports would face our own, her coaling stations would be
+in every sea, and her great army, greater then than ever, would be
+within striking distance of our shores. To avoid sinking forever into
+the condition of a dependant, we should be compelled to have recourse to
+rigid compulsory service, and our diminished revenues would be all
+turned to the needs of self-defense. Such would be the miserable
+condition in which we should hand on to our children that free and
+glorious empire which we inherited in all the fullness of its richness
+and its splendor from those strong fathers who have built it up. What
+peace of mind, what self-respect could be left for us in the remainder
+of our lives! The weight of dishonor would lie always upon our hearts.
+And yet this will be surely our fate and our future if we do not nerve
+our souls and brace our arms for victory. No regrets will avail, no
+excuses will help, no after-thoughts can profit us. It is now--now--even
+in these weeks and months that are passing that the final reckoning is
+being taken, and when once the sum is made up no further effort can
+change it. What are our lives or our labors, our fortunes or even our
+families, when compared with the life or death of the great mother of us
+all? We are but the leaves of the tree. What matter if we flutter down
+today or tomorrow, so long as the great trunk stands and the burrowing
+roots are firm. Happy the man who can die with the thought that in this
+greatest crisis of all he has served his country to the uttermost, but
+who would bear the thoughts of him who lives on with the memory that he
+had shirked his duty and failed his country at the moment of her need?
+
+There is a settled and assured future if we win. There is darkness and
+trouble if we lose. But if we take a broader sweep and trace the
+meanings of this contest as they affect others than ourselves, then ever
+greater, more glorious are the issues for which we fight. For the whole
+world stands at a turning point of its history, and one or other of two
+opposite principles, the rule of the soldier or the rule of the citizen,
+must now prevail. In this sense we fight for the masses of the German
+people, as some day they will understand, to free them from that
+formidable military caste which has used and abused them, spending their
+bodies in an unjust war and poisoning their minds by every device which
+could inflame them against those who wish nothing save to live at peace
+with them. We fight for the strong, deep Germany of old, the Germany of
+music and of philosophy, against this monstrous modern aberration the
+Germany of blood and of iron, the Germany from which, instead of the old
+things of beauty, there come to us only the rant of scolding professors
+with their final reckonings, their Weltpolitik, and their Godless
+theories of the Superman who stands above morality and to whom all
+humanity shall be subservient. Instead of the world-inspiring phrases of
+a Goethe or a Schiller, what are the words in the last decade which have
+been quoted across the sea? Are they not always the ever-recurring words
+of wrath from one ill-balanced man? "Strike them with the mailed fist."
+"Leave such a name behind you as Attila and his Huns." "Turn your
+weapons even upon your own flesh and blood at my command." These are the
+messages which have come from this perversion of a nation's soul.
+
+
+*A Mighty Despotism.*
+
+But the matter lies deep. The Hohenzollerns and the Hapsburgs have used
+their peoples as a great landowner might use the serfs upon his estate.
+It was, and is, their openly expressed theory that they were in their
+position by the grace of God, that they owed no reckoning to any man,
+and that kingdom and folk were committed for better or worse to their
+charge. Round this theory of the Dark Ages there gathered all the forces
+of the many courts of the empire, all the nobility who make so huge a
+class in Germanic countries, all the vast army to whom strict discipline
+and obedience were the breath of life, all the office-holders of the
+State, all the purveyors of warlike stores. These and their like were
+the natural setting to such a central idea. Court influence largely
+controlled the teaching at school and universities, and so the growing
+twig could be bent. But all these forces together could not have upheld
+so dangerous and unnatural a theory had it not been for the influence of
+a servile press. How that press was managed, how the thoughts of the
+people could be turned to the right or the left with the same precision
+as a platoon of grenadiers, has been shown clearly enough in the memoirs
+of Bismarck. Public opinion was poisoned at its very roots. The average
+citizen lived in a false atmosphere where everything was distorted to
+his vision. He saw his Kaiser, not as an essentially weak and impetuous
+man with a dangerous entourage who were ever at his ear, but as Germany
+personified, an angel with a flaming sword, beating back envious
+assailants from the beloved Fatherland. He saw his neighbors not as
+peaceful nations who had no possible desire to attack him, but on the
+contrary lived in constant fear of him, but as a band, of envious and
+truculent conspirators who could only be kept in order by the sudden
+stamp of the jackboot and the menacing clatter of the sabre. He
+insensibly imbibed the Nietzsche doctrine that the immorality of the
+Superman may be as colossal as his strength and that the slave-evangel
+of Christianity was superseded by a sterner law. Thus, when he saw acts
+which his reason must have told him were indefensible he was still
+narcotized by this conception of some new standard of right. He saw his
+Kaiser at the time of a petty humiliation to Great Britain sending a
+telegram of congratulation to the man who had inflicted this rebuff.
+Could that be approved by reason? At a time when all Europe was
+shuddering over the Armenian massacres he saw this same Kaiser paying a
+complimentary visit to the Sultan whose hands were still wet with the
+blood of murdered Christians. Could that be reconciled with what is
+right? A little later he saw the Kaiser once again pushing himself into
+Mediterranean politics, where no direct German interest lay, and
+endeavoring to tangle up the French developments in Northern Africa by
+provocative personal appearances at Morocco, and, later, by sending a
+gunboat to intrude upon a scene of action which had already by the
+Treaty of Algeciras been allotted to France. How could an honest German
+whose mind was undebauched by a controlled press justify such an
+interference as that? He is or should be aware that, in annexing Bosnia,
+Austria was tearing up a treaty without the consent of the other
+signatories, and that his own country was supporting and probably
+inciting her ally to this public breach of faith. Could he honestly
+think that this was right? And, finally, he must know, for his own
+Chancellor has publicly proclaimed it, that the invasion of Belgium was
+a breach of international right, and that Germany, or, rather, Prussia,
+had perjured herself upon the day that the first of her soldiers passed
+over the frontier. How can he explain all this to himself save on a
+theory that might is right, that no moral law applies to the Superman,
+and that so long as one hews one's way through, the rest can matter
+little? To such a point of degradation have public morals been brought
+by the infernal teachings of Prussian military philosophy, dating back
+as far as Frederick II., but intensified by the exhortations of press
+and professors during our own times. The mind of the average kindly
+German citizen has been debauched and yet again debauched until it
+needed just such a world crisis as this to startle him at last from his
+obsession and to see his position and that of his country in its true
+relation with humanity and progress.
+
+
+*The Final Stakes.*
+
+Thus I say, that for the German who stands outside the ruling classes,
+our victory would bring a lasting relief, and some hope that in future
+his destiny should be controlled by his own judgment and not by the
+passions or interests of those against whom he has at present no appeal.
+A system which has brought disaster to Germany and chaos to all Europe
+can never, one would think, be resumed, and amid the debris of his
+empire the German may pick up that precious jewel of personal freedom
+which is above the splendor of foreign conquest. A Hapsburg or a
+Hohenzollern may find his true place as the servant rather than the
+master of a nation. But apart from Germany, look at the effects which
+our victory must have over the whole wide world. Everywhere it will mean
+the triumph of reasoned democracy, of public debate, of ordered freedom
+in which every man is an active unit in the system of his own
+Government, while our defeat would stand for a victory to a priviliged
+class, the thrusting down of the civilian by the arrogance and
+intolerance of militarism, and the subjection of all that is human and
+progressive to all that is cruel, narrow, and reactionary. This is the
+stake for which we play, and the world will lose or gain as well as we.
+You may well come, you democratic oversea men of our blood, to rally
+round us now, for all that you cherish, all that is bred in your very
+bones, is that for which we fight. And you, lovers of freedom in every
+land, we claim at least your prayers and your wishes, for if our sword
+be broken you will be the poorer. But fear not, for our sword will not
+be broken, nor shall it ever drop from our hands until this matter is
+forever set in order. If every ally we have upon earth were to go down
+in blood and ruin, still would we fight through to the appointed end.
+Defeat shall not daunt us. Inconclusive victory shall not turn us from
+our purpose. The grind of poverty and the weariness of hopes deferred
+shall not blunt the edge of our resolve. With God's help we shall go to
+the end, and when that goal is reached it is our prayer that a new era
+shall come as our reward, an era in which, by common action of State
+with State, mutual hatreds and strivings shall be appeased, land shall
+no longer be estranged from land, and huge armies and fleets will be
+nightmares of the past. Thus, as ever, the throes of evil may give birth
+to good. Till then our task stands clear before us--a task that will ask
+for all we have in strength and resolution. Have you who read this
+played your part to the highest? If not, do it now, or stand forever
+shamed.
+
+
+
+
+*Conan Doyle on British Militarism*
+
+
+Early last year, in the course of some comments which I made upon the
+slighting remarks about our army by Gen. von Bernhardi, I observed: "It
+may be noted that Gen. von Bernhardi has a poor opinion of our troops.
+This need not trouble us. We are what we are, and words will not alter
+it. From very early days our soldiers have left their mark upon
+Continental warfare, and we have no reason to think that we have
+declined from the manhood of our forefathers." Since then he has
+returned to the attack.
+
+With that curious power of coming after deep study to the absolutely
+diametrically wrong conclusion which the German expert, political or
+military, appears to possess, he says in his "War of Today": "The
+English Army, trained more for purposes of show than for modern war,"
+adding in the same sentence a sneer at our "inferior colonial levies."
+
+He will have an opportunity of reconsidering his views presently upon
+the fighting value of our oversea troops, and surely, so far as our own
+are concerned, he must already be making some interesting notes for his
+next edition, or, rather, for the learned volume upon "Germany and the
+Last War," which will, no doubt, come from his pen. He is a man to whom
+we might well raise a statue, for I am convinced that his frank
+confession of German policy has been worth at least an army corps to
+this country. We may address to him John Davidson's lines to his enemy:
+
+ Unwilling friend, let not your spite abate.
+ Spur us with scorn and strengthen us with hate.
+
+There is another German gentleman who must be thinking rather furiously.
+He is a certain Col. Gadke, who appeared officially at Aldershot some
+years ago, was hospitably entertained, being shown all that he desired
+to see, and on his return to Berlin published a most deprecatory
+description of our forces. He found no good thing in them. I have some
+recollection that Gen. French alluded in a public speech to this
+critic's remarks, and expressed a modest hope that he and his men would
+some day have the opportunity of showing how far they were deserved.
+Well, he has had his opportunity, and Col. Gadke, like so many other
+Germans, seems to have made a miscalculation.
+
+
+*Germans Untried in War.*
+
+An army which has preserved the absurd parade schritt, an exercise which
+is painful to the bystander, as he feels that it is making fools of
+brave men, must have a tendency to throw back to earlier types. These
+Germans have been trained in peace and upon the theory of books. In all
+that vast host there is hardly a man who has stood at the wrong end of a
+loaded gun. They live on traditions of close formations, vast cavalry
+charges, and other things which will not fit into modern warfare. Braver
+men do not exist, but it is the bravery of men who have been taught to
+lean upon each other, and not the cold, self-contained, resourceful
+bravery of the man who has learned to fight for his own hand. The
+British have had the teachings of two recent campaigns fought with
+modern weapons--that of the Tirah and of South Africa. Now that the
+reserves have joined the colors there are few regiments which have not a
+fair sprinkling of veterans from these wars in their ranks. The Pathan
+and the Boer have been their instructors in something more practical
+than those imperial grand manoeuvres where the all-highest played with
+his puppets in such a fashion that one of his Generals remarked that the
+chief practical difficulty of a campaign so conducted would be the
+disposal of the dead.
+
+Boers and Pathans have been hard masters and have given many a slap to
+their admiring pupils, but the lesson has been learned. It was not show
+troops, General, who, with two corps, held five of your best day after
+day from Mons to Compiegne. It is no reproach to your valor, but you
+were up against men who were equally brave and knew a great deal more of
+the game. This must begin to break upon you, and will surely grow
+clearer as the days go by. We shall often in the future take the knock
+as well as give it, but you will not say that we are a slow army if you
+live to chronicle this war, nor will your imperial master be proud of
+the adjective which he has demeaned himself in using before his troops
+had learned their lesson.
+
+
+*The South African Lesson.*
+
+The fact is that the German Army, with all its great traditions, has
+been petrifying for many years back. They never learned the lesson of
+South Africa. It was not for want of having it expounded to them, for
+their military attache--"'im with the spatchcock on 'is 'elmet,'" as I
+heard him described by a British orderly--missed nothing of what
+occurred, as is evident from their official history of the war. And yet
+they missed it, and with all those ideas of individual efficiency and
+elastic independent formation which are the essence of modern
+soldiering. Their own more liberal thinkers were aware of it. Here are
+the words which were put into the mouth of Guentz, the representative of
+the younger school, in Beverlein's famous novel:
+
+"The organization of the German Army rested upon foundations which had
+been laid a hundred years ago. Since the great war they had never
+seriously been put to the proof, and during the last three decades they
+had only been altered in the most trifling details. In three long
+decades! And in one of those decades the world at large had advanced as
+much as in the previous century.
+
+"Instead of turning this highly developed intelligence to good account,
+they bound it hand and foot on the rack of an everlasting drill which
+could not have been more soullessly mechanical in the days of Frederick.
+It held them together as an iron hoop holds together a cask, the dry
+staves of which would fall asunder at the first kick."
+
+Lord Roberts has said that if ten points represent the complete soldier,
+eight should stand for his efficiency as a shot. The German maxim has
+rather been that eight should stand for his efficiency as a drilled
+marionette. It has been reckoned that about two hundred books a year
+appear in Germany upon military affairs, against about twenty in
+Britain. And yet, after all this expert debate, the essential point of
+all seems to have been missed--that in the end everything depends upon
+the man behind the gun, upon his hitting his opponent and upon his
+taking cover so as to avoid being hit himself.
+
+After all the efforts of the General Staff, the result when shown upon
+the field of battle has filled our men with a mixture of admiration and
+contempt--contempt for the absurd tactics and admiration for the poor
+devils who struggle on in spite of them. Listen to the voices of the men
+who are the real experts. Says a Lincolnshire Sergeant: "They were in
+solid square blocks, and we couldn't help hitting them." Says Private
+Tait (Second Essex): "Their rifle shooting is rotten. I don't believe
+they could hit a haystack at 100 yards." "They are rotten shots with
+their rifles," says an Oldham private. "They advance in close column,
+and you simply can't help hitting them," writes a Gordon Highlander.
+"You would have thought it was a big crowd streaming out from a cup
+tie," says Private Whitaker of the Guards. "It was like a farmer's
+machine cutting grass," so it seemed to Private Hawkins of the
+Coldstreams. "No damned good as riflemen," says a Connemara boy. "You
+couldn't help hitting them. As to their rifle fire, it was useless."
+"They shoot from the hip, and don't seem to aim at anything in
+particular."
+
+
+*Not Books That Count.*
+
+These are the opinions of the practical men upon the field of battle.
+Surely a poor result from the 200 volumes a year and all the weighty
+labors of the General Staff! "Artillery nearly as good as our own, rifle
+fire beneath contempt." That is the verdict. How will the well-taught
+parade schritt avail them when it comes to a stricken field?
+
+But let it not seem as if this were meant for disparagement. We should
+be sinking to the Kaiser's level if we answer his "contemptible little
+army" by pretending that his own troops are anything but a very
+formidable and big army. They are formidable in numbers, formidable,
+too, in their patriotic devotion, in their native courage, and in the
+possession of such material, such great cannon, aircraft, machine guns,
+and armored cars as none of the Allies can match. They have every
+advantage which a nation would be expected to have when it has known
+that war was a certainty, while others have only treated it as a
+possibility. There is a minuteness and earnestness of preparation which
+are only possible for an assured event. But the fact remains, and it
+will only be brought out more clearly by the Emperor's unchivalrous
+phrase, that in every arm the British have already shown themselves to
+be the better troops. Had he the Froissart spirit within him he would
+rather have said: "You have today a task which is worthy of you. You are
+faced by an army which has a high repute and a great history. There is
+real glory to be won today." Had he said this then, win or lose, he
+would not have needed to be ashamed of his own words--the words of
+ungenerous spirit.
+
+It is a very strange thing how German critics have taken for granted
+that the British Army had deteriorated, while the opinion of all those
+who were in close touch with it was that it was never so good. Even some
+of the French experts made the same mistake, and Gen. Bonnat counseled
+his countrymen not to rely upon it, since "it would take refuge amid its
+islands at the first reverse." One would think that the cause which
+makes for its predominance were obvious. Apart from any question of
+national spirit there is the all-important fact that the men are there
+of their own free will, an advantage which I trust that we shall never
+be compelled to surrender. Again, the men are of longer service in every
+arm, and they have far more opportunities of actual fighting than come
+to any other force. Finally they are divided into regiments with
+centuries of military glories streaming from their banners, which carry
+on a mighty tradition. The very words the Guards, the Rifles, the
+Connaught Rangers, the Buffs, the Scots Greys, the Gordons, sound like
+bugle calls. How could an army be anything but dangerous which had such
+units in its line of battle?"
+
+
+*History Repeating Itself*.
+
+And yet there remains the fact that both enemies and friends are
+surprised at our efficiency. This is no new phenomenon. Again and again
+in the course of history the British armies have had to win once more
+the reputation which had been forgotten. Continentals have always begun
+by refusing to take them seriously. Napoleon, who had never met them in
+battle, imagined that their unbroken success was due to some weakness in
+his Marshals rather than in any excellence of the troops. "At last I
+have them, these English," he exclaimed as he gazed at the thin, red
+line at Waterloo. "At last they have me, these English," may have been
+his thought that evening as he spurred his horse out of the debacle. Foy
+warned him of the truth. "The British infantry is the devil," said he.
+"You think so because you were beaten by them," cried Napoleon. Like von
+Kluck or von Kluck's master, he had something to learn.
+
+Why this continual depreciation? It may be that the world pays so much
+attention to our excellent right arm that it cannot give us credit for
+having a very serviceable left as well. Or it may be that they take
+seriously those jeremiads over our decay which are characteristic of our
+people, and very especially of many of our military thinkers. I have
+never been able to understand why they should be of so pessimistic a
+turn of mind, unless it be a sort of exaltation of that grumbling which
+has always been the privilege of the old soldier. Croker narrates how he
+met Wellington in his later years, and how the Iron Duke told him that
+he was glad he was so old, as he would not live to see the dreadful
+military misfortunes which were about to come to his country. Looking
+back, we can see no reason for such pessimism as this. Above all, the
+old soldier can never make any allowance for the latent powers which lie
+in civilian patriotism and valor. Only a year ago I had a long
+conversation with a well-known British General, in which he asserted
+with great warmth that in case of an Anglo-German war with France
+involved the British public would never allow a trained soldier to leave
+these islands. He is at the front himself and doing such good work that
+he has little time for reminiscence, but when he has he must admit that
+he underrated the nerve of his countrymen.
+
+
+*Assurance Beneath Pessimism.*
+
+And yet under the pessimism of such men as he there is a curious
+contradictory assurance that there are no troops like our own. The late
+Lord Goschen used to tell a story of a letter that he had from a Captain
+in the navy at the time when he was First Lord. This Captain's ship was
+lying alongside a foreign cruiser in some port, and he compared in his
+report the powers of the two vessels. Lord Goschen said that his heart
+sank as he read the long catalogue of points in which the British ship
+was inferior--guns, armor, speed--until he came to the postscript, which
+was: "I think I could take her in twenty minutes."
+
+With all the grumbling of our old soldiers, there is always some
+reservation of the sort at the end of it. Of course, those who are
+familiar with our ways of getting things done would understand that a
+good deal of the croaking is a means of getting our little army
+increased, or at least preventing its being diminished. But whatever the
+cause, the result has been the impression abroad of a "contemptible
+little army." Whatever surprise in the shape of 17-inch howitzers or
+900-foot Zeppelins the Kaiser may have for us, it is a safe prophecy
+that it will be a small matter compared to that which Sir John French
+and his men will be to him.
+
+But above all I look forward to the development of our mounted riflemen.
+This I say in no disparagement of our cavalry, who have done so
+magnificently. But the mounted rifleman is a peculiarly British
+product--British and American--with a fresh edge upon it from South
+Africa. I am most curious to see what a division of these fellows will
+make of the Uhlans. It is good to see that already the old banners are
+in the wind, Lovat's Horse, Scottish Horse, King Edward's Horse, and the
+rest. All that cavalry can do will surely be done by our cavalry. But I
+have always held, and I still very strongly hold, that the mounted
+rifleman has it in him to alter our whole conception of warfare, as the
+mounted archer did in his day; and now in this very war will be his
+first great chance upon a large scale. Ten thousand well-mounted,
+well-trained riflemen, young officers to lead them, all broad Germany,
+with its towns, its railways and its magazines before them--there lies
+one more surprise for the doctrinaires of Berlin.
+
+
+
+
+*The Need of Being Merciless*
+
+*By Maurice Maeterlinck.*
+
+*From The London Daily Mail.*
+
+
+At these moments of tragedy none should be allowed to speak who cannot
+shoulder a rifle, for the written word seems so monstrously useless and
+so overwhelmingly trivial in face of this mighty drama that will for a
+long time and maybe forever free mankind from the scourge of war--the
+one scourge among all that cannot be excused and that cannot be
+explained, since alone among all scourges it issues entirely from the
+hands of man.
+
+But it is while this scourge is upon us--while we have our being in its
+very centre--that we shall do well to weigh the guilt of those who
+committed this inexpiable crime. It is now, when we are in the awful
+horror, undergoing and feeling it, that we have the energy and
+clearsightedness needed to judge it. From the depths of the most fearful
+injustice justice is best perceived. When the hour shall have come for
+settling accounts--it will not be long delayed--we shall have forgotten
+much of what we have suffered and a censurable pity will creep over us
+and cloud our eyes.
+
+
+*Will Seek Sympathy.*
+
+This is the moment, therefore, for us to frame our inexorable
+resolution. After the final victory, when the enemy is crushed--as
+crushed as he will be--efforts will be made to enlist our sympathy. We
+shall be told that the unfortunate German people are merely the victims
+of their monarch and their feudal caste; that no blame attaches to the
+Germany we know that is so sympathetic and cordial--the Germany of
+quaint old houses and open-hearted greetings; the Germany that sits
+under its lime trees beneath the clear light of the moon--but only to
+Prussia, hateful, arrogant Prussia; that homely, peace-loving Bavaria,
+the genial, hospitable dwellers on the banks of the Rhine, the Silesian
+and Saxon--I know not who besides--have merely obeyed and been compelled
+to obey orders they detested, but were unable to resist.
+
+We are in the face of reality now. Let us look at it well and pronounce
+our sentence, for this is the moment when we hold the proofs in our
+hands; when the elements of the crime are hot before us and should
+out--the truth that will soon fade from our memory. Let us tell
+ourselves now therefore that all we shall be told hereafter will be
+false. Let us unflinchingly adhere to what we decide at this moment when
+the glare of the horror is on us.
+
+
+*No Degrees of Guilt.*
+
+It is not true that in this gigantic crime there are innocent and guilty
+or degrees of guilt. They stand on one level, all who have taken part.
+The German from the north has no more especial craving for blood than
+the German from the south has especial tenderness and pity. It is very
+simple. It is the German from one end of the country to the other who
+stands revealed as a beast of prey that the firm will of our planet
+finally repudiates. We have here no wretched slaves dragged along by a
+tyrant King who alone is responsible. Nations have the Government they
+deserve, or rather the Government they have is truly no more than a
+magnified public projection of the private morality and mentality of the
+nation.
+
+If eighty million innocent people merely expose the inherent falseness
+and superficiality of their innocence--and it is a monster they maintain
+at their head who stands for all that is true in their nature, because
+it is he who represents the eternal aspirations of their race, which lie
+far deeper than their apparent transient virtues--let there be no
+suggestion of error, of intelligent people having been tricked and
+misled. No nation can be deceived that does not wish to be deceived. It
+is not intelligence that Germany lacks. In the sphere of intellect such
+things are not possible, nor in the region of the enlightened,
+reflecting will. No nation permits herself to be coerced into the one
+crime man cannot pardon. It is of her own accord she hastens toward it.
+Her chief has no need to persuade. It is she who urges him on.
+
+We have forces here quite different from those on the surface--forces
+that are secret, irresistible, profound. It is these we must judge, must
+crush under heel once for all, for they are the only ones that will not
+be improved, softened or brought into line by experience, progress, or
+even the bitterest lesson. They are unalterable, immovable. Their
+springs lie far beneath hope or influence. They must be destroyed as we
+destroy a nest of wasps, since we know these never can change into a
+nest of bees.
+
+Even though individually and singly Germans are all innocent and merely
+led astray, they are none the less guilty in mass. This is the guilt
+that counts--that alone is actual and real, because it lays bare
+underneath their superficial innocence, the subconscious criminality of
+all. No influence can prevail on the unconscious or subconscious. It
+never evolves. Let there come a thousand years of civilization, a
+thousand years of peace, with all possible refinements, art, and
+education, the German spirit which is its underlying element will remain
+absolutely the same as today and would declare itself when the
+opportunity came under the same aspect with the same infamy.
+
+Through the whole course of history two distinct will-powers have been
+noticed that would seem to be the opposing elemental manifestations of
+the spirit of our globe, one seeking only evil, injustice, tyranny,
+suffering, the other strives for liberty, right, radiance, joy. These
+two powers stand once again face to face. Our opportunity is to
+annihilate the one that comes from below. Let us know how to be pitiless
+that we have no more need for pity. It is the measures of organic
+defense--it is essential that the modern world should stamp out Prussian
+militarism as it would stamp out a poisonous fungus that for half a
+century had poisoned its days. The health of our planet is the question.
+Tomorrow the United States and Europe will have to take measures for the
+convalescence of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+*Letters to Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler*
+
+*By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant.*
+
+
+ _Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia University, has
+ permitted_ THE NEW YORK TIMES _to have the extracts printed
+ herewith from letters sent to him since the beginning of the war by
+ Baron d'Estournelles de Constant, Senator of France, and Member of
+ the International Court at The Hague._
+
+
+*First Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Aug. 15, 1914.--* * * Today I am full of grief to feel myself
+impotent before the murderous conflicts now going on in Belgium and at a
+number of points on our northern and eastern frontiers, while awaiting
+the great battles and hecatombs which will follow; my thought is full of
+these terrible calamities willfully brought about; so many precious
+lives already wiped out or soon to be; so much avoidable mourning which
+one neither can nor wishes now to avoid!
+
+In France there is not a single family which has not given without
+hesitation all its children of military age to fight for the repulse of
+the invader. All the men from Creans, of ages 20 to 48 years, have gone,
+with one exception, and he is now going; and meanwhile no work has
+ceased because of their absence. In all the communes, in all the hamlets
+of the whole of France, the women, the children, and the men over 48
+have assumed all duties, in particular the gathering of the harvests,
+which I see already finished as in normal times. * * *
+
+When one thinks that Servia alone, even though exhausted by two
+atrocious wars, is sufficient to hold in check imperial Austria; when
+one sees Italy remain neutral, and in reality hostile to Austria, and
+Russia open slowly, inexorably, her reservoir of men, resources, and
+infinite energy on the eastern frontier of Germany, one asks truly if
+the Pan-Germanists have not been the veritable plague of God for their
+country; the Fatherland, which men like Goethe, Kant, and Beethoven had
+made so cultured, so glorious, and which asked only to live and to
+prosper, the Pan-Germanists have isolated only to deliver it to the
+execration of the world. It was the same in France formerly, when she
+ceded to chauvinistic influences.
+
+
+*Second Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 3, 1914.
+
+* * * May you never witness such calamities as have fallen upon Europe.
+The visions of horror, which formerly we evoked in order to terrify the
+world and to try to conjure them away, are now surpassed; and we are
+only at the commencement of the war! The trains, thronged with youth and
+enthusiasm, which I saw leave are now returning crowded with the
+wounded. They have filled all the hospitals, the barracks which had been
+left empty, the lyceums, and the schools throughout France. In but a few
+days they have arrived everywhere in the south, the west and the centre
+of the country. At La Fleche alone we have five improvised hospitals
+with 1,200 beds. Creans is a hospital annex, and so it is in all the
+villages and in the dwellings which can provide one or more beds. The
+wounded who occupy these beds are happy, very happy. One of them, who
+has only a broken leg, but who thinks of the thousands of his comrades
+who remain wounded upon the fields of battle, said to me, "I am in
+heaven." * * *
+
+The worst of all, (I have always said it, but it is even worse than I
+had thought,) the worst is that each of the combatants, for the most
+part incapable of cruelty under ordinary conditions, is now devoted to
+the horrible work of hatred and of reprisal; and even more than the
+combatants, their children, their orphans, all those who are to remain
+in mourning. * * *
+
+As far as France is concerned, our first reverses have served to exalt
+the national spirit and to fortify the unanimous resolution to conquer
+or to die. It is important that this be well understood in the United
+States and that it be given due consideration if it is desired to
+intervene without irritating the most noble scruples. * * *
+
+It is the Prussian military system of domination with its contagion
+which has done the harm and which ought to disappear, and that system
+itself is the fruit of Napoleonic imperialism. The struggle is always,
+and more now than ever, between imperialism and liberty, between force
+and right. May you in the United States profit by this lesson, so that
+you may avoid falling into the European error. * * * It is barbarity
+triumphant. But that triumph will be only momentary, and all agree at
+the conclusion of this terrible drama on having a United States of
+Europe with disarmament, or at least with armaments limited to a
+collective police force.
+
+
+*Third Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 8, 1914.
+
+* * * You have comprehended that France is struggling for justice and
+peace. Be sure that she will resist even to the last man, with the
+certainty that she is defending not herself alone but also civilization.
+Never have I suspected to what degree of savagery man can be degraded by
+unrestrained violence. I had believed that the world could never again
+see the time of the Massacre of the Innocents; I deceived myself; we
+have returned to barbarity, and the Prussian Army leaves us no
+alternative between victory and extermination; should she become
+mistress of Paris, which I doubt, and of the half of France, she will
+find the other half which will bury her under its ruins. * * *
+
+The English troops march on our roads, stop at Clermont-Creans! Oh,
+miracle! I see among my compatriots the worst chauvinists, those who
+openly desire for me the fate of Jaures, those who fought me in 1902
+with cries of "Fashoda" or "Chicago," hasten to meet the English
+soldiers in order to aid and acclaim them, in this country still full of
+the memories and the ruins of the hundred years' war! It is because the
+English troops are also defending the land of liberty, theirs as ours
+and as yours. Every one except the Prussians comprehend this, and this
+it is which exalts their souls! * * *
+
+The whole misfortune, I repeat, is the result of the crime committed
+forty-three years ago, the crime which we accepted to avoid recommencing
+the war. Our resignation has not sufficed; it has not caused the trouble
+to disappear; the German Government has none the less been obliged to
+confirm it each day. The misfortune has been the forcible annexation of
+Alsace-Lorraine. For that the Germans are paying today; for that they
+will pay until they have made atonement for their fault. In this regard
+France is irreproachable; she has resisted the chauvinists; our general
+elections, the conferences of Berne and of Basle, have proved that, far
+from seeking revenge, she wished by mutual concessions to arrive
+worthily at reconciliation in peace.
+
+The Germans are paying today for their fault of 1870-71, because that
+fault has corrupted and poisoned them. I have said it a thousand times.
+In order to keep those two unfortunate provinces under their domination
+it has been necessary for them to use force, to institute a regime of
+force. * * * It has been necessary to prevent revolts by repressive
+measures, as at Saverne, which have disgusted, and even disquieted, the
+whole world; that ignominious brutality become sovereign mistress, by
+the force of circumstances, even against the will of the Kaiser and
+against the protestation of all the elite of Germany, of such men as
+Zorn, Foerster, Nippold, and Bebel, has ended by being a menace and a
+danger to Germany itself. All this is connected, and, whatever happens,
+Germany cannot emerge victorious from a war which is itself but the
+logical result of the abuse of her victories. She cannot conquer
+civilization; it is impossible. * * *
+
+Comprehend this well, repeat it, publish it if you wish; France,
+Belgium, and England may suffer check after check; they are prepared for
+this, they expect it, but they will not be discouraged. The German
+armies may exhaust themselves uselessly in killing, burning, and
+destroying. They will destroy themselves in the end. Our national policy
+is to take them in their own trap and to wear them out.
+
+The day of reckoning is coming, when the inexorable advance of the
+Slavic race, always increasing in numbers--it little matters whether it
+is well or badly organized--will come from the rear to attack the
+Germans at the time when they are confident of victory and to drown them
+in the floods of blood which they have caused to flow; terrible
+punishment for a war which we and our friends have done everything to
+prevent. The victims of this punishment will be at least a half million
+of French, Belgians, and Englishmen, together with a whole nation which
+desired peace as we did, but which has allowed herself to be misled by a
+Government mad enough to wish to reconcile the irreconcilable, namely,
+the maintenance of peace and the spirit of conquest. May this punishment
+at least begin an era of new peace! Alas! how may we hope for this when
+we see the human beast awakening in a delirium of fury and getting
+beyond our control to destroy the masterpieces of human genius.
+
+
+*Fourth Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 11, 1914.
+
+The Germans appear to have comprehended that the atrocities which have
+bitterly aggravated the remorseless violation of Belgian neutrality have
+only aroused general indignation, and have at the same time exasperated
+the opposing nations and armies. Contrary to the tales which appear in
+the sensational journals, which are naturally as eager today to embitter
+the war as they were formerly to bring it about, I am assured that the
+German armies in France are repudiating the unworthy excesses of the
+beginning of the campaign and are respecting life and private property.
+This will alleviate the horrors of the war, but France nevertheless will
+place no limit on the sacrifices which she will make. She will wear out
+the German Army and destroy it, day after day, in continuous battles.
+* * *
+
+The Belgians with us at Clermont-Creans, instead of being a burden, as I
+had feared, are making themselves useful. They are very welcome. They
+are gradually recognized and appreciated as estimable people, and are
+employed in the homes and farms and fields. We should like to have more
+of them. How we shall regret them when they leave! * * *
+
+The German Emperor must stand either as a pacifist or as a conqueror. He
+cannot pass as both. All the results which may follow this war could
+well have been obtained in peace by a general effort of good-will. On
+the other hand, the legacy of the war will be endless rancor, hatred,
+reprisal, and savagery. When it shall be understood that, in spite of
+Governments and Parliaments, the war has been, in large part, excited by
+the manoeuvres of an international band of the dealers in military
+supplies and by their all-powerful newspapers, when it shall be
+thoroughly comprehended that these dealers and these newspapers have
+played with rumors of war as with a scarecrow, for the purpose of
+keeping up a general condition of disquiet favorable to their sinister
+operations, then, too late, alas! there will be a revulsion of public
+opinion to sustain finally those men, like our friends, who have urged
+arbitration rather than war, and conciliation rather than arbitration.
+
+* * * More than ever our motto, "Pro patria per orbis concordiam," will
+be that of every good patriot who wishes to develop the internal
+prosperity of his country through friendly foreign relations. * * * More
+than a century ago you Americans condemned and executed British
+imperialism; subsequently Europe condemned and executed Napoleonic
+imperialism; Europe is now going to condemn and execute Germanic
+imperialism; profit by this threefold lesson to make an end of
+imperialism in your country, and by your good example to render to
+Europe an incalculable service.
+
+Such an example will be more efficacious than overhasty or superficial
+intervention, however well intentioned it might be. Above all, beware of
+offering aid to Europe in a spirit of opportunism rather than of high
+principle. Especially, do not try to take advantage of some
+circumstances in order to urge a lame and ephemeral peace. Public
+opinion will be bitterly divided if the war is brought to an end merely
+by lassitude and a desire for comfort. Public opinion will accept only a
+peace inspired with high ideals, without needless humiliation for the
+conquered, and equally without sacrifice of any principles which have
+brought together the anti-German coalition.
+
+The war itself, however atrocious it has been and still may be, will
+have been only a commencement, the beginning of continual wars into
+which the New World will be drawn, if we do not leave the desire of life
+and the means of living to Germany, conquered but still alive. It is
+possible to conquer and to exterminate armies, but it is not possible to
+exterminate a nation of 70,000,000 people. It will then be necessary to
+make a place for Germany which will permit the exercise of her fecund
+activity in the struggle of universal competition. If we yield to the
+temptation to make an end of German competition, we shall neither end
+the competition nor shall we end war.
+
+For years I have repeated this to our English friends who were
+intoxicated with the theories of Chamberlain. I see without surprise but
+with sorrow that serious journals of London and Paris spread before the
+eyes of their readers the absurd idea that this war will kill the German
+foreign commerce, while the English and French production will be
+enriched without a rival, and consequently without effort. Place should
+be made for Germany from Berlin to Vienna in the organization of a
+general European confederation which will give full satisfaction to
+Italy at Trieste, will install the Turkish Government in Asia, will
+bring about an agreement between the Christian Balkan States, and give
+the free disposal of their destinies to Poland, Denmark, Finland,
+Hungary, Rumania, and Alsace-Lorraine.
+
+In this manner the worst problems on which general peace depends would
+be solved, and with these problems that of armaments, which it would no
+longer be dangerous nor humiliating to reduce if the general reduction,
+extending even to Japan and seconded by all the republics of the New
+World, were agreed to by all. Certainly such an agreement would be
+difficult to develop; it would terrify the diplomats, but outside of
+such an agreement I see in perspective nothing but perpetual war,
+internal revolution, and general ruin.
+
+
+*Fifth Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 18, 1914.
+
+
+* * * The pride of an empire may not be crushed without a bitter
+struggle. The German Government has at its disposition the live force of
+a young and growing people. However, the day is coming when that people,
+aware that they have been deceived, will be able to repudiate their
+Government, just as the French people did after Sedan. Meanwhile the
+German armies have stopped their retreat in order to form a new line of
+resistance. But to what good? This line will be overthrown, and in the
+end the German Army will be obliged to retreat in disorder and again to
+cross the land which it has laid waste.
+
+The true difficulties, in my opinion, are going to commence when the
+conquered Germans must submit to the conditions made by the conquerors.
+The victors will be able to agree, I believe, to stop the war and to
+dictate conditions. But will they agree to make these conditions
+moderate? That is the question. At that moment even France will be far
+from unanimous, as she has been unanimous in defending herself. France
+is of one opinion on these principal points:
+
+1. Alsace-Lorraine ought to be liberated at last, free to return to
+France; her rights ought to be respected and recognized. Such liberation
+should extend as far as possible to every country in Europe whose right
+has been violated.
+
+2. We must make an end of ruinous armed peace, invented, so it was said,
+to prevent war, but which has made war inevitable. German militarism
+must be crushed unless it is again to become a menace and give the
+signal for another competition of armaments. This peace will be only a
+truce, a sinister comedy, unless it is crowned by a general convention
+of disarmament, to which Germany must subscribe with all the others and
+before all the others.
+
+3. Arbitration, conciliation, all the means already provided for
+amicable adjustment, and if possible for the prevention of international
+conflicts, should be organized on a more solid and more definite basis
+than in the past, with the sanction, or at least the maximum of
+necessary precautions, of a federated Europe. All which we have done at
+The Hague, far from being lost, will serve as a foundation for the
+building of a pacific federation.
+
+On these three points one may prophesy a unanimity almost complete; but
+the division will begin when it comes to distinguishing between Germany
+and the empire, between the German people who have a right to live and
+the German Empire which opposed the right to live; the division will
+begin when some demand the humiliation of Germany, others the ruin of
+her colonies, and of her very life. France, who has defended peace,
+will, I am sure, also defend justice; but justice will not triumph
+without difficulty. And it is here that the United States will render
+great service, if the United States has preserved, as one can see so
+clearly in the Mexican crisis, her moral authority and
+disinterestedness.
+
+In the cuttings from the American papers which you have sent me I have
+read with great disquietude an article which says that, after all, the
+United States "will be the beneficiary of the European war." This
+article claims that the United States may profit very easily by this war
+to take away from Germany her commerce in the three Americas, &c. It is
+a dangerous form of reasoning, which, however, is not new.
+
+If war has attracted ardent partisans it is because it appeals to the
+temperament of many people, it flatters their self-pride, but also it
+serves their interests. I have never understood it as I do at present. I
+see, for example, the town of Mons enriching itself through the war;
+cafes, restaurants, the hotels, are unable to accommodate all who come
+to them; the farmers are seen disputing about their products. There are
+also the military requisitions by which one can profit in getting rid of
+an old horse, of a wagon, an automobile, &c.; there are the butchers,
+the bakers, the dealers in cutlery, &c., who have never had so many
+purchasers; the furnishers of materials for the hospitals, pharmacists,
+orthopedists, &c.
+
+Add to these an immense number of furnishers of military supplies, not
+only those who sell cannon, arms, and ammunition, but the accessories,
+the uniforms, material for the transports, and for the administrative
+work, &c. They are legion. Add to these all the combatants who have been
+promised positions as officers, Colonels, Generals. * * * Napoleon I.
+gave titles and honors. * * * You will understand that after the war, if
+there is an infinite number of unfortunates who mourn and who are ruined
+by the war, there are others, on the contrary, who have profited very
+well, who have enriched themselves and been raised to a privileged,
+fortunate class, who will find it quite natural to demand war or whose
+children will demand it later; while the mass of unfortunates, without
+strength, without resources, without protection, will need years to
+reconquer in peace the rights which they legally enjoyed before the war,
+and which the war suddenly took from them.
+
+If to this class, more powerful than numerous, of natural partisans of
+the war in Europe you are going to add the American partisans of the
+European war, you will commit a grave fault, for the Americans have more
+than ever everything to gain by peace and all to lose in war, which they
+will not be able to limit if it breaks out again in the world.
+
+The truth is that the Americans evidently gain in the war, but they lose
+more. Europe is something else to them than a market over which to
+dispute, she is a reservoir of experiences, good and bad, but of
+experiences which you cannot do without. To wish for the continuation of
+the war in Europe or even to take sides with it as a sort of half evil
+is for the Americans a crime, a sort of suicide; that would be to
+applaud the destruction of models which civilization seems to have
+collected for your edification and for your development. Later, the
+United States can do without many of these lessons which she learns from
+Europe, but she will always have need of the inspiration of the
+masterpieces of our civilization. It is only a barbarous reasoning which
+allows one to see in the European war profit for the United States; it
+is a loss, a mourning, a shame for the whole world, and particularly for
+the free countries which are the guides of other peoples and which can
+only fulfill their mission in times of peace.
+
+I have often heard the profits of war discussed. The undertakers of
+impressive funeral services can also congratulate themselves over
+catastrophes. A railroad accident which puts an entire country in
+mourning can enrich them. The most murderous battles bring profit in the
+final reckoning to somebody, if it is only to the jackals and the crows;
+but it is the whole of a country, and for the United States it is the
+whole world, which must be considered, and the more the whole world
+prospers the more will the United States find friends, collaborators,
+and clients. The more the world is troubled, on the contrary, the more
+commerce and general activities will suffer from it, without mention of
+the development of instruction and of the progress of human thought,
+which will be paralyzed.
+
+I have been surprised to see a serious American paper bring up these old
+questions for discussion, and I conclude that we are going to feel in
+Europe the result of our errors. It is going to be necessary to find
+money to fill up the financial gulf which we dig each day under our feet
+without realizing it; a gulf twice made, by the billions which it has
+been necessary to spend for the war, by the billions of ordinary income
+which must now go by default. We cannot reasonably expect that Germany
+will be able to pay all the deficits in France, England, Russia,
+Belgium, and Japan; she will have no longer her foreign commerce; her
+misery is going to be frightful; it will be necessary then that each of
+the adversaries which she has so rashly provoked limit his demands; we
+must ourselves limit her ruin unless our own credit shall be ruined
+also.
+
+In a word, there are two victories equally difficult for the Allies to
+win: the first over Germany, the second over themselves. Let us prepare
+ourselves to the uttermost and with all the authority which we can
+husband to facilitate the first here, and from your side as well as from
+ours, the second. To make war there is the first difficulty; but to
+finish well, that is what makes me anxious for the future.
+
+
+*Sixth Letter.*
+
+PARIS, Sept. 24, 1914.
+
+In spite of all, unity of purpose is maintained among the Allies as well
+as among Frenchmen. I say in spite of all, because at Berlin this was
+hardly believed possible at the beginning of the war.
+
+* * * All the men have left Creans; my farm is empty, and as I told you,
+the work is accomplished just the same. Means are found to feed the
+wounded English, becoming more and more numerous, the wounded Belgians
+and the prisoners. At the mill the miller's wife has four sons and a
+son-in-law in the army. I went to see her; not a tear, she looked
+straight before her absorbed in her work and said only "It is
+necessary." She continues her work as yesterday, as always, only with
+more energy and seriousness than formerly, with the purpose to
+accomplish double.
+
+Meanwhile in spite of lack of news, we are beginning to learn that many
+sons, husbands, fathers, and brothers whom we saw go away will never
+return. Each day a few of the wounded are buried, and so it is in all
+the communities in the country which are not occupied by the Germans. In
+every town, village, home, and heart the national tribulations have
+their local echo.
+
+If all France were victim of a catastrophe of nature, an earthquake, a
+conflagration, or a flood, the country would be crushed; but, no, the
+contrary is now true, for the present catastrophe has been brought about
+by an evil will and each one comprehends that this will, if left free to
+act, will continue to do evil until it has been crushed. We have neither
+the time nor the wish to complain; we fight. * * *
+
+The people, all those who are now devoted to my policy, to our policy,
+remain more faithful than ever. They keep silent awaiting the end of the
+war and knowing well that in fact it is not so much a question of
+Germany as of German reaction, German imperialism, and German
+militarism. They know also that if the German reaction might have been
+crushed sooner, the war would not have broken out. Thus, far from being
+blind, public opinion is alive to the truth. The grandeur, and to speak
+the whole truth, alas, the beauty of the atrocious war is that it is a
+war of liberation. * * *
+
+It is impossible that the New World should remain a simple spectator
+before the gigantic struggle which is progressing in Europe. I do not
+ask that the New World intervene by armed force, but that it shall not
+conceal its opinion, its aversion for that horror which is called
+reaction and which truly is only death; that it shall not conceal its
+indignation for the abominable calculation of that reaction which is
+incapable of comprehending anything of the life, the work, the science
+and the art of human genius. I ask that the New World shall not remain
+skeptical before the senile attacks of those armies which respect
+nothing, neither women, children, old men, unfortified cities, museums,
+nor cathedrals. * * *
+
+It is impossible that the free United States, born out of the sacred
+struggle against European domination, enlarged, enriched, and ennobled
+by that struggle, and now in the front rank among nations as the fruit
+of that struggle, should hesitate between revolution and reaction,
+between right and conquest, between peace and war.
+
+Americans are too generous to hesitate, too wise, also, for Prussian
+reaction is cracking and is going to crumble; even Americans of German
+origin would be acting against their own fatherland if they, by their
+sympathies, should sustain the regime of caporalism which is now
+destroying it.
+
+
+
+
+*The Vital Energies of France*
+
+*By Henri Bergson.*
+
+*From The Bulletin des Armees, Nov. 5, 1914.*
+
+
+The issue of the war is not doubtful: Germany will succumb. Material
+force and moral force, all that sustains her will end by failing her
+because she lives on provisions garnered once for all, because she
+wastes them and will not know how to renew them.
+
+Everything has been said about her material resources. She has money,
+but her credit is sinking, and it is not apparent where she can borrow.
+She needs nitrates for her explosives, oil for her motors, bread for her
+sixty-five millions of inhabitants. For all this she has made provision,
+but the day will come when her granaries will be empty and her
+reservoirs dry. How will she fill them? War as she practices it consumes
+a frightful number of her men, and here, too, all revitalization is
+impossible; no aid will come from without, since an enterprise launched
+to impose German domination, German "culture," German products, does not
+and never will interest those who are not Germans. Such is the situation
+of Germany confronting a France who keeps her credit intact and her
+ports open, who procures provisions and ammunition according to her
+need, who reinforces her army with all that her Allies bring to her, and
+who can count--since her cause is that of humanity itself--upon the
+increasingly active sympathy of the civilized world.
+
+But it is not merely a question of material force, of visible force.
+What of the moral force that cannot be seen and that is more important
+than the other--which to a certain degree can be supplied--that is
+essential, since without it nothing avails?
+
+The moral energy of nations, like that of individuals, can only be
+sustained by some ideal superior to themselves, stronger than they are,
+to which they can cling with a strong grip when they feel their courage
+vacillate. Where lies the ideal of contemporary Germany? The time has
+past when her philosophers proclaimed the inviolability of justice, the
+eminent dignity of the person, (the individual?), the obligation laid
+upon nations to respect one another. Germany militarized by Prussia has
+thrust far from her those noble ideas which came to her formerly for the
+most part from the France of the eighteenth century and the Revolution.
+She has made for herself a new soul, or rather, she has docilely
+accepted that which Bismarck has given her. To that statesman has been
+attributed the famous phrase: "Might makes right." As a matter of fact
+Bismarck never said it, because he was unable to distinguish between
+might and right; in his eyes right was simply that which is desired by
+the strongest, that which is declared in the law imposed by the victor
+upon the vanquished. His whole moral philosophy is summed up in that.
+The Germany of the present knows no other. She also worships brute
+force. And as she believes herself strongest she is entirely absorbed in
+adoration of herself. Her energy has its origin in this pride. Her moral
+force is only the confidence by which her material force inspires her.
+That is to say, that here also she lives on her reserves, that she has
+no means of revitalization. Long before England was blockading her
+coasts she had blockaded herself, morally, by isolating herself from all
+ideals capable of revivifying her.
+
+Therefore she will see her strength and her courage worn out. But the
+energy of our soldiers is linked to something which cannot be worn out,
+to an ideal of justice and liberty. Time has no hold on us. To a force
+nourished only by its own brutality we oppose one that seeks outside of
+itself, above itself, a principle of life and of renewal. While the
+former is little by little exhausted, the latter is constantly revived.
+The former already is tottering, the latter remains unshaken. Be without
+fear: the one will be destroyed by the other.
+
+
+
+
+*France Through English Eyes*
+
+With Rene Bazin's Appreciation.
+
+
+ _Referring to the article printed below, which appeared in The
+ London Times Literary Supplement of Oct. 1, and which the French
+ Government ordered to be read in all Parisian schools, M. Rene
+ Bazin writes in l'Echo de Paris:_
+
+Is not this language admirable? What full and flowing phrases. They are
+like a ship filled with grain sailing into port with her sails full.
+Preserve them, these fugitive lines written by a neighbor, and read them
+to your children. They will teach them the greatness of France and the
+greatness of England.
+
+The whole world recognizes two qualities in the Englishman: his bravery
+and his common sense. We know that the Englishman is true to his given
+word, and that even in the antipodes he never changes his habits. As I
+write, the postman brings me a letter from the front, dated Oct. 17. The
+cavalryman who sends it tells of our Allies. "We are fighting the
+enemy's cavalry," he writes, "and for two days my brigade was in action
+with the British. They know how to fight and they astonish us by their
+marvelous powers of organization and their coolness."
+
+Yes, we know that of old. We also know that England never closes her
+doors to liberty. We have a confused memory of the hospitality given to
+our priests in the times of the Revolution. Now England provides us with
+fresh proof of her kindness of heart. You have heard the news--the
+professors and students of the Catholic University of Louvain invited to
+Cambridge. The destroyed Belgian university reconstituted in the home of
+the celebrated English university. What a magnificent idea!
+
+I do not know whether the author who has spoken so well of France in the
+great English newspaper has ever visited this country. But he has surely
+meditated on our history and has divined the reason of the very
+existence of France; why she merits love beyond her frontiers, and why
+she should be defended "like a treasure." England is not made up of
+traders, soldiers, sailors, politicians, but also--and that is what the
+French people will learn better every day--of poets, subtle
+philosophers, and of thoughtful and religious spirits.
+
+In truth, the day which Joan of Arc foresaw has arrived. She did not
+hate the English. It was only their intolerable rule of the kingdom
+which was hateful to her. The good maid of Lorraine said that after
+having driven the English out of France she would reconcile them with
+the French and lead them together in a crusade. This has become true.
+Her dream is accomplished. The crusade is not against the Saracens, but
+it is a crusade all the same.
+
+
+
+
+*France*
+
+*From The London Times Literary Supplement*
+
+
+Among all the sorrows of this war there is one joy for us in it: that it
+has made us brothers with the French as no other two nations have ever
+been brothers before. There has come to us, after ages of conflict, a
+kind of millennium of friendship; and in that we feel there is a hope
+for the world that outweighs all our fears, even at the height of the
+worldwide calamity. There were days and days, during the swift German
+advance, when we feared that the French armies were no match for the
+German, that Germany would be conquered on the seas and from her eastern
+frontier, that after the war France would remain a power only through
+the support of her Allies. For that fear we must now ask forgiveness;
+but at least we can plead in excuse that it was unselfish and free from
+all national vanity. If, in spite of ultimate victory, France had lost
+her high place among the nations, we should have felt that the victory
+itself was an irreparable loss for the world. And now we may speak
+frankly of that fear because, however unfounded it was, it reveals the
+nature of the friendship between France and England.
+
+That is also revealed in the praise which the French have given to our
+army. There is no people that can praise as they can: for they enjoy
+praising others as much as some nations enjoy praising themselves, and
+they lose all the reserve of egotism in the pleasure of praising well.
+But in this case they have praised so generously because there was a
+great kindliness behind their praise, because they, like us, feel that
+this war means a new brotherhood stronger than all the hatreds it may
+provoke, a brotherhood not only of war but of the peace that is to come
+after it. That welcome of English soldiers in the villages of France,
+with food and wine and flowers, is only a foretaste of what is to be in
+both countries in a happier time. It is what we have desired in the past
+of silly wrangles and misunderstandings, and now we know that our desire
+is fulfilled.
+
+
+*"That Sweet Enemy."*
+
+For behind all those misunderstandings, and in spite of the difference
+of character between us, there was always an understanding which showed
+itself in the courtesies of Fontenoy and a hundred other battles. When
+Sir Philip Sidney spoke of France as that sweet enemy, he made a phrase
+for the English feeling of centuries past and centuries to be. We
+quarrelled bitterly and long; but it was like a man and woman who know
+that some day their love will be confessed and are angry with each other
+for the quarrels that delay the confession. We called each other
+ridiculous, and knew that we were talking nonsense; indeed, as in all
+quarrels without real hatred, we made charges against each other that
+were the opposite of the truth. We said that the French were frivolous;
+and they said that we were gloomy. Now they see the gayety of our
+soldiers and we see the deep seriousness of all France at this crisis of
+her fate. She, of all the nations at war, is fighting with the least
+help from illusion, with the least sense of glory and romance. To her
+the German invasion is like a pestilence; to defeat it is merely a
+necessity of her existence; and in defeating it she is showing the
+courage of doctors and nurses, that courage which is furthest removed
+from animal instinct and most secure from panic reaction. There is no
+sign in France now of the passionate hopes of the revolutionary wars;
+1870 is between them and her; she has learned, like no other nation in
+Europe, the great lesson of defeat, which is not to mix material dreams
+with spiritual; she has passed beyond illusions, yet her spirit is as
+high as if it were drunk with all the illusions of Germany.
+
+And that is why we admire her as we have never admired a nation before.
+We ourselves are an old and experienced people, who have, we hope,
+outlived gaudy and dangerous dreams; but we have not been tested like
+the French, and we do not know whether we or any other nation could
+endure the test they have endured. It is not merely that they have
+survived and kept their strength. It is that they have a kind of
+strength new to nations, such as we see in beautiful women who have
+endured great sorrows and outlived all the triumphs and passions of
+their youth, who smile where once they laughed; and yet they are more
+beautiful than ever, and seem to live with a purpose that is not only
+their own, but belongs to the whole of life. So now we feel that France
+is fighting not merely for her own honor and her own beautiful country,
+still less for a triumph over an arrogant rival, but for what she means
+to all the world; and that now she means far more than ever in the past.
+
+
+*Furia Francese.*
+
+This quarrel, as even the Germans confess, was not made by her. She saw
+it gathering, and she was as quiet as if she hoped to escape war by
+submission. The chance of revenge was offered as it had never been
+offered in forty years; yet she did not stir to grasp it. Her enemy gave
+every provocation, yet she stayed as still as if she were spiritless;
+and all the while she was the proudest nation on the earth, so proud
+that she did not need to threaten or boast. Then came the first failure,
+and she took it as if she had expected nothing better. She had to make
+war in a manner wholly contrary to her nature and genius, and she made
+it as if patience, not fire, were the main strength of her soul. Yet
+behind the new patience the old fire persisted; and the _Furia Francese_
+is only waiting for its chance. The Germans believe they have determined
+all the conditions of modern war, and, indeed of all modern competition
+between the nations to suit their own national character. It is their
+age, they think, an age in which the qualities of the old peoples,
+England and France, are obsolete. They make war, after their own
+pattern, and we have only to suffer it as long as we can. But France has
+learned what she needs from Germany so that she may fight the German
+idea as well as the German armies; and when the German armies were
+checked before Paris there was an equal check to the German idea. Then
+the world, which was holding its breath, knew that the old nations, the
+old faith and mind and conscience of Europe, were still standing fast
+and that science had not utterly betrayed them all to the new barbarism.
+Twice before, at Tours and in the Catalaunian fields, there had been
+such a fight upon the soil of France, and now for the third time it is
+the heavy fate and the glory of France to be the guardian nation. That
+is not an accident, for France is still the chief treasury of all that
+these conscious barbarians would destroy. They knew that while she
+stands unbroken there is a spirit in her that will make their Kultur
+seem unlovely to all the world. They know that in her, as in Athens long
+ago, thought remains passionate and disinterested and free. Their
+thought is German and exercised for German ends, like their army; but
+hers can forget France in the universe, and for that reason her armies
+and ours will fight for it as if the universe were at stake. Many forms
+has that thought taken, passing through disguises and errors, mocking at
+itself, mocking at the holiest things; and yet there has always been the
+holiness of freedom in it. The French blasphemer has never blasphemed
+against the idea of truth even when he mistook falsehood for it. In the
+Terror he said there was no God, because he believed there was none, but
+he never said that France was God so that he might encourage her to
+conquer the world. Voltaire was an imp of destruction perhaps, but with
+what a divine lightning of laughter would he have struck the Teutonic
+Antichrist, and how the everlasting soul of France would have risen in
+him if he could have seen her most sacred church, the visible sign of
+her faith and her genius, ruined by the German guns. Was there ever a
+stupidity so worthy of his scorn as this attempt to bombard the spirit?
+For, though the temple is ruined, the faith remains; and whatever war
+the Germans may make upon the glory of the past, it is the glory of the
+future that France fights for. Whatever wounds she suffers now she is
+suffering for all mankind; and now, more than ever before in her
+history, are those words become true which one poet who loved her gave
+to her in the Litany of Nations crying to the earth:
+
+ I am she that was thy sign and standard bearer,
+ Thy voice and cry;
+ She that washed thee with her blood and left thee fairer,
+ The same am I.
+ Are not these the hands that raised thee fallen, and fed thee,
+ These hands defiled?
+ Am not I thy tongue that spake, thine eye that led thee,
+ Not I thy child?
+
+
+
+
+*The Soldier of 1914*
+
+*By Rene Doumic.*
+
+
+ _In spite of the great European war, which struck France with the
+ full force of its horrors, the Institute of France, which includes
+ the world-famous French Academy, held its regular session on Oct.
+ 26 last. The feature of this session, widely heralded beforehand,
+ was the address of the celebrated critic, M. Rene Doumic of the
+ Academy, on "The Soldier of 1914." "Every sentence, every word of
+ it, was punctuated with acclamations from the audience," says Le
+ Figaro in its report. Below is a translation of M. Doumic's
+ address:_
+
+The soldier of 1914. We think only of him. We live only for him, just as
+we live only through him. I have not chosen this subject; it has forced
+itself upon me. My only regret is that I come here in academician's
+costume, with its useless sword, to speak to you about those whose
+uniforms are torn by bullets, whose rifles are black with powder.
+
+And I am ashamed, above all, of placing so feeble a voice at the service
+of so great a cause. But what do words matter, when the most brilliant
+of them would pale before acts of which each day makes us the witnesses?
+For these acts we have only words, but let us hope that these, coming
+from the heart, may bring to those who are fighting for their country
+somewhere near the frontier the spirit of our gratitude and the fervor
+of our admiration.
+
+Our history is nothing but the history of French valor, so ingenious in
+adopting new forms and adapting itself each time to the changing
+conditions of warfare. Soldiers of the King or of the republic, old
+"grognards" of Napoleon, who always growled yet followed just the same,
+youngsters who bit their cartridges with childish lips, veterans of
+fights in Africa, cuirassieurs of Reichshofen, gardes-mobiles of the
+Loire, all, at the moment of duty and sacrifice, did everything that
+France expected of her sons.
+
+So, too, for this war, the soldier needed has arisen. After so many
+heroes he has invented a new form of heroism.
+
+I say the soldier, for the soldier is what one must say. Here begins
+what is clearly expressed in one phrase only--the French miracle. This
+national union in which all opinions have become fused is merely a
+reflection of the unity which has been suddenly created in our army.
+
+
+*When War Broke Out.*
+
+When war broke out it found military France ready and armed; mere
+troopers, officers none of whom ever thought that he would one day lead
+his men under fire, and that admirable General Staff which, never
+allowing itself to be deflected from its purpose, did its work silent
+and aloof.
+
+But there was beside this France another France, the France of
+civilians, accustomed by long years of peace to disbelieve in war;
+which, in conjuring up a picture of Europe delivered over to fire and
+blood, could not conceive that any human being in the world would assume
+the responsibility for such an act before history. War surprised the
+employe at his desk, the workman in his workshop, the peasant in his
+field. It snatched them from the intimacy of their hearths, from the
+amenities of family life which in France is sweeter than elsewhere.
+These men were obliged to leave behind beings whom they loved tenderly.
+For the last time they clasped in their arms the beloved partners of
+their lives, so deeply moved yet so proud, and their children, the
+eldest of whom have understood and will never forget. And all of them,
+artist and artisan, priest and teacher, those who dreamed of revenge and
+those who dreamed of the fraternity of nations, those of every mind,
+every profession, every age, as they stepped into their places, were
+endowed with the soul of the soldier of France, every one of them, and
+became thus the same soldier.
+
+The war which lay in wait for these men, many of whom did not seem made
+for war, was a war of which nobody had ever seen the like. We have heard
+tell of wars of giants, of battles of nations, but nobody had ever seen
+a war extending from the Marne to the Vistula, nor battles with a front
+of hundreds of kilometers, lasting weeks without respite day or night,
+fought by millions of men. Never in its worst nightmares had
+hallucinated imagination conjured up the progress made in the art of
+mowing down human lives. The German Army, to which the German Nation has
+never refused anything, either moral support or money, the nerve of war,
+has been able to profit by all this progress, to reduce to a formula the
+violence which drives forward the attack, to prepare the spy system
+which watches over the unarmed foe, to organize even incendiarism, and
+to become thus, forged by forty-four years of hatred, the most
+formidable tool of destruction that has ever sown ruin and death.
+
+
+*German Meets Belgian.*
+
+The Germans arrived, with the irresistible impetus of their masses, with
+the fury of a tempest, with the roar of thunder, enraged at having been
+confronted on their road by that little Belgian Nation which has just
+inscribed its name among the first on the roster of heroism. Already the
+German chiefs imagined themselves lords of Paris, which they threatened
+to reduce to ashes--and which did not tremble.
+
+It was to meet this colossus of war that our little soldier marched
+forth. And he made it fall back.
+
+To this new war he brings his old qualities, the qualities of all time.
+Courage--let us not speak of that. Can one speak of courage? Just read
+the short sentences in the army orders.
+
+Corporal Voituret of the Second Dragoons, mortally wounded on a
+reconnoissance, cries: "Vive la France! I die for her! I die happy!"
+Private Chabannes of the Eighteenth Chasseurs, unhorsed and wounded,
+replies to the Major who asks him why he had not surrendered: "We
+Frenchmen never surrender!" And remember those who, mortally wounded,
+stick to their posts so as to fight to the end with their men, and those
+wounded men who have but one desire--every one of us can vouch for
+this--to return to the firing line! And that one who, hopelessly
+mutilated, said to me: "It is not being crippled that hurts me; it is
+that I shall not be able to see the best part of the thing!" These, and
+the others, the thousands of others, shall we speak of their courage?
+--what would it mean to speak of their courage?
+
+And the dash of them!--the only criticism to which they lay themselves
+open is that they are too fiery, that they do not wait the right moment
+for the charge, in order to drive back the enemy at the point of the
+bayonet. What spirit! What gayety! All the letters from our soldiers are
+overflowing with cheerfulness. Where, for instance, does that nickname
+come from applied by them to the enemy--the "Boches"? It comes from
+where so many more have come; its author is nobody and everybody; it is
+the spontaneous product of that Gallic humor which jokes at danger,
+takes liberities with it.
+
+What pride! What sense of honor! Whereas the German officer, posted
+behind his men, drives them forward like a flock of sheep, revolver in
+his hand and insults on his lips, we, on our side, hear nothing but
+those beautiful, those radiant words: "Forward! For your country!"--the
+call of the French officer to his children, whom he impels forward by
+giving them the example, by plunging under fire first, before all of
+them, at their head.
+
+
+*The Password: "Smile!"*
+
+And--supreme adornment of all--with what grace they deck their
+gallantry! A few seconds before being killed by an exploding shell, Col.
+Doury, ordered to resist to the last gasp, replies: "All right! We will
+resist. And now, boys, here is the password: Smile!" It is like a flower
+thrown on the scientific brutality of modern war, that memory of the
+days when men went to war with lace on their sleeves. There we recognize
+the French soldier such as we have always known him through fifteen
+centuries of the history of France.
+
+But now we look upon him in a form of which we did not suspect the
+existence, the form in which he has just revealed himself to us.
+
+To go forward is all very well; but to fall back in good order, to
+understand that a retreat may be a masterpiece of strategy, to find in
+himself that other kind of courage which consists in not getting
+discouraged, to be able to wait without getting demoralized, to preserve
+unshaken the certainty of the final outcome--in these things lies a
+virtue which we did not know we possessed: the virtue of patience. It
+won us our victory of the Marne. One man is its personification today,
+that great chief, wise and prudent, who spares his men, who makes up his
+mind not to give battle except in his own time on his own ground, that
+chief toward whom at this moment the calm and confident eyes of the
+entire country are turned.
+
+To carry a position by assault is one thing. But to stand impassive in a
+rain of shot, amid exploding shells, amid infernal din and blinding
+smoke; to fire at an invisible enemy, to dispute foot by foot ground
+covered with traps, to retake the same village ten times, to burrow into
+the soil and crouch there, to watch day after day for the moment when
+the beast at bay ventures from his lair--where have we acquired the
+phlegmatic coolness for such things? Has it come from the proximity of
+our English allies? It is in the English reports that we read the
+eulogies of our army for its endurance and tenacity.
+
+We have always known how to pluck the laurels of the brave on fields of
+battle and to water them with our blood. We Frenchmen, all of us, are
+lovers of glory. The stories of war which we read in our childhood
+days--captures of redoubts, fiery charges, furious fights around the
+flag--made us thrill. And, like the Athenians who left the performance
+of a tragedy by Aeschylus thirsting to close their books and march on
+the enemy, we dreamed of combats in which we were to win fame.
+
+But since those days military literature has undergone somewhat of a
+change, and the communiques which we devour twice a day, hungry for
+news, give us no such tales of prowess.
+
+"On the left wing we have progressed. On the right wing we have repulsed
+violent counter-attacks. On the front the situation remains without
+change." Where are our men? What troops are meant? What Generals?
+Nothing is told of such things. The veil of anonymity shrouds great
+actions, a barrier of impenetrable mystery protects the secret of the
+operations.
+
+
+*Great Things Done Simply.*
+
+Our soldiers have endured every hardship, braved every danger, never
+knowing whether each dawning day was their last, yet the cleverest
+manoeuvring, the most gallant feats, are obliterated, effaced, lost, in
+the calculated colorlessness of an enigmatic report. But that sacrifice
+also have they made. To be at the post assigned to them, to play a great
+or infinitesimal role in the common work, is the only reward they
+desire. Can it be that the disease of individualism is a thing of
+yesterday? The soldier of 1914 has cured us of it. Never have
+disinterestedness and modesty been pushed so far.
+
+Let us say it in a word: Never have great things been done so simply.
+
+But he knows why he is fighting. It is not for the ambition of a
+sovereign or the impatience of his heir, for the arrogance of a caste of
+country squires or the profit of a firm of merchants. No; he fights for
+the land where he was born and where his dead sleep; he fights to free
+his invaded country and give her back her lost provinces, for her past,
+struck to the heart by the shells that bombarded the Cathedral of
+Rheims; he fights so that his children may have the right to think,
+speak, and feel in French, so that there may still be in the world a
+French race, which the world needs. For this war of destruction is aimed
+at the destruction of our race, and our race has been moved to its
+depths. It has risen as one man and assembled together; it has called up
+from its remotest history all its energy, in order to reincarnate them
+in the person of him whose duty is to defend the race today; it has
+inspired in him the valor of the knights of old, the endurance of the
+laborer bending over his furrow, the modesty of the old masters who made
+of our cathedrals masterpieces of anonymity, the honesty of the
+bourgeois, the patience of humble folk, the consciousness of duty which
+mothers teach to their children, all those virtues which, developed from
+one generation to another, become a tradition, the tradition of an
+industrious people, made strong by a long past and made to endure. It is
+these qualities, all of them together, which we admire in the soldier of
+1914, the complete and superb type of the entire race.
+
+
+*A Holy Intoxication.*
+
+When it has such an aim, the noblest of all, war is sublime; all who go
+into it are as if transfigured. It exalts, expands, and purifies souls.
+On approaching the battlefield a holy intoxication, a holy happiness,
+takes possession of those for whom has been reserved the supreme joy of
+braving death for their country. Death is everywhere, but they do not
+believe in it any more. And when, on certain mornings, to the sound of
+cannon that mix their rumblings with mystic voices of bells, in the
+devastated church which cries to the heavens through every breach opened
+in its walls, the Chaplain blesses the regiment that he will accompany
+the next minute to the firing line, every head will be bent at the same
+time and all will feel on their brows the breath of God.
+
+Alas! the beauty of the struggle does not hide from me its sadness. How
+many went away, full of youth and hope, to return no more. How many have
+fallen already without seeing realized what they so ardently desired;
+sowers they, who to make the land fertile have watered it with their
+blood, yet will not see the harvest.
+
+But at least their sacrifice will not have been in vain. They have
+brought reconciliation to their divided country, they have made her
+become conscious of herself again, they have made her learn enthusiasm
+once again. They have not seen victory, but they have merited it. Honor
+to them, struck down first, and glory to those who will avenge them! We
+enfold them both in our devotion to the same sacred cause.
+
+Would that a new era might dawn, thanks to them, that a new world might
+be born in which we might breathe more freely, where injustices
+centuries old might be made good, where France, arising from long
+humiliation, might resume her rank and destiny. Then, in that cured,
+vivified France, what an awakening, what a renewal, what a sap, what a
+magnificent flowering there would be! This will be thy work, soldier of
+1914! To you we shall owe this resurrection of our beloved country. And
+later on, and always, in everything beautiful and good that may be done
+among us, in the creations of our poets and the discoveries of our
+savants, in the thousand forms of national activity, in the strength of
+our young men and the grace of our young women, in all that will be the
+France of tomorrow, there will be, soldier so brave and so simple in
+your greatness, a little of your heroic soul!
+
+
+
+
+*Germany's Civilized Barbarism*
+
+*By Emile Boutroux.*
+
+*From the Revue des Deux Mondes.*
+
+
+I sincerely thank M. Emile Boutroux for the letter he has been good
+enough to write to me; and the readers of the Revue will join me, for it
+is addressed to them also. No one could speak of Germany more
+authoritatively than M. Boutroux; no one, indeed, is better acquainted
+with the Germany of yesterday and that of today, or better equipped to
+draw a comparison between them, which for the Prussianized Germany of
+the present is a verdict and a condemnation. The violence, brutality,
+barbarism which she displays--a frightful spectacle--doubtless spring
+from the deepest instincts of race; but man always feels the need of
+justifying his conduct, and the Germans are too much philosophers not to
+seek justification for theirs in a scientific system in which these
+doctrinaires of a new sort are encouraged to persevere without the least
+scruple or pity. M. Boutroux explains to us the detestable sophism which
+has perverted the entire German soul and made of a nation which our
+grandfathers loved and admired, a monster whose implacable egotism
+weighs heavily on the world. But let M. Boutroux speak.
+
+FRANCIS CHARMES.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PARIS, 28 September, 1914.
+
+To the Director of the Revue des Deux Mondes:
+
+Mr. Director and Dear Colleague: You have done me the honor to ask me,
+as I have lived in Germany and studied in part German philosophy and
+literature, whether I was not prepared to submit some observations
+touching the present war. I confess that at this moment words, and even
+thoughts, seem to me to amount to little. Like every Frenchman,
+
+[Illustration: FREDERIC HARRISON. _See Page_ 192]
+
+[Illustration: YVES GUYOT. _See Page_ 194]
+
+I am given up wholly to the task of the hour; all my interest is in
+our generous and admirable army, and my sole concern is to take part,
+however modestly, in the work of the nation. True, a thousand memories
+and reflections crowd my mind; the notion of pausing to express them in
+writing had not occurred to me, but it would be ungracious in me to
+decline your kind invitation. Please omit from the ideas I throw on
+paper whatever seems to you to be lacking in interest.
+
+
+*Mephistopheles Appears.*
+
+In the presence of such events as are passing before our eyes, how can
+we keep our minds free? We have to say to ourselves: "See what has come
+of that philosophic, artistic, scientific development whose grandeur and
+idealistic character all the world has proclaimed!" "That is what the
+infernal cur had in his belly," said Faust as he saw the dog which was
+playing at his side change into Mephistopheles. What! Having declared
+the morality of Plato and Aristotle inadequate and mediocre, having
+preached duty for duty's sake, having established the unconditioned
+supremacy of moral worth, the royalty of the intellect, to end by
+officially declaring that a signed engagement is but a scrap of paper,
+and that juridic or moral laws do not count if they incommode us and if
+we are the strongest! Having given to the world marvelous music, in
+which the purest and deepest aspirations seem to be heard; having raised
+art and poetry to a sort of religion, in which man communes with the
+Eternal by the worship of the ideal; having exalted the universities as
+the most sublime of human creations, temples of science and of
+intellectual freedom, to come to bombarding Louvain, Malines, and the
+Cathedral of Rheims! Having assumed the role of representative par
+excellence of culture, of civilization in its loftiest form, at the end
+to aim at the subjugation of the world and to strive toward that aim by
+the methodical letting loose of brute force, wickedness, and barbarism!
+To boast of having attained the highest plane of human nature, and to
+reveal themselves as survivors of the Huns and Vandals!
+
+Only yesterday Germany was feared throughout the world because of her
+power, but esteemed for her science and her heritage of idealism. Today,
+on the contrary, there is a common cry of reprobation and horror raised
+against her from one end of the earth to the other. Fear is overcome by
+indignation. On every side it is asserted that the victory of German
+imperialism and militarism would be the triumph of despotism, brutality,
+and barbarism. These ideas are expressed to us by Americans of the North
+and South, by Spaniards, Italians, Greeks, Swiss, and Rumanians. The
+nation which burned the University of Louvain and the Cathedral of
+Rheims has brought dishonor upon itself.
+
+What shall we think of the prodigious contrast which manifests itself
+between the high culture of Germany and the end at which she aims, the
+means which she employs in the present war? Is it enough to explain this
+contrast, to allege that in spite of all their science the Germans are
+but slightly civilized, that in the sixteenth century they were still
+boorish and uncultivated and that their science, an affair of
+specialists and pundits, has never penetrated their soul or influenced
+their character?
+
+This explanation is justified. Consider the German professor in the beer
+garden, in the relations of everyday life, in his amusements. With
+certain notable exceptions he excels only in discovering and collecting
+materials for study and in drawing from them, by mechanical operations,
+solutions that rest wholly upon text and argument and make no appeal
+whatever to ordinary judgment and good sense. What a disproportion often
+between his science and his real education. What vulgarity of tastes and
+sentiments and language. What brutality of methods on the part of this
+man whose authority is indisputable in his specialty. Take this learned
+man from his university chair, place him on that scene of war where
+force can alone reign and where the gross appetites are unchained, it is
+not surprising that his conduct approaches that of savages.
+
+
+*A Culture of Violence.*
+
+That is the current judgment and not without reason. The savant and the
+man, among the Germans, are only too often strangers to each other. The
+German in war is inhuman not merely because of an explosion of his true
+nature, gross and violent, but by order. His brutality is calculated and
+systematized. It justifies the words of La Harpe, "There is such a thing
+as a scientific barbarity." In 1900 the German Emperor haranguing his
+soldiers about to set sail for China, exhorted them to leave nothing
+living in their path and to bear themselves like Huns.
+
+If, then, in this war, in the manner in which they have prepared and
+provoked it and now conduct it, they violate without scruple the laws of
+the civilized world, it is not despite their superior culture, it is in
+consequence of that very culture. They are barbarous because they are
+more civilized. How can such a combination of contradictory elements,
+such a synthesis, be possible?
+
+Fichte in the famous discourses to the German Nation which he delivered
+at the University of Berlin during the Winter of 1807 and 1808, had one
+object: to arouse the German Nation by kindling its self-consciousness,
+that is to say, its pure Germanic essence, _Deutschheit_, in order to
+realize that essence when possible beyond its borders and to make it
+dominate the world. The general idea which must guide Germany in the
+accomplishment of this double task is: Germany is to all the rest of the
+world as good is to evil.
+
+The appeal of Fichte was heard. During the century which followed,
+Germany in the most precise and practical manner, on the one hand built
+up the theory of Germanism or _Deutschtum_, on the other hand prepared
+the domination of Germanism in the world. This notion of Germanism
+furnishes, if I am not mistaken, the principle of the inference which I
+wish to indicate, the explanation of the surprising solidarity which
+Germans have created between culture and barbarism.
+
+It would be interesting to probe this notion and follow its development.
+
+In the first place how can a people come to claim for its ideas, its
+virtue, its achievements, not only the right to exist and to be
+respected by other people, but the privilege of being the sole
+expression of the true and the good while everything which emanates from
+other peoples represents nothing but error and evil?
+
+The philosopher Fichte after having built up his system under the
+influence of Kant and of French ideas, notably under the influence of
+Rousseau--of whom he said "peace to his ashes, for he has done
+things"--could think of nothing better to reinforce the German soul
+after Jena than to persuade it that in itself and itself alone there was
+to be found the sense of the ideal combined with power to realize that
+ideal in the world.
+
+
+*The Power to Realize.*
+
+Starting from a certain notion of the absolute he found after Jena that
+this very notion constituted the foundation of the German genius. Soon
+this mystic method was merged in a more concrete method better adapted
+to the positive spirit of modern generations. The one science where all
+knowledge and ideas which concern human life are concentrated is
+history. To this science our epoch has devoted a veritable worship. Now
+the Germans have drawn from history two lessons of the highest
+importance. One is that history is not only the succession of events,
+which mark the life of humanity, it is the judgment of God upon the
+rivalries of peoples. Everything which is wishes to be, and to endure,
+struggle, and impose itself. History tells us which are the men and the
+things Providence has elected. The sign of that election is success. To
+subsist, grow, conquer, dominate is to prove that one is the confidant
+of the thought of Providence, the dispenser of the power of Providence.
+If one people appears designated by history to dominate the others then
+that people is the vicegerent of God upon earth, is God Himself, visible
+and tangible for His creatures.
+
+The second lesson which German erudition has drawn from the study of
+history is that the actual existence of a people charged with
+representing God is not a myth, that such a people exists and that the
+German people is that people. From the victory of Hermann (Arminius)
+over Varus in the forest of Teutoburg in the year 9 A.D., the will of
+God is evident. The Middle Ages show it, and if in modern times Germany
+has appeared to efface herself it is because she was reposing to collect
+her force and strike more heavily. When she was not obviously the first,
+she was so virtually. It was in 1844 that Hoffmann von Fallersleben
+composed the national song, _Deutschland ueber alles, ueber alles in der
+Welt_. Germany over all, Germany over all the world, Germany extending
+from the Meuse to the Niemen, from the Adige to the Belt.
+
+Not only is Germany the elect of Providence but the sole elect, and
+other nations are rejected. The sign of her election is the annihilation
+of the three legions of Quinctilius Varus, and her eternal task is to
+revenge herself for the insolence of the Roman General. "We shall give
+battle to Hermann and we shall avenge ourselves, "_und wollen Rache
+haben_." Thus ran the celebrated national song. _Der Gott, der Eisen
+wachsen liess_.
+
+
+*Germanism and God.*
+
+German civilization has developed in antagonism with the Greco-Roman
+civilization. To adopt the former was on the part of God to reject the
+latter. Therefore German consciousness, realized without hindrance in
+all its force, is but the Divine consciousness. _Deutschtum_ = God and
+God = _Deutschtum_. In practice it is enough that an idea is
+authentically German in order that we may and must conclude that it is
+true, that it is just, and that it ought to prevail.
+
+What are the essential dogmas of this truth, which is German because it
+is true and which is true because it is German? German metaphysicians
+explain that to us more clearly than is usual by thought. The first
+quality of this truth is that it is in opposition to what classic or
+Greco-Latin thought would recognize as true. The latter has sought to
+discover what in man is essentially human, to render man superior to
+other beings, and to substitute more and more the superior elements for
+the inferior elements in human life--reason for blind impulse, justice
+for force, good for wickedness. It has undertaken to create in the world
+a moral force capable of controlling and humanizing material forces. To
+this doctrine, which rests upon man as its centre and which was
+essentially human, German thought opposes itself as the infinite opposes
+the finite, the absolute the relative, the whole the part. The disciples
+of the Greeks had at their disposition no light except that of human
+reason; the German genius possesses a transcendent reason which pierces
+the mysteries of the absolute, of the Divine. What would light be
+without the shadow from which it is detached? How could the ego exist if
+there was not somewhere a non ego to which it is opposed? Evil is not
+less indispensable than good in the transcendent symphony of the whole.
+
+There is something more. It may be a satisfaction for a Greco-Latin,
+impelled by his mediocre logic to say that good is good, evil is evil,
+but these simple formulas are contrary to the truth per se. Good by
+itself is absolutely impotent to realize itself. It is only an idea, an
+abstraction. The power and faculty of creation belong to evil alone. So
+that if good is to be realized it can only be by means of evil, and by
+means of evil left entirely to itself. God could not exist if He were
+not created by the devil, and thus, in a sense, evil is good and good is
+bad. Evil is good because it creates. Good is bad because it is
+impotent. The supreme and true divine law is just this: That evil left
+to itself, evil as evil, gives birth to good, which, by itself, would
+never be able to advance from the ideal to the real. "I am," said
+Mephistopheles, "part of that force which always wishes evil and always
+creates the good." Such is the divine order. He who undertakes to do
+good by good will only do evil. It is only in unchaining the power of
+evil that one has a chance to realize any good.
+
+From these metaphysical principles questions raised by the idea of
+civilization receive most remarkable solutions.
+
+
+*The Essence of Civilization.*
+
+What is civilization in the German and true sense of the word?
+
+Nations in general, especially the Latin nations, put the essence of
+civilization in the moral element of human life, in the softening of
+human manners. To those who understand human culture in this way the
+Germans will apply the words of Ibsen's Brand, "You wish to do great
+things but you lack energy. You expect success from mildness and
+goodness." According to the German thought, mildness and goodness are
+only weakness and impotence. Force alone is strong and force _par
+excellence_ is science, which puts at our disposal the powers of nature
+and indefinitely multiplies our strength. Science, then, should be the
+principal object of our efforts. From science and from the culture of
+scientific intelligence there will necessarily result, by the effect of
+Divine grace, the progress of the will and of the conscience which is
+called moral progress. It is in this sense that Bismarck said,
+"Imagination and sentiment are to science and intelligence what the
+tares are to the wheat. The tares threaten to stifle the wheat; that is
+why they are cut down and burned." True civilization is a virile
+education, aiming at force and implying force. A civilization which
+under pretext of humanity and of courtesy enervates and softens man is
+fit only for women and for slaves.
+
+Is that to say that the notion of right which men invoke against force
+has in reality no meaning, and that a highly civilized people would
+disregard it? We must clearly understand the relation which exists
+between the notion of right and the notion of force. Force is not the
+right. All existing forces do not have an equal right to exist; mediocre
+forces in reality have but a feeble share in the Divine force; but in
+proportion as a force becomes greater it is more noble. A universally
+victorious and all-powerful force would be identical with Divine force
+and should, therefore, be obeyed and honored in the same degree. Justice
+and force, moreover, belong to two different worlds--the natural and the
+spiritual. The former is the phenomenon and symbol of the latter. We
+live in a world of symbols; and so preponderant force is for us the
+visible and practical equivalent of right.
+
+It is, then, puerile to admit the existence of a natural right inherent
+in individuals or in nations, and manifested in their aspirations, their
+powers, their sympathies, their wills. The right of peoples should be
+determined by a purely objective method.
+
+Now in this sense people should be divided into _Naturvoelker_,
+_Halbkulturvoelker_, and _Kulturvoelker_--people in the state of nature,
+half-cultivated people, and cultivated people. This is not all. There
+are people who are simply cultivated--_Naturvoelker_--and people who are
+wholly cultivated--_Vollkulturvoelker_. Now the degree of right depends
+on the degree of culture. As compared with the _Kulturvoelker_ the
+_Naturvoelker_ have no rights. They have only duties--submission,
+docility, obedience. And if there exists a people which deserves more
+than all others the title of _Vollkulturvoelker_--completely cultured
+people--to this people the earth belongs and the supremacy thereof. Its
+mission is to bend all other peoples beneath the yoke of its omnipotence
+co-ordinated with its supreme culture.
+
+
+*The Master Nation.*
+
+Such is the idea of the master nation. This nation must not be simply an
+abstract type, it must necessarily be able to realize itself in our
+world. In effect the spirit is the supreme form of being; it necessarily
+wishes to be; and as it is infinite, it can be realized only by means of
+an infinite force. A nation capable of imposing its will upon everybody
+is the necessary instrument of the Divine will which can grant the
+prayer: "Our Father, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it
+is done in heaven."
+
+As a master nation is necessary in the world there must be subordinate
+nations. There can be no efficient "yes" without a decided "no." The
+ego, says Fichte, is effort. Therefore it presupposes something that
+resists it, namely, that which we call matter. The master nation
+commands. Therefore nations must exist who are made to obey it. It is
+needful even that these nations, which are to the master nation what the
+non ego is to the ego, should resist the action of this superior nation.
+For this resistance is necessary to enable the latter to develop and
+employ its force and to become fully itself; that is, to become the
+whole, enriching itself by the spoils of its enemies.
+
+The ideal nation is thus defined by a transcendental deduction, and this
+same deduction leads us to affirm that the master nation must be not
+merely an idea but a reality. Now, it is plain that this realization of
+the ideal nation is going on under our eyes in the German Nation, which
+represents the highest created race and which surpasses all other
+nations in science and in power. It is to her, and to her alone, that
+the task of accomplishing the will of God upon earth is consigned.
+
+
+*Means of Success.*
+
+To succeed in it, what means must she employ?
+
+In the first place she must acquire complete consciousness of her
+superiority and of her own genius. Nothing German is found in the same
+degree of excellence in other nations. German women, German fidelity,
+German wine, the German song, hold the first rank in the world. To
+combat Satan, that is to say, enemies of Germany, the Germans have at
+their service the ancient god, the German god, _der alte, der deutsche
+Gott_, who identifies His cause with theirs. And as everything which is
+German is by that very fact unique and inimitable, so it is
+correspondingly true that everything which the world has of excellence
+belongs to Germany in fact and in right. Rembrandt, Shakespeare, Ibsen,
+are Germans. A German brain alone could understand them and has a right
+to admire them. It is doubtful if even Joan of Arc, that sublime
+heroine, is French. German savants have maintained her German
+nationality. If the people of Alsace and Lorraine are faithful to France
+that only proves that they ought to be German subjects, because fidelity
+is a German virtue.
+
+As Germany possesses, in principle, all the virtues, all the
+perfections, she suffices to herself and can learn nothing from other
+people. By still stronger reason she owes them no duty of respect or
+good-will. What is called humanity has no meaning for the German. The
+_mot_ of William II., "Humanity for me stops at the Vosges," is not
+merely an instance of national egoism. The German Emperor feels that
+what is for the present beyond his empire can only acquire value when it
+shall be annexed to it.
+
+How, then, ought Germany to behave to other nations?
+
+There are people who wish to be loved, who believe that among nations as
+between individuals, courtesy may have a place and that it would be an
+advance for humanity to admit that justice and equity may rule
+international relations. But Germany, as regards other nations, makes no
+account of justice. She has nothing but scorn for that feminine
+sentiment which particularly characterizes the Latin races. The
+sentiment of justice and humanity is weakness and Germany is and ought
+to be force. _Wo Preussens Macht in Frage kommt, kenne ich kein Gesetz,_
+said Bismarck--"When the power of Prussia is in question I know no law."
+
+
+*Enemies Most Welcome.*
+
+The German does not ask to be loved. He prefers to be hated provided he
+is feared. _Oderint, dum metuant_. He does not mind being surrounded by
+enemies. He knows with satisfaction that in the very heart of the empire
+certain annexed provinces constantly protest against the violence which
+has been done to them. The ego cannot work without opposition. The
+German needs enemies to keep himself in that state of tension and of
+struggle which is the condition of vigor. He willingly applies to
+himself what the Lord God said of man in general in the prologue of
+Goethe's "Faust":
+
+ Man's activity has only too great a propensity to relax. Left by
+ himself man seeks repose. That is why I give him a devil for a
+ companion. He will excite him and keep him from getting sleepy.
+
+Germany has a certain satisfaction in recognizing in the neighbors whom
+she menaces, in the subjects whom she oppresses, these providential
+devils whose mischief will stimulate her activity and her virtue.
+
+Not that Germany rejects, as regards other nations, every regime except
+that of hostility. Her aim is domination, the only role which suits the
+people of God. Now, to attain that, two means are offered to her. The
+first plainly is intimidation which must never flag. The feeble quickly
+become insolent if their feebleness is not recalled to them. Other
+nations must feel themselves constantly threatened with the worst
+catastrophes if they resist Germany. But it being well understood that
+Germany is the strongest, that she will never give up what she
+possesses, however unjustly, then bargains advantageous not only for
+herself but occasionally for the other party, may be the more direct and
+less onerous means than violence to attain her end. So Germany will be,
+by turns, or both at once, threatening and amiable. Amiability itself
+can be effective when it rests on hatred, contempt, and omnipotence.
+
+Now power counts before all. Germany must possess armaments superior to
+those of all other nations. The reason is plain. The German Empire is a
+rock of peace, _der Hort des Friedens_. The force which it accumulates
+is directed toward imposing upon mankind the German peace, the divine
+peace. Since Germany represents peace, whoever opposes Germany intends
+war. Now it is legitimate that Germany should arm to the teeth because
+she is the incarnation of peace, but the adversaries of Germany, who, in
+opposing Germany oppose peace, cannot have the same right. It is the
+duty of Germany to carry her armaments to the maximum; other peoples
+have the right to arm only as Germany may permit.
+
+Germany does not seek war. On the contrary, she tries by inspiring
+terror to render it impossible. But if some nation should profit or be
+capable of profiting by her love of peace to pretend to rights which
+offend her she will consent to punish that nation. She will be pained by
+the violence she has to do to that nation and the severity which she has
+to use toward the guilty. But soldier of God as she is, she cannot fail
+to her mission. Any nation which refuses to do the will of Germany
+proves by that very fact its cultural inferiority and becomes guilty. It
+must be chastised.
+
+The method according to which Germany will make war is determined by
+these premises. War is a return to the state of nature. Germany yields
+to this temporary retrogression because she has to do with people of an
+inferior culture who must be taught a lesson, and must be spoken to in a
+language which they understand. Now a characteristic of a state of
+nature is that force reigns undisputed. In this very trait resides the
+sublime beauty of that state, its grandeur and its fecundity. Don't talk
+of that romantic chivalry which pretends in time of war to temper the
+violence of savage instincts by the intervention of feminine
+sensibility. War is war. _Krieg ist Krieg_. It isn't child's play, it
+isn't sport where it is necessary to blend barbarity and humanity so as
+to conciliate and humanize them. It is barbarity itself let loose as
+widely and fully as possible. This is not perversity. Man as man suffers
+in becoming barbarous, but the man who replaces God suppresses the
+feebleness of the creature. He submits himself to the mysterious and
+sublime law in virtue of which evil is by so much more beneficent as it
+is achieved with resolution and completeness. _Pecca fortiter._
+
+
+*The Nature of War.*
+
+The first article of the code of war is then the suppression of all
+sensibility, pity, humanity. The nature of war is to kill and destroy.
+The more it destroys and kills the sooner it comes to its ideal form.
+Moreover, it is at bottom more humane the more inhuman it is, because
+the very terrors which its excesses inspire shorten it and make it less
+murderous.
+
+In the second place, war necessarily ignores moral laws. Respect for
+laws, treaties, conventions, loyalty, good faith, sentiment and honor,
+scruples, nobility of soul generosity--these are mere fetters. The
+God-people do not recognize them. It will then, without hesitation,
+violate the rights of neutrals if it is to its interest. It will use
+falsehood, perfidy, treachery. It will justify itself by futile pretexts
+in committing the most atrocious acts--bombardment of undefended cities,
+massacre of old men, women and children; barbarous torture, pillage and
+assassination; bestiality to women; organized incendiarism; methodical
+destruction of monuments which, by their history and their antiquity and
+by the admiration of the world, would seem to be inviolable. "I am told:
+I must avenge myself." This reason suffices. We are told that some
+inhabitant of one city or another has been wanting in respect toward one
+of our men. Therefore we must burn the city and show the inhabitants
+what we have. Definitively, our duty is to let loose the elementary
+energies of nature as far as possible to attain the maximum force and
+the maximum of result.
+
+The effect should, moreover, be psychological as well as material.
+Actions which seem horrible to man and which spread terror are
+commendable means, because they break the spirit even if they have no
+value from a military point of view. Moreover, what offends common
+morality is conformed to transcendent morality. The mission of the
+Germans at war is to punish. They work Divine vengeance. They compel
+their enemies to expiate the crime of resisting them. After they have
+taken a city, if the enemy has the insolence to take it back, it is just
+that they shall sack that city if possible, killing its inhabitants and
+burning its finest monuments.
+
+*Barbarity Multiplied by Science.*
+
+Given this problem, how to let loose most widely the powers of evil, it
+is clear that a people of superior culture is better equipped than any
+other to resolve that problem. In fact, science, where it excels, can
+work destruction and evil with the very forces which nature employs only
+to create light, heat, life, and beauty. The God-people therefore unites
+the maximum of science to the maximum of barbarity. The formula of its
+action may be thus written: "Barbarity multiplied by science."
+
+This is the last word of the famous doctrine of Germanism. Now the
+identity of the ultimate consequences of the doctrine and the features
+which the present war presents is evident. The problem which we
+undertook is, therefore, solved. If, contrary to all likelihood,
+barbarity co-exists with culture in the Germans; if in the present war
+it appears to be absolutely bound up in that culture, the reason is that
+German culture differs profoundly from what humanity understands by
+culture and civilization. Human civilization tries to humanize war.
+German culture tends indefinitely to increase its primitive brutality by
+science.
+
+In everything the Germans must be unique--in their women, their God,
+their wine, their loyalty. The war which the Germans wage against us
+strikes the world with horror and terror, because it is in the full
+force of the term "the German way, _die deutsche Art_, the German war."
+
+As the world recognizes this astonishing proposition it asks with
+anxiety, what may be its future relations to Germany? Knowingly and
+systematically, Germany opposes to all Hellenic, Christian, humane
+civilizations the devastating theory of the Huns. True, after the war
+she will claim that she has done nothing but conform, often with pain,
+to the conditions of ideal and divine war, and she will appear willing
+to pardon to her enemies the cruelties she has had to inflict upon them.
+Decidedly, the world will refuse to admire this horrible magnanimity
+which on the first impulse of resistance becomes savagery. Today the
+veil is torn away. German culture is shown to be a scientific barbarity.
+The world, which means in the future to rid itself of all despotism,
+will not compromise with the despotism of barbarity.
+
+But what a disappointment and what a grief! Formerly, Germany was held
+to be a great nation. Its praises were sounded in many a land of solid
+and high culture. The German tradition once held other doctrines than
+those we have now seen devolop under the hands of Prussia. Germanism, as
+the Prussians formulate it, consists essentially in contempt for all
+other nations and in the pretension of domination. But Leibnitz--as
+highly esteemed in the Latin world as in the German--professed a
+philosophy which valued unity only under the form of harmony between
+free and autonomous forces. Leibnitz exalted the multiple, the diverse,
+the spontaneous. Between rival powers he sought to establish relations
+which would reconcile them without changing or diminishing the value or
+independence of any of them. Witness his effort at the reunion of the
+Catholic and Protestant Churches. After Leibnitz came Kant. He certainly
+was very much of a German. He owned, nevertheless, that he had learned
+from Rousseau to honor the common man who, not being a savant, possesses
+moral value far above the savant, who has no merit but science. And,
+starting from the principle that every person, so far as he is capable
+of moral value, is entitled to respect, he urged men to create not a
+universal and despotic monarchy but a republic of nations in which each
+should possess a free and independent personality.
+
+This willingness to put liberty before unity, and respect and honor the
+dignity of other nations while at the same time serving its own, was not
+extinguished in Germany with Leibnitz and Kant. Permit me, my dear
+Director, on this subject to indulge in some personal reminiscences.
+
+
+*Treitschke Versus Bluntschli.*
+
+In January, 1869, I was sent to Heidelberg by the Minister of Public
+Instruction, Victor Duruy, to study the organization of German
+universities. Germany was for me the land of metaphysics, music, and
+poetry. I was greatly astonished to find that outside of the lecture
+courses the only thing discussed was the war which Prussia was about to
+make on France. Invited to a soiree, I heard it whispered behind me,
+_Vielleicht ist er ein franzoesischer Spion_--"Perhaps he is a French
+spy." Such were the words as I caught them. At the beer garden a student
+seated himself near me. He said to me, "We are going to war with you. We
+shall take Alsace and Lorraine." That night I could see from my window,
+looking out on the Neckar, the students clad in their club costumes
+floating down the river on an illuminated raft singing the famous song
+in honor of Bluecher, who "taught the Welches the way of the Germans."
+And at the university itself the lectures of Treitschke, attended by
+excited crowds, were heated harangues against the French, inciting to
+hatred and to war. Seeing that nothing was thought of but the
+preparation for war, I came back at the Easter vacation of 1869
+convinced that hostilities would ensue. I returned to Heidelberg some
+time later and became acquainted with other persons, other centres of
+ideas. I understood then that opinion in Germany was divided between two
+opposite doctrines. The general aspiration was for the unity of Germany,
+but there was no agreement as to the way of conceiving and realizing
+this unity. The thesis of Treitschke was, _Freiheit durch Einheit_,
+"liberty through unity," that is to say, unity first, unity before all;
+liberty later, when circumstances should permit. And to realize at once
+this unity, which really was the only thing that mattered, the
+enrollment of all Germany under the command of Prussia for a war against
+France.
+
+Now the formula of Treitschke was opposed by that of Bluntschli,
+_Einheit durch Freiheit_--"Unity through liberty." This doctrine, which
+counted at that time some eminent advocates, aimed first to safeguard
+the independence and unity of the German States and then to establish
+between them on that basis a federated union. And as it contemplated in
+the heart of Germany a union without hegemony, so it conceived of German
+unity as something to be realized without harm to other nations, and
+especially without harm to France. It was to be a free Germany in a free
+world.
+
+Germany at that epoch was at the parting of the ways. Should she follow
+a tendency still living in many and noble minds or should she abandon it
+entirely, to march head down in the ways in which Prussia had entangled
+her? That was the question. The party of war, the party of unity as a
+means of attacking and despoiling France, the Prussian party, gained the
+day. And its success rendered its preponderance definitive. Since then
+those who have undertaken to remain faithful to an ideal of liberty and
+humanity have been annihilated.
+
+Is it still possible that Germany may some day regain the parting of the
+ways where she was before 1870 and this time take the other road, the
+road of the Leibnitzes, the Kants, the Bluntschlis, which leads first to
+the liberty of individuals and of peoples and afterward--- and only
+afterward--a form of harmony where the rights of all are equally
+respected? A word of the Scotch professor, William Knight, comes back to
+my memory at this moment: "The best things have to die and be reborn."
+The Germany which the world respected and admired, the Germany of
+Leibnitz, appears indeed dead. Can it be reborn?
+
+Accept, I beg, my dear Director, the assurance of my cordial devotion.
+
+EMILE BOUTROUX.
+
+
+
+
+*The German Religion of Duty*
+
+*By Gabriele Reuter.*[B]
+
+
+On various occasions in the past I have been reproached by my friends
+for not showing the proper spirit of patriotism.
+
+I have merely smiled at their criticism, for it was my opinion that true
+patriotism does not consist of flowery speeches and assertions, but in
+the effort dutifully to accomplish that for which one is best qualified.
+
+It seemed to me that I was truly showing my love for the Fatherland by
+writing my books to the best of my ability.
+
+But the source of this reproach was very evident to me. The cause could
+be traced to a quality which I share with many of my compatriots. It
+must, in truth, be called a particularly characteristic trait. This is a
+very earnest desire for and love of justice, which is not satisfied
+simply to "recognize," but endeavors thoroughly to understand the
+material and spiritual points of view of the other nations in order to
+show them the proper appreciation.
+
+It is natural to develop affection for that which one earnestly desires
+to understand.
+
+Many Germans have had the experience that they have rather overzealously
+commenced by weighing the good of a foreign people in the balance with
+the good of their own, and with well-nigh fanatic honesty they have
+ended by acknowledging their own shortcomings compared to the merits and
+advantages of the foreign nation. There have been instances when some
+foreigner has drawn our attention to this or that particular weakness
+and immediately innumerable of my countrymen assented, saying,
+"Certainly it is true, the criticism is just, matters are probably even
+worse than they have been represented."
+
+Many of us, and I acknowledge I am one of the many, have developed a
+form of ascetic mania for self-abasement, a desire for truth which knows
+no limits in the dissection of its own condition and the disclosure of
+social and personal shortcomings and disadvantages. This tendency may be
+easily discerned in much of the German literature of the past twenty
+years; also, in my books.
+
+The individual is really always the symbol of the whole, and the
+thoughts and feelings of one person are but the expression of strong
+forces in national life and culture. It was not want of patriotism, but
+an unbounded love for the universality of European culture which drove
+us, drove many thousand people with German souls, to reach out over the
+boundaries of our own Fatherland for intellectual conquests, for
+permeation and coalescence with all the world's riches, goodness, and
+beauty.
+
+We loved the others; and believing ourselves among friends we were
+candid and disclosed our weaknesses.
+
+
+*Germans Trusted Too Well.*
+
+We permitted criticism and criticised ourselves, because we were
+convinced that those others had our welfare at heart, and also because
+we were convinced that only by unsparing self-knowledge can the heights
+be scaled which lead to superior and more refined development. It is
+therefore probable that we ourselves have delivered the weapons into our
+enemies' hands.
+
+Confiding and harmless as children, we were blind to the enigmatical
+hatred which has to an appalling extent developed all around us. This
+hate which has been nourished systematically and with satanic cleverness
+probably originated in a slight feeling of jealousy, and the tendency of
+my countrymen to criticise each other led our enemies to believe that
+they might look for internal discord in the Fatherland and that our
+humiliation could therefore be more easily accomplished.
+
+If we had recognized the danger in time, we might have prevented this
+hatred, to which they at the beginning were hardly prone, from taking
+root in the souls of nations. But only very few among us were aware of
+it and they received little credence from the others. There were times
+when each one of us sensed the antipathy which we encountered beyond the
+boundary lines of our own country. But we never realized how deeply it
+had taken root and how widely it had spread. We loved our enemies! We
+loved this French nation for its high development of etiquette,
+language, and taste; a culture which seemed well adapted to serve as a
+complement to our own. How much misery France might have been spared had
+she but understood this unfortunate love of the German people for the
+"Hereditary Enemy!"
+
+We loved the deep, mystically religious soul of the Russians in their
+anguished struggles for freedom! How many Germans have looked upon
+Tolstoy as a new savior!
+
+Above all, though, the German admired the Englishman, in the role of the
+"royal merchant," the far-seeing colonizer, the master of the seas.
+Without envy Germany gave England credit for all these qualities. And
+when during the Boer war voices were raised to warn against the English
+character, even then to most of us our Anglo-Saxon cousin remained the
+"Gentleman beyond reproach."
+
+Then there is the great German love for Holland, Switzerland, and the
+Scandinavian countries; here we may find the Germanic race less
+adulterated than in our own country. Scandinavian poets have become our
+poets and we are as proud of the works of the Swedish artist as we are
+of those of our people.
+
+We gaze with delight upon the proud, blonde grace of the Norse maid; the
+more gentle and pliant manners of the Swedes and Danes arouse our
+admiration; and we dearly love their beautiful fjords and forests of
+beech and birch.
+
+
+*Love Changed to Suspicion.*
+
+Many of us wonder today how much of all this love we, in the days to
+come, will be able to rescue from the debris. "Has the world gone mad
+that it has ceased to believe in our sincerity?" This at present is the
+cry of many, many thousand German men and women. Do we deserve to have
+our love requited with hate? And to find in the countries which declare
+themselves neutral, distrust, reserve, and, in fact, doubt of our honest
+intentions? Sad, dull despair has taken possession of the hearts of our
+best men and women. It is not because they tremble for the fate of the
+loved ones who have been compelled to go to the front and not because
+there is any fear as to the outcome of this war. Not one among us doubts
+the ultimate triumph of Germany. We also know that we must pay a
+terrible toll for this victory with the blood of our sons, fathers and
+husbands.
+
+Equally as much as they mourn the loss of our young manhood many of our
+best citizens deplore the hatred which has spread over the face of the
+globe, hate which has torn asunder what was believed to have been a
+firmly woven net of a common European culture. That which we with ardent
+souls have labored to create is being devastated by ruthless force.
+
+The following story of the non-commissioned German officer is typical or
+symbolical of many. He, while the bullets of the inhabitants of Louvain
+fell around him, rescued the priceless old paintings from the burning
+Church of St. Peter, simply because he was an art-historian and knew and
+loved each of the masterpieces. And well we all understand the feelings
+which mastered him during those moments of horror.
+
+He would probably think and say, "I have but done my duty."
+
+And now we have arrived at the point which gives rise to the greatest
+amount of antipathy. Our opponents declare we are endowed with great
+ability--they say they must acknowledge that. But how can a race of
+stiff, dry, duty-performing beings awaken love? The German must lose all
+claim to individual freedom and independence of thought in consequence
+of the training which he receives. When he is a child he commences it in
+a military subordination in the school, he continues it in the barracks,
+and later, when he enters a vocational life, under the stern leadership
+of his superiors. He becomes, our critics continue, simply a
+disagreeable pedantic tool of the all-powerful "drill." This atmosphere
+of "drill," or in other words this stern hard military spirit, envelops
+him, accompanies him as guardian from the cradle to the grave, and makes
+of him an unbearable companion for all the more refined, gentle, and
+amiable nations. Yes, our opponents often declare that they are waging
+war not only against Germany, but against this pedantic, military,
+tyrannical sense of duty, which they call the "Prussian spirit." It
+shall once and for all, they assert, be eradicated from the world.
+
+
+*A Religious Feeling of Duty.*
+
+Far be it from me to deny that my country people, male and female, do
+indeed possess an unusually strong sense of duty. This is combined with
+a desire for justice which is so often looked upon by outsiders as a
+lack of patriotic pride, and with an honesty which easily makes the
+German appear so clumsy and awkward. These three characteristics belong
+indissolubly together and one is not to be thought of without the other.
+The spirit from which the German sense of duty arises is what the
+foreigner so often misunderstands in us. He generally confuses sense of
+duty with blind obedience. But this sense of duty does not originate
+from a need for submission or from a mental dependence. No, it rests on
+a deep philosophical reason and arises from the mental recognition of
+ethical and national necessity. That is why it can exist side by side
+with the most extreme individualism, which also belongs to the
+peculiarities of the character of our people. The Germans have always
+been a nation of thinkers. Not only the scholar, also the simple worker,
+the laborer, the modest mother take a deep pleasure in forming their
+philosophy of life and the world. Side by side with the loud triumph of
+our industry goes this quieter existence, which has been rather pushed
+into the background in the last decades, but has not, therefore, ceased
+to exist. And the further the belief in miracles stepped into the
+background, the more the belief in duty acquired a warm religious tinge.
+The loud complaints about the vanishing of the sense of duty among the
+young, which has so often been voiced by public opinion, only prove how
+strongly this ethical force was governing people's minds. Every seeming
+diminution of it was felt to be a disastrous endangerment of the
+knowledge of the people. We have perhaps acted childishly and foolishly
+toward other nations by too great confidence. But in the consciousness
+of the entire German Nation the ominous feeling was living and working
+with mighty power, that only if every one of us devotes his entire
+strength to the post assigned to him, and works until the exhaustion of
+his last mental and physical power, only then can we as a national whole
+retain our high level and, surrounded by dangers on all sides, create
+sufficient room for ourselves to breathe and live.
+
+
+*The Military and the Socialists.*
+
+Two mighty organizations exist among us which were opposed to each other
+until recently--the military and the Social Democratic. The world sees
+with amazement the perfection which has been reached by the military
+organization of our army. Its achievements have only become possible
+through the above-mentioned philosophical conception of the sense of
+duty which raises it far above any systematic obedience and lets it
+appear in the light of religious ideal. Duty becomes in these serious
+and energetic minds a voluntary adaptation to a carefully organized
+whole with the knowledge that to serve this whole at the same time
+produces the highest achievement of the individual personality. The
+Social Democratic organization, opposed though it is to the military
+organization, is also composed of Germans and is, therefore, directed by
+the same basic principles as the military organization, although for
+entirely different purposes. For this one reason it was almost a matter
+of course that the Social Democrats offered their services for the war
+at the moment when they recognized that it had become of imperious
+necessity to set aside personal wishes and ideals and to put in the
+foreground only the duty of the defense of their country. The idea of
+our opponents, that they would find a support in the Socialists of our
+country, rested on a complete misunderstanding of the German character.
+
+A foreign woman wrote to me in the days of the mobilization: "I do not
+understand the German enthusiasm for war--how it is possible that one
+can become enthusiastic about murder!" The woman only saw the exterior
+and superficial phase of things.
+
+In its endeavor to unite itself with the world the German soul had
+suddenly come upon the wildest hatred * * * numerous high ideals of
+culture fell to ruin within a few hours. Deeply wounded, it was hurled
+back into its most personal possessions. Here it found itself face to
+face with tasks which far surpassed anything demanded heretofore of it
+as fulfillment of duty. And now there came to pass a wonder which will
+be unforgettable for every one who lived through this period. Everything
+dry, petty, pedantic, connected with German ways, which had often made
+many of us impatient with ourselves, was suddenly swept away by the
+storm of these days.
+
+A gigantic wave of fiery hot feeling passed through our country flaming
+up like a beautiful sacrificial pyre. It was no longer a duty to offer
+one's self and one's life--it was supreme bliss. That might easily sound
+like a hollow phrase. But there is a proof, which is more genuine than
+words, than songs, and cheers. That is the expression in the faces of
+the people, their uncontrolled spontaneous movements. I saw the eyes
+light up of an old woman who had sent four sons into battle and
+exclaimed: "It is glorious to be allowed to give the Fatherland so
+much!" I saw the controlled calm in the features of sorrowing mothers
+who knew that their only sons had fallen. But the expression in the
+faces of many wounded who were already returning home gripped me the
+most. They had lived through the horror of the battle, their feet had
+waded through blood, their young bodies were horribly maimed. I saw this
+strangely serene, quietly friendly expression in the young faces. They
+were men who had sacrificed their ego. They were great patient
+conquerors of selfishness. And with what tenderness, what goodness are
+they surrounded, to lighten their lot, to give them joy. How the general
+sentiment is often expressed in the gesture of a single person--you did
+that for us--how can we sufficiently requite you?
+
+A stream of love is flowing through our Fatherland and is uniting all
+hearts. The unobtrusive mother "duty" gave birth to the genial child
+"feeling." She bestowed on it her strong vitality so that it can defy a
+world of hatred--and conquer it.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[B] Gabriele Reuter is one of the foremost German woman authors.
+
+
+
+
+*A Letter to Gerhart Hauptmann*
+
+*By Romain Rolland.*
+
+
+I am not, Gerhart Hauptmann, of those Frenchmen who call Germany
+barbarian. I recognize the intellectual and moral grandeur of your
+mighty race. I realize all that I owe to the thinkers of old Germany;
+and even at this extreme hour I recall to mind the example and the words
+of our Goethe--for he belongs to all humanity--repudiating national
+hatred and preserving his soul serene in those heights "where one feels
+the joys and sorrows of all peoples as one's own." It has been the labor
+of my life to bring together the minds of our two nations; and the
+atrocities of impious war shall never lead me to soil my heart with
+hatred.
+
+Whatever reason I may have, therefore, to suffer through the deeds of
+your Germany and to judge as criminal the German policy and the German
+methods, I do not hold responsible the people who submit thereto and are
+reduced to mere blind instruments. This does not mean that I regard war
+as a fatality. A Frenchman knows no such word as fatality. Fatality is
+the excuse of souls that lack a will.
+
+No. This war is the fruit of the feebleness of peoples and of their
+stupidity. One can only pity them; one cannot blame them. I do not
+reproach you for our sorrows. Your mourning will not be less than ours.
+If France is ruined, so also will be Germany. I did not even raise my
+voice when I saw your armies violate the neutrality of noble Belgium.
+This forfeit of honor, which compels the contempt of every
+right-thinking mind, is too well within the political tradition of
+Prussian Kings to have surprised me.
+
+But the fury with which you treated that generous land whose one crime
+was to defend, unto despair, its independence and the idea of
+justice--that was too much! The world revolts in wrath at this. Reserve
+for us your violence--for us French, who are your enemies. But to
+trample upon your victims, upon the little Belgian people, unfortunate
+and innocent--that is ignominy!
+
+And not content with assaulting the Belgium that lives, you wage war on
+the dead, on the glory of past centuries. You bombard Malines, you put
+Rubens to flame, Louvain comes from your hands a heap of ashes--Louvain
+with its treasures of art and knowledge, the holy city! Who indeed are
+you and what name do you conjure us to call you, Hauptmann, you who
+reject the title of barbarian?
+
+Are you the children of Goethe or of Attila? Do you wage war against
+armies or against the human spirit? Kill men if you must, but respect
+man's work. For this is the heritage of the human race. And you, like
+us, are its trustees. In making pillage of it as you have done you prove
+yourselves unworthy of this great inheritance, unworthy of holding rank
+in the small European army which is the garde d'honneur of civilization.
+
+It is not to the sense of the rest of the world that I appeal against
+you. It is to yourself, Hauptmann. In the name of our Europe, of which
+up to the present you have been one of the noblest champions--in the
+name of that civilization for which the greatest of men have
+struggled--in the name of the honor even of your German race, Gerhart
+Hauptmann, I adjure you, I command you, you and the intellectual elite
+of Germany, where I have so many friends, to protest with utmost
+vehemence against this crime which leaps back upon yourselves.
+
+If you fail in this, one of two things will be proved--that you
+acquiesce, (and then the opinion of the world will crush you,) or that
+you are powerless to raise your voice against the Huns that now command
+you. And in that case, with what right will you still pretend, as you
+have written, that your cause is that of liberty and human progress?
+
+You will be giving to the world a proof that, incapable of defending the
+liberty of the world, you are helpless even to uphold your own; that the
+elite of Germany lies subservient to the blackest despotism--to a
+tyranny which mutilates masterpieces and assassinates the human spirit.
+
+I await your response, Hauptmann--a response which shall be an act. The
+opinion of Europe awaits it, as do I. Bear this in mind; in a moment
+like this, even silence is an act.
+
+
+
+
+*A Reply to Rolland*
+
+*By Gerhart Hauptmann.*
+
+
+You address me, Herr Rolland, in public words which breathe the pain
+over this war, (forced by England, Russia and France,) pain over the
+endangering of European culture and the destruction of hallowed
+memorials of ancient art. I share in this general sorrow, but that to
+which I cannot consent is to give an answer whose spirit you have
+already prescribed and concerning which you wrongly assert that it is
+awaited by all Europe. I know that you are of German blood. Your
+beautiful novel, "Jean-Christophe," will remain immortal among us
+Germans together with "Wilhelm Meister," and "der gruene Heinrich."
+
+But France became your adopted fatherland; therefore your heart must now
+be torn and your judgment confused. You have labored zealously for the
+reconciliation of both peoples. In spite of all this when the present
+bloody conflict destroys your fair concept of peace, as it has done for
+so many others, you see our nation and our people through French eyes,
+and every attempt to make you see clearly and as a German is absolutely
+sure to be in vain.
+
+Naturally everything which you say of our Government, of our army and
+our people, is distorted, everything is false, so false that in this
+respect your open letter to me appears as an empty black surface.
+
+War is war. You may lament war, but you should not wonder at the things
+that are inseparable from the elementary fact itself. Assuredly it is
+deplorable that in the conflict an irreplaceable Rubens is destroyed,
+but--with all honor to Rubens!--I am among those in whom the shattered
+breast of his fellow-man compels far deeper pain.
+
+And, Herr Rolland, it is not exactly fitting that you should adopt a
+tone implying that the people of your land, the French, are coming out
+to meet us with palm branches, when in reality they are plentifully
+equipped with cannon, with cartridges, yes, even with dumdum bullets. It
+is apparent that you have grown pretty fearful of our brave troops! That
+is to the glory of a power which is invincible through the justice of
+its cause. The German soldier has nothing whatsoever in common with the
+loathsome and puerile were-wolf tales which your lying French press so
+zealously publishes abroad, that press which the French and the Belgian
+people have to thank for their misfortune.
+
+Let the idle Englishmen call us Huns; you may, for all I care,
+characterize the warriors of our splendid Landwehr as sons of Attila; it
+is enough for us if this Landwehr can shatter into a thousand pieces the
+ring of our merciless enemies. Far better that you should call us sons
+of Attila, cross yourselves in fear and remain outside our borders, than
+that you should indict tender inscriptions upon the tomb of our German
+name, calling us the beloved descendants of Goethe. The epithet Huns is
+coined by people who, themselves Huns, are experiencing disappointment
+in their criminal attacks on the life of a sound and valorous race,
+because it knows the trick of parrying a fearful blow with still more
+fearful force. In their impotence, they take refuge in curses.
+
+I say nothing against the Belgian people. The peaceful passage of German
+troops, a question of life for Germany, was refused by Belgium because
+the Government had made itself a tool of England and France. This same
+Government then organized an unparalleled guerrilla warfare in order to
+support a lost cause, and by that act--Herr Rolland, you are a
+musician!--struck the horrible keynote of conflict. If you are at all in
+a position to break your way through the giant's wall of anti-German
+lies, read the message to America, by our Imperial Chancellor, of Sept.
+7; read further the telegram which on Sept. 8 the Kaiser himself
+addressed to President Wilson. You will then discover things which it is
+necessary to know in order to understand the calamity of Louvain.
+
+
+
+
+*Another Reply to Rolland*
+
+*By Karl Wolfskehl.*
+
+
+To you, Rolland, belonging as a chosen one to the more important
+Frenchmen who can rise above their race, the German nature has often
+been revealed. To you, now, we shall make answer, offer frank testimony
+concerning the spirit of the time, concerning that fate, that very fate
+in which you, the Frenchman, do not believe. You do not believe in it;
+what to us is fate, mysterious necessity, to you is fatalite, an
+unavoidable Alp which threatens the individual in his individual
+freedom. This fatalite, we, too, do not believe in it, but we do believe
+in the forces which bring forth the eternal in human will, that these
+both are one, will and forces, one with necessity, with actuality, with
+creative, moral power, of which all great ideas are the children, the
+idea of freedom, the idea of the beautiful, the idea of tragic fidelity,
+and that these, reaching far above being and passing away, are
+nevertheless real, life entire, fact entire. All that which is as dear
+to you as to us, great works and great feelings, resignation and
+self-restraint, all that is necessity, is fate, that became will--all
+that a unity out of choice and compulsion. All that is for us eternal,
+not according to the measure of time, but according to the beginning and
+the power of its working forces, in so far as it is necessary.
+
+Thus has it become fate, destiny, not fatalite, rather like that fate
+which in Beethoven's own words in the first movement of his "Eroica" "is
+the knocking at the gate."
+
+Such a fate is this war. No one wanted it in our Germany, for it was
+forced upon us with terrible arbitrariness, contrary to all right. Do
+you not know of the net that has been spun around us and drawn tight for
+the last half of a generation, to choke us? Do you not know how often
+this most peaceful of peoples has drawn back, how often the strange
+powers in the East and in the West have with contemptuous snarls said,
+"Wilhelm will not make war"? That you ought to know, Rolland, for it is
+known to the whole world.
+
+
+*The War "Came from God."*
+
+But I will betray something to you that you cannot know, because you are
+a stranger; and this will probably show you where we see fate. I will
+betray to you the fact that there is still another Germany behind the
+exterior in which great politics and great finance meet with the
+literary champions of Europe. That Germany tells you in this heavy hour
+of Europe:
+
+This undesired war that has been forced upon us is nevertheless a
+necessity; it had to come to pass for the sake of Germany and the world
+of European humanity, for the sake of the world. We did not want it, but
+it came from God. Our poet knew of it. He saw this war and its necessity
+and its virtues, and heralded it, long before an ugly suspicion of it
+flew through the year--before the leaves began to turn. The "Stern des
+Bundes" ["Star of the Federation"] is this book of prophecy, this book
+of necessity and of triumph.
+
+The present need and the present triumph are quite human and quite
+inexorable. They have a part in all that has taken place, and they are
+unprecedented and new. None of us--do you hear, Rolland?--none of us
+Germans today would hesitate to help destroy every monument of our holy
+German past, if necessity made it a matter of the last ditch, for that
+from which alone all monuments of all times draw their right of
+existence and their worth unless they are empty husks, skeletons, and
+framework; even so, we alone may ask what shall come to pass, not what
+shall cease. Which ruins are ravings, and which are the pains of
+childbirth, we do not presume to decide; but you, too, who are so pained
+by ruins, even as we are pained by them, you, too, do not know it.
+
+Today it is a question of the life or death of the European soul. Do you
+not believe that this soul is more endangered at the hands of the hordes
+of stub-nosed Slavs than of the phalanx of those whom you, Rolland, call
+Huns? Your sense must give you the right to answer. Recall the terrible
+story of Russian incendiarism for the last hundred years, which has torn
+to pieces in ever-increasing lust for murder bodies and souls; recall
+the eternally perjured and law-defying regiment of grave diggers; and
+then blush that you have characterized as a heavy crime a manfully
+confessed act of self-defense on the part of the Germans, the temporary
+occupation of Belgium! Blush that you have forgotten the Russian Moloch
+now loosed upon us, drunk with the blood and tears of alien peoples as
+well as of its own children! That you have forgotten all that, in order
+to lament over buildings which we have been forced in
+self-defense--again in self-defense--to sacrifice! And blush for those
+of your people who have become accomplices of that Moloch! Those who are
+sinning against the Holy Ghost of Europe, in order to attempt belated
+vengeance against Germany! Do you know what the ancients, the very
+Greeks and Romans from whom you have drawn your blood and temperament,
+called that sin? Blood-guiltiness is the name of that horror. And do you
+know how it is atoned for? I shrink to ask further, yea, even to think
+further; for horror falls upon me, and I see the unspeakable.
+
+Today, battling against you allies of the swarms of Muscovites, we
+Europeans are battling also for that France which you are
+threatening--you, not we!
+
+
+*German Intellectuals "All Afire."*
+
+Yes, Romain Rolland, try, Frenchman that you are, to look into the
+mysteries of the time. Ask yourself, marvel, how it comes to pass that
+we, the intellectuals among the Germans, take part without exception in
+this dreadful war; take part with body and soul. None of us ambitious,
+none of us a politician, not one of us who, till this war, busied
+himself about anything except his idea, the Palladium of his life! And
+now we are all afire, with all our hearts, with our whole people, all
+full of determination and prepared for the last. All our youth in the
+field, every man among us thrilled with faith in our God and this battle
+of our God, every man among us conscious of the sacred necessity that
+has driven us, every man among us consecrated for timely death! Are
+these incendiaries? Are these slaves, whom a despot points the way to
+the rolling dead? Every one knows it is our all that is at stake; it is
+a matter of the divine in humanity, a matter of our preservation and
+that of Europe.
+
+And so we stand amid death and ruins under the star--one federation, one
+single union. This I have had to tell you, whether you will listen to
+it, whether Europe has ears to hear it, or not. From now on, may our
+deeds be our words!
+
+
+
+
+*Are We Barbarians?*
+
+*By Gerhart Hauptmann.*
+
+
+The idea of cosmopolitanism has never taken deeper root anywhere than in
+Germany. Let any person reflect about our literary translations and then
+name a nation that has tried so honestly as we to do justice to the
+spirit and the feelings of other races, to understand their inmost soul
+in all good-will.
+
+I must out with it: We had and have no hatred against France: we have
+idolized the fine arts, the sculpture and painting and the literature of
+that country. The worldwide appreciation of Rodin had its origin in
+Germany--we esteem Anatole France, Maupassant, Flaubert, Balzac, as if
+they were German authors. We have a deep affection for the people of
+South France. We find passionate admirers of Mistral in small German
+towns, in alleys, in attics. It was deeply to be regretted that Germany
+and France could not be friends politically. They ought to have been,
+because they were joint trustees of the intellectual treasures of the
+Continent, because they are two of the great cultivated nations of
+Europe. But fate has willed it otherwise.
+
+In the year 1870 the German races fought for the union of the Germans
+and the German Empire. Owing to the success of this struggle Germany has
+enjoyed an era of peace for more than forty years. A time of budding,
+growing, becoming strong, flowering, and bearing fruit, without parallel
+in history. Out of a population, growing more and more numerous, an
+ever-increasing number of individuals have been formed. Individual
+energy and a general tendency to expand led to the great achievements of
+our industry, our commerce, and our trade. I do not think that any
+American, Englishman, Frenchman, or Italian when in a German family, in
+German towns, in German hotels, on German ships, in German concerts, in
+German theatres, at Baireuth, in German libraries, or in German museums,
+ever felt as if he were among "barbarians." We visited other countries
+and kept an open door for every stranger.
+
+
+*English Relations.*
+
+It is with pain and with bitterness that I speak the word England. I am
+one of those barbarians on whom the English University of Oxford
+conferred the degree of Doctor Honoris Causa. I have friends in England
+who stand with one foot on the intellectual soil of Germany. Haldane,
+formerly English Minister of War, and with him countless other
+Englishmen, made regular pilgrimages to the little barbarous town of
+Weimar, where the barbarians Goethe, Schiller, Herder, Wieland, and
+others, have created another world for humanity. We have a poet, whose
+plays, more than those of any other German poet, have become national
+property; his name is Shakespeare. This Shakespeare is, at the same
+time, the prince of English poets. The mother of our Emperor is an
+English woman, the wife of the King of England a German, and yet this
+nation, so closely related by blood and choice, has declared war against
+us. Why? Heaven only knows. This much, however, is certain, that the now
+beginning European concert, saturated with blood, as it is, has an
+English statesman for its impresario and its conductor. It is doubtful,
+however, whether the finale of this terrible music will find the same
+conductor at the stand. "My cousin, you did not mean well either with
+yourselves or with us when your tools threw the fire-brand into our
+dwellings!"
+
+If heaven wills that we should issue regenerated from this terrible
+trial, we shall have the sacred duty of showing ourselves worthy of our
+regeneration. By the complete victory of German arms the independence of
+Europe would be secured. It would be necessary to make it clear to the
+different nations of Europe that this war must be the last between
+themselves. They must see at last that their sanguinary duels only bring
+a shameful advantage to the one who, without taking part in them, is
+their originator. Then they must devote themselves mutually to the work
+of civilization and peace, which will then make misunderstandings
+impossible.
+
+In this direction much had already been done before the war began. The
+dfferent nations had already met in peaceful emulation and were to meet
+again at Berlin for the Olympian games. It is only necessary to recall
+the aeronautic races, the boat races, the horse races, and the
+beneficial international influence of the arts and sciences, and the
+great super-national Nobel Prizes. The barbarian Germany has, as is well
+known, led the way among the other nations with her great institutions
+for social reform. A victory would oblige us to go forward on this path
+and to make the blessings of such institutions general. Our victory
+would, furthermore, secure the future existence of the Teutonic race for
+the welfare of the world. During the last decade, for example, how
+fruitful has the Scandinavian literature been for the German, and vice
+versa, the German for the Scandinavian. How many Swedes, Norwegians, and
+Danes have lately, without feeling conscious of a drop of foreign blood,
+shaken hands with German brothers in Stockholm, Christiania, Copenhagen,
+Munich, Vienna, and Berlin. How much homely good-fellowship has grown up
+around the noble names of Ibsen, Bjoernsen, and Strindberg.
+
+
+*Faust and Rifles.*
+
+I hear that abroad an enormous number of lying tales are being
+fabricated to the detriment of our honor, our culture, and our strength.
+Well, those who create these idle tales should reflect that the
+momentous hour is not favorable for fiction. On three frontiers our own
+blood bears witness. I myself have sent out two of my sons. All our
+intrepid German soldiers know why they are going to war. There are no
+analphabets to be found among them; all the more, however, of those who,
+besides their rifle, have their Goethe's "Faust," their "Zarathustra," a
+work of Schopenhauer's, the Bible, or their Homer in their knapsacks.
+And even those who have no book in the knapsack know that they are
+fighting for a hearth at which every guest is welcome.
+
+On the frontier stands our blood testimony; the Socialist side by side
+with the bourgeois, the peasant beside the man of learning, the Prince
+beside the workman; and they all fight for German freedom, for German
+domestic life, for German art, German science, German progress; they
+fight with the full, clear consciousness of a noble and rich national
+possession, for internal and external goods, all of which serve for the
+general progress and development of mankind.
+
+
+
+
+*To Americans From a German Friend*
+
+*By Ludwig Fulda.*
+
+ _Like most of the champions of Germany in the literary field,
+ Ludwig Fulda is a Doctor of Philosophy. He is also author of many
+ famous poetical and prose works of fiction._
+
+
+Many things have been revealed to us by this war that even the
+keenest-minded among us would have declared immediately before its
+outbreak to be impossibilities. Nothing, however, has been a greater and
+more painful surprise to Germans than the position taken by a great part
+of the American press. There is nothing that we would have suspected
+less than that within the one neutral nation with which we felt
+ourselves most closely connected, both by common interests and by common
+ideals, voices would be raised that in the hour of our greatest danger
+would deny us their sympathy, yes, even their comprehension of our
+course.
+
+To me, personally--I cannot avoid saying it--this was a very bitter
+disappointment. A year has hardly passed since I was over there the
+second time as a guest and returned strengthened in my admiration for
+that great, upward striving community. In my book, "Amerikanische
+Eindrucke," ("American Impressions,") a new edition of which has just
+appeared in a considerably supplemented form, comprising the fruits of
+that trip, I have made every effort to place before my countrymen in the
+brightest light the advantages and superiorities of Americans, and
+especially to convince them that the so-called land of the dollar was
+not only economically but also mentally and spiritually striding upward
+irresistibly; that also in the longing and effort to obtain education
+and knowledge and in the valuation of all the higher things in life, it
+was not surpassed by any other country in the world. In the entire book
+there is not a page that is not filled with the confidence that for
+these very reasons America and Germany were called upon to march hand in
+hand at the head of cultured humanity. Is this belief now to be
+contradicted? Shall I as a German no longer be permitted to call myself
+a friend of America because over there they think the worst of us for
+the reason that we, attacked in dastardly wise by a world of foes, are
+struggling with unanimous determination for our existence?
+
+
+*Guillotining German Honor.*
+
+Of course I know very well that public opinion over there has largely
+been misled by our opponents and is continuously being misled. Did not
+the English at the very beginning of the war cut our cable, in order to
+be able to guillotine our honor without the least interference? For this
+reason I cannot blame the masses if they took for truth the absurd
+fables dished out to them, when no contradicting voice could reach them.
+Less than that, however, can I understand how educated beings, even men
+who, thanks to their gifts and their standing, play the part of
+responsible leaders, not only accepted believingly these prevarications
+and distortions, but, with them as a basis, immediately rendered a
+verdict against us. For he who publicly judges must be expected to have
+heard first both parties; and whoever is not in a position to do this
+must in decency be expected to postpone his verdict. Yes, even more than
+that, one should think that the sense of justice of every non-partisan
+must be violated if the one party is absolutely muzzled by the other,
+and even for this one reason the cause of the latter must be considered
+as not being free from reason for doubt. Furthermore, one should assume
+that he who once has been unmasked as a liar therewith should have lost
+the blind confidence of the impartial in his future assertions. In spite
+of this, although the first ridiculous news of German defeats and
+internal dissent could not withstand the far-sounding echo of facts,
+there still seems to be no twisting of the truth, no defamation, which
+over there is considered as too thin and too ridiculous by the press and
+as too shameless by the public.
+
+Should the Germans, who, since the time when they fought for and
+attained their national unity, have exclusively devoted themselves to
+works of peace and culture, suddenly have been transformed into an
+adventurous, booty-hungry horde which from mere lust challenged a
+tremendously superior force to do battle? Should they suddenly have
+sacrificed to their so-called militarism all their other efforts in
+commerce, industry, art, and science, in order to risk their very
+existence for the love of this Moloch? Do you believe that, Americans?
+
+
+*Question of Militarism.*
+
+Our militarism! What does this expression, quoted until it is sickening,
+mean in the mouth of enemies who in respect of the energy and extent of
+their armaments were not behind us? Is there no such thing as militarism
+in France and in Russia? Is the English giant fleet an instrument of
+peace? Was the Triple Entente founded in order to bring about the
+millennium on earth? Would the Entente, if we had been foolish enough to
+disarm, have guaranteed our possessions as a reward for being good? Do
+you believe that, Americans?
+
+It certainly may be difficult for the citizens of the Union--happy
+beings they are for it--to put themselves in the place of a nation that
+knows it is surrounded on its open borders by jealous, hateful, and
+greedy neighbors; of a country that for centuries has been the
+battlefield of all European wars, the place of strife of all the
+European peoples. They, the members of a nation which for itself
+occupies a space nearly as large as Europe, almost half of a continent,
+protected on both sides by the ocean and on the other borders not
+seriously threatened for as long a time to come as may be anticipated,
+have no people's army because they do not need any; and yet they
+would--their history proves it--give their blood and that of their sons
+for the cause of their nation just as gladly as we, if the necessity for
+doing so came to them. Will they, therefore, reproach us for loving our
+country not less than they do theirs, only for the reason that we have a
+thousand times more difficulty in protecting it?
+
+Our general military service, which today is being defamed by the word
+"militarism," is born of the iron commandment of self-preservation.
+Without it the German Empire and the German Nation long ago would have
+been struck out of the list of the living. Only lack of knowledge or
+intentional misconception of our character could accuse us of having an
+aggressive motive back of it. On earth there is no more peaceful nation
+than Germany, providing she be left in peace and her room to breathe be
+not lessened. Germany never has had the least thought of assuming for
+herself the European hegemony, much less the rulership of the world. She
+has never greedily eyed colonial possessions of other great powers. On
+the contrary, in the acquisition of her colonies she was satisfied with
+whatever the others had left for her. And least of all did she carry up
+her sleeve a desire of extending the frontiers of the empire. The famous
+word of Bismarck, that Germany was "saturated" with acquired territory,
+is still accepted as fully in force to such an extent that even in case
+of her victory the question as to which parts of the enemies' territory
+we should claim for our own would cause us a great deal of perplexity.
+The German Empire could only lose as the national State she is in
+strength and unity by acquiring new and strange elements.
+
+Otherwise would the empire, from the day of its founding until now, for
+nearly half a century, actually have avoided every war, often enough
+under the most difficult circumstances? Would it have quietly suffered
+the open or hidden challenges, the machinations of its enemies
+constantly appearing more plainly? Yes, would it have tried again and
+again to improve its relations with these very same enemies by the
+greatest advances? As opposed to the ill-concealed hostility of the
+French, would it not have been shaken in its steadfast policy of
+conciliation by the fact that this policy with them only made the
+impression of weakness and fear? Would it have permitted France to
+reconstruct her power which was destroyed in 1870 to a greater extent
+than before, and, in addition, allowed her to conquer a new and gigantic
+colonial empire? Would it have permitted prostrate Russia to recuperate
+undisturbed from the almost annihilating blows of the revolution and the
+Japanese war? Would it, in the countless threatening conflicts of the
+last decades, have on every occasion thrown the entire weight of its
+sword into the scales for the preservation of peace?
+
+
+*The Kaiser's Responsibility.*
+
+Then, too, many Americans emphasize the fact that they are making not
+the German people but the Emperor alone responsible for this war. It is
+hardly conceivable how serious-minded people can lend themselves to the
+spreading of a fable so childish. When William II., 29 years old,
+mounted the throne, the entire world said of him that his aim was the
+acquirement of the laurels of war. In spite of this for twenty-six years
+he has shown that this accusation was absurd and has proved himself to
+be the most honest and most dependable protector of European peace. In
+fact, the very circle of enemies which now dares to call him a military
+despot thirsting for glory, has year in and year out ridiculed him as a
+ruler, whose provocation to the very limit was an amusement absolutely
+fraught with no danger. He who has never been misled by the fiery
+enthusiasm of youth nor by the full strength of ripe manhood to adorn
+his brow with the bloody halo of glory, should he suddenly, when his
+hair is turned gray, have turned into a Caesar, an Attila? Do you
+believe that, Americans?
+
+It is a fact in times of peace there have been certain differences of
+opinion between the Emperor and his people. Although at all times the
+honesty of his intentions was elevated above every doubt, the one or
+other impulsive moves he took to obtain their realization exposed him to
+criticism at home. Today one may safely admit that--today, when of these
+trifling disputes not even a breath, not even a shadow, remains. Never
+before has his whole people, his whole nation, in every grade of
+education, in all classes, in all parties, stood behind him so
+absolutely without reserve as now, when in the last, the very last hour,
+and driven by direst need, he finally drew the sword to ward off an
+attack from three sides, long ago prepared.
+
+Our nation and our Emperor have not wanted this war and are not to be
+blamed for it. Even the "White Book" of the German Government, by the
+very uncontrovertible language of its documents, must convince every
+impartial being of this fact. And day by day the overwhelming evidence
+of the plot systematically hatched and systematically carried out under
+the guidance of England, which put before us the alternative of cutting
+our way through or being annihilated, is increasing.
+
+
+*No Treason to Austria Considered.*
+
+It may be that the catastrophe, so far as we are concerned, might have
+been staved off once more if we would have disregarded the obligation of
+our alliance and would have left Austria in the lurch--the Austria which
+did not want anything else than to put a stop to the nasty work of a
+band of assassins organized by a neighboring State. But it requires an
+extreme degree of political blindness for the assumption that by such
+cowardly treason we should have been able to purchase a change of mind
+or a lasting peace from our enemies. On the contrary, they would soon
+enough have used a suitable opportunity to fall upon Germany, which then
+would have been completely isolated, and the struggle for our national
+existence would have had to be fought under conditions very much more
+favorable to our enemies.
+
+According to a newspaper report, the esteemed President Eliot of Harvard
+has written that the fear of the Muscovites could not explain our
+action, and that an alliance with the Western powers would have offered
+better protection against a Russian attack. Yes; if such a thing had
+been possible! As a matter of fact, however, the Western powers did not
+ally themselves with us against Russia, but with Russia against us; and
+not the fear of the Muscovites, but their mobilization, encouraged and
+aided by the very same Western powers, drove us to war. I wonder what
+President Eliot himself would have done under these circumstances had he
+been the guardian responsible for Germany's fate?
+
+*Belgium's Alleged Neutrality.*
+
+But then the violation of Belgian neutrality! How with the aid of this
+bugaboo the entire neutral world has been stirred up against us, after
+England made it the hypocritical excuse for her declaration of war! We
+knew very well that England and France were determined to violate this
+neutrality; but, then, we ought to have been very good; we ought to have
+waited until they did so. Waited until their armies would break into our
+country across our unprotected Belgian frontier! In other words, we
+ought to have committed national suicide. Whoever, even up until now,
+has doubted the German assertion that Belgium was under one roof with
+England and France, and had herself thrown away her neutrality, must
+have his eyes opened by the latest official developments. The documents
+of the Belgian General Staff which have fallen into our hands contain an
+agreement according to which the march through Belgium of British troops
+in the case of a Franco-German war was provided for in every detail.
+Whosoever in the face of these documents repeats the assertion that we
+have committed a violation of innocent Belgium gives aid to a historical
+forgery.
+
+We have violated the alleged neutrality of Belgium in self-defense. On
+the other hand, the Japanese, egged on and supported by England, have
+violated the real neutrality of China from pure lust for robbery. For
+the three great powers allied against Germany and Austria have not been
+satisfied with their own nominal superiority of 220 millions against 110
+millions! In addition to this they have urged on into war against us a
+Mongolian people, the most dangerous enemy of the white race and its
+culture. They have supplemented their armies by a motley collection of
+all the African negro tribes. They lead into battle against us Indian
+troops, and the Christian Germanic King of England prays to God for the
+victory of the heathen Hindus over his coreligionists and blood
+relatives. Americans, does your racial feeling, at other times so
+sensitive, remain silent in view of this unexampled shame? Do you accord
+to the English and the French, who are attacking us in co-operation with
+the Russians, the Servians, and the Montenegrins, who are dirtying
+themselves with a brotherhood in arms with the yellow skins, the brown
+skins, and the blacks, the right to declare themselves the
+representatives of civilization and us to be barbarians?
+
+In order to drive home such evident absurdities, they were, of course,
+obliged to carry on the poisoning of the spring of information to the
+utmost, they had to suppress the news of the vile deeds of guerrillas
+and "snipers" in Belgium and of the Russian ghouls in East Prussia, that
+were crying to heaven, and to send out into the world instead fables of
+German brutality. Our national army, permeated with ethical seriousness
+and iron discipline, the scientist standing beside the farmer, the
+workman beside the artist, should be guilty of unnecessary severity,
+uncontrollable brutality, brutality against people unable to defend
+themselves? Do you believe that, Americans?
+
+
+*The Charge of Vandalism.*
+
+The climax of absurdity, however, is reached when the Germans, who in
+their love and appreciation of art are not surpassed by any people in
+the world, are accused of having raged as vandals against works of art.
+Even now these accusations, which the French Government itself had the
+pitiful courage to support, have proved totally groundless. The City
+Hall at Louvain stands uninjured; while the populace fired at them, our
+soldiers had, risking their own lives, saved it from the flames. An
+imperial art commission followed at the heels of our victorious troops
+in Belgium, in order to take charge of the guarding and administration
+of the treasures of art. The cathedral at Rheims has received but slight
+damage, and would not have been damaged at all had its tower not been
+misused by the French as an observation station. I should like to see
+the commander of an army who, for the sake of the safety of a historical
+monument, would forget the safety of the troops intrusted into his care!
+
+Enough of it! What I have stated is sufficient to show what low weapons
+our enemies are using behind the battlefield to sully Germany's shield
+of honor. It is enough for those who care to listen at all. But, also,
+wherever the weak voice of one rebounds from ears stubbornly closed, the
+more powerful voice of truth eventually will force a more just verdict.
+
+Justice--that is all that we expect from America. We respect its
+neutrality; we do not ask from it an ideal partisanship for our benefit.
+If it does not have for us the sympathy which we have already extended
+to it and, after a century and a half of unclouded intercourse between
+the two nations, have anticipated there, then we cannot imbue it with
+that spirit by reasoning. Furthermore, in the existence of nations
+sympathy is not the deciding factor, and every nation should be rebuked
+which out of regard for sympathy would in decisive matters act against
+its own interests. But just for that very reason one more question must
+be raised. In the present conflict, which momentarily almost splits the
+entire world into two camps, where do the interests of America lie?
+
+That they are not lying on the side of Russia probably is self-evident.
+No free American can find desirable a further extension of the Russian
+world empire and of Russian despotism at the expense of Germany. But how
+about a country from which once America had to wrest its own liberty in
+bloody battle? How about England? Where, if England should succeed in
+downing Germany, would her eyes next be pointed? Has she not herself
+admitted that she is making war on us principally because she sees in us
+an uncomfortable competitor in trade? And which competitor would be the
+next one after us that would become awkward to the trust on the Thames?
+Yes, have they not already hauled off for the smash against America,
+when Japan is given opportunity to increase her power--the same Japan
+with whom America sooner or later will be bound to have an accounting
+and whose victory over us would make that accounting a great deal more
+difficult for the United States?
+
+Germany's fate certainly does not depend upon the friendly or unfriendly
+feeling of America. It will be decided solely upon the European
+battlefields. But because we are looking out from the night to a future
+dawn, because in the midst of our national need the cause of humanity is
+close to our heart, for these reasons it is not immaterial to us how the
+greatest neutral nation of culture thinks of us. Americans, the cable
+between us has been cut. It is our wish and our hope that the stronger
+band that unites American ideals with German ideals shall not also be
+cut.
+
+
+
+
+*To the Civilized World*
+
+*By Professors of Germany.*
+
+
+As representatives of German science and art, we hereby protest to the
+civilized world against the lies and calumnies with which our enemies
+are endeavoring to stain the honor of Germany in her hard struggle for
+existence--in a struggle which has been forced upon her.
+
+The iron mouth of events has proved the untruth of the fictitious German
+defeats, consequently misrepresentation and calumny are all the more
+eagerly at work. As heralds of truth we raise our voices against these.
+
+_It is not true_ that Germany is guilty of having caused this war.
+Neither the people, the Government, nor the Kaiser wanted war. Germany
+did her utmost to prevent it; for this assertion the world has
+documental proof. Often enough during the twenty-six years of his reign
+has Wilhelm II. shown himself to be the upholder of peace, and often
+enough has this fact been acknowledged by our opponents. Nay, even the
+Kaiser they now dare to call an Attila has been ridiculed by them for
+years, because of his steadfast endeavors to maintain universal peace.
+Not till a numerical superiority which had been lying in wait on the
+frontiers assailed us did the whole nation rise to a man.
+
+_It is not true_ that we trespassed in neutral Belgium. It has been
+proved that France and England had resolved on such a trespass, and it
+has likewise been proved that Belgium had agreed to their doing so. It
+would have been suicide on our part not to have been beforehand.
+
+_It is not true_ that the life and property of a single Belgian citizen
+was injured by our soldiers without the bitterest self-defense having
+made it necessary; for again and again, notwithstanding repeated
+threats, the citizens lay in ambush, shooting at the troops out of the
+houses, mutilating the wounded, and murdering in cold blood the medical
+men while they were doing their Samaritan work. There can be no baser
+abuse than the suppression of these crimes with the view of letting the
+Germans appear to be criminals, only for having justly punished these
+assassins for their wicked deeds.
+
+_It is not true_ that our troops treated Louvain brutally. Furious
+inhabitants having treacherously fallen upon them in their quarters, our
+troops with aching hearts were obliged to fire a part of the town as a
+punishment. The greatest part of Louvain has been preserved. The famous
+Town Hall stands quite intact; for at great self-sacrifice our soldiers
+saved it from destruction by the flames. Every German would of course
+greatly regret if in the course of this terrible war any works of art
+should already have been destroyed or be destroyed at some future time,
+but inasmuch as in our great love for art we cannot be surpassed by any
+other nation, in the same degree we must decidedly refuse to buy a
+German defeat at the cost of saving a work of art.
+
+_It is not true_ that our warfare pays no respect to international laws.
+It knows no indisciplined cruelty. But in the east the earth is
+saturated with the blood of women and children unmercifully butchered by
+the wild Russian troops, and in the west dumdum bullets mutilate the
+breasts of our soldiers. Those who have allied themselves with Russians
+and Servians, and present such a shameful scene to the world as that of
+inciting Mongolians and negroes against the white race, have no right
+whatever to call themselves upholders of civilization.
+
+_It is not true_ that the combat against our so-called militarism is not
+a combat against our civilization, as our enemies hypocritically pretend
+it is. Were it not for German militarism German civilization would long
+since have been extirpated. For its protection it arose in a land which
+for centuries had been plagued by bands of robbers as no other land had
+been. The German Army and the German people are one and today this
+consciousness fraternizes 70,000,000 of Germans, all ranks, positions,
+and parties being one.
+
+We cannot wrest the poisonous weapon--the lie--out of the hands of our
+enemies. All we can do is to proclaim to all the world that our enemies
+are giving false witness against us. You, who know us, who with us have
+protected the most holy possessions of man, we call to you:
+
+Have faith in us! Believe that we shall carry on this war to the end as
+a civilized nation, to whom the legacy of a Goethe, a Beethoven, and a
+Kant is just as sacred as its own hearths and homes.
+
+For this we pledge you our names and our honor:
+
+ADOLF VON BAEYER, Professor of Chemistry, Munich.
+
+Prof. PETER BEHRENS, Berlin.
+
+EMIL VON BEHRING, Professor of Medicine, Marburg.
+
+WILHELM VON BODE, General Director of the Royal Museums, Berlin.
+
+ALOIS BRANDL, Professor, President of the Shakespeare Society, Berlin.
+
+LUJU BRENTANO, Professor of National Economy, Munich.
+
+Prof. JUSTUS BRINKMANN, Museum Director, Hamburg.
+
+JOHANNES CONRAD, Professor of National Economy, Halle.
+
+FRANZ VON DEFREGGER, Munich.
+
+RICHARD DEHMEL, Hamburg.
+
+ADOLF DEITZMANN, Professor of Theology, Berlin.
+
+Prof. WILHELM DOERPFELD, Berlin.
+
+FRIEDRICH VON DUHN, Professor of Archaeology, Heidelberg.
+
+Prof. PAUL EHRLICH, Frankfort on the Main.
+
+ALBERT EHRHARD, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Strassburg.
+
+KARL ENGLER, Professor of Chemistry, Karlsruhe.
+
+GERHARD ESSER, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Bonn.
+
+RUDOLF EUCKEN, Professor of Philosophy, Jena.
+
+HERBERT EULENBERG, Kaiserswerth.
+
+HEINRICH FINKE, Professor of History, Freiburg.
+
+EMIL FISCHER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM FOERSTER, Professor of Astronomy, Berlin.
+
+LUDWIG FULDA, Berlin.
+
+EDUARD VON GEBHARDT, Dusseldorf.
+
+J.J. DE GROOT, Professor of Ethnography, Berlin.
+
+FRITZ HABER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.
+
+ERNST HAECKEL, Professor of Zoology, Jena.
+
+MAX HALBE, Munich.
+
+Prof. ADOLF VON HARNACK, General Director of the Royal Library, Berlin.
+
+GERHART HAUPTMANN, Agnetendorf.
+
+KARL, HAUPTMANN, Schreiberhau.
+
+GUSTAV HELLMANN, Professor of Meteorology, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM HERRMANN, Professor of Protestant Theology, Marburg.
+
+ANDREAS HEUSLER, Professor of Northern Philology, Berlin.
+
+ADOLF VON HILDEBRAND, Munich.
+
+LUDWIG HOFFMANN, City Architect. Berlin.
+
+ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK, Berlin.
+
+LEOPOLD GRAF KALCKREUTH, President of the German Confederation of
+Artists, Eddelsen.
+
+ARTHUR KAMPF, Berlin.
+
+FRITZ AUG. VON KAULBACH, Munich.
+
+THEODOR KIPP, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.
+
+FELIX KLEIN, Professor of Mathematics, Goettingen.
+
+MAX KLINGER, Leipsic.
+
+ALOIS KNOEPFLER, Professor of History of Art, Munich.
+
+ANTON KOCH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Muenster.
+
+PAUL LABAND, Professor of Jurisprudence, Strassburg.
+
+KARL LEMPRECHT, Professor of History, Leipsic.
+
+PHILIPP LENARD, Professor of Physics, Heidelberg.
+
+MAX LENZ, Professor of History, Hamburg.
+
+MAX LIEBERMANN, Berlin.
+
+FRANZ VON LISZT, Professor of Jurisprudence, Berlin.
+
+LUDWIG MANZEL, President of the Academy of Arts, Berlin.
+
+JOSEF MAUSBACH, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Muenster.
+
+GEORG VON MAYR, Professor of Political Sciences, Munich.
+
+SEBASTIAN MERKLE, Professor of Roman Catholic Theology, Wurzburg.
+
+EDUARD MEYER, Professor of History, Berlin.
+
+HEINRICH MORF, Professor of Roman Philology, Berlin.
+
+FRIEDRICH NAUMANN, Berlin.
+
+ALBERT NEISSER, Professor of Medicine, Breslau.
+
+WALTER NERNST, Professor of Physics, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM OSTWALD, Professor of Chemistry, Leipsic.
+
+BRUNO PAUL, Director of School for Applied Arts, Berlin.
+
+MAX PLANCK, Professor of Physics, Berlin.
+
+ALBERT PLEHN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.
+
+GEORG REICKE, Berlin.
+
+Prof. MAX REINHARDT, Director of the German Theatre, Berlin.
+
+ALOIS RIEHL, Professor of Philosophy, Berlin.
+
+KARL ROBERT, Professor of Archaeology, Halle.
+
+WILHELM ROENTGEN, Professor of Physics, Munich.
+
+MAX RUBNER, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.
+
+FRITZ SCHAPER, Berlin.
+
+ADOLF VON SCHLATTER, Professor of Protestant Theology, Tubingen.
+
+AUGUST SCHMIDLIN, Professor of Sacred History, Muenster.
+
+GUSTAV VON SCHMOLLER, Professor of National Economy, Berlin.
+
+FRANZ VON STUCK, Munich.
+
+REINHOLD SEEBERG, Professor of Protestant Theology, Berlin.
+
+MARTIN SPAHN, Professor of History, Strassburg.
+
+HERMANN SUDERMANN, Berlin.
+
+HANS THOMA, Karlsruhe.
+
+WILHELM TRUEBNER, Karlsruhe.
+
+KARL VOLLMOELLER, Stuttgart.
+
+RICHARD VOTZ, Berchtesgaden.
+
+KARL VOTZLER, Professor of Roman Philology, Munich.
+
+SIEGFRIED WAGNER, Baireuth.
+
+WILHELM WALDEYER, Professor of Anatomy, Berlin.
+
+AUGUST VON WASSERMANN, Professor of Medicine, Berlin.
+
+FELIX VON WEINGARTNER.
+
+THEODOR WIEGAND, Museum Director, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM WIEN, Professor of Physics, Wurzburg.
+
+ULRICH VON WILAMOWITZ-MOELLEN-DORFF, Professor of Philology, Berlin.
+
+RICHARD WILLSTAETTER, Professor of Chemistry, Berlin.
+
+WILHELM WINDELBAND, Professor of Philosophy, Heidelberg.
+
+WILHELM WUNDT, Professor of Philosophy, Leipsic,
+
+
+
+
+*Appeal of the German Universities*
+
+
+The campaign of systematic lies and slander which has been carried on
+against the German people and empire for years has since the outbreak of
+the war surpassed everything with which one might have credited even the
+most unscrupulous press. To repudiate any charges raised against our
+Kaiser and his Government rests with the authorities in question. They
+have done so, and their defense is substantiated by striking proofs. He
+who wants to know the truth can learn it, and we trust that truth will
+prevail. But if we are to look on, when our enemies, guided by envy and
+malice, are shameless enough to charge our army and with it our whole
+nation with barbarous atrocities and senseless vandalism, and when their
+statements appear to be believed, to a certain extent, among neutrals
+and in places which, at other times, were well disposed toward us; if we
+are quietly to look on when all this happens, we, the appointed trustees
+of culture and education in our Fatherland, feel in duty bound to break
+the reserve which our calling and position impose on us with a strong
+expression of protest. Hence we now appeal to the learned bodies with
+whom we hitherto worked in common in the interests of the highest ideals
+of the human race and with whom, even at this time, when hatred and
+passion rule the world and confuse the minds of men, we hope to remain
+of the same mind, in the same service of truth. We appeal to them in the
+confident belief that our voice will find hearing, and that the
+expression of our honest indignation will meet with credence. Moreover,
+we appeal to the love of truth and to the sense of justice of the many
+thousands all over the world who, being welcome guests in our
+educational institutions, have taken part in the inheritance of German
+culture, and who thus have had an opportunity of watching and
+appreciating the German people in peaceful labor, their industry and
+uprightness, their sense of order and discipline, their reverence for
+intellectual work of every kind, and their profound love for sciences
+and arts. All of you who know that our army is no mercenary host but
+embraces the entire nation from first to last, that it is led by the
+country's best sons, and that, at this very hour, thousands from our
+midst, teachers as well as students, are shedding their life's blood as
+officers and soldiers on the battlefields of Russia and France; you who
+have seen and heard for yourselves in what spirit and with what success
+our youths are treated and taught, and that nothing is stamped upon
+their minds more deeply than reverence and admiration for artistic,
+scientific and technical creations of the human mind, no matter what
+country and nation brought them forth; we call upon you who know all
+this as witnesses, whether it can be true what our enemies report that
+the German Army is a horde of barbarians and a band of incendiaries who
+take pleasure in leveling defenseless cities to the ground and in
+destroying venerable monuments of history and art. If you wish to pay
+honor to the cause of truth you will be as firmly convinced as we are
+that German troops, wherever they had to do destructive work, could only
+have done so in the bitterness of defensive warfare. But we appeal to
+all those whom the slanderous reports of our enemies reach and who are
+not yet altogether blinded by passion, in the name of truth and justice,
+to shut their ears to such insults to the German people, and not allow
+themselves to be prejudiced by those who prove ever anew that they hope
+to be victorious by the instrumentality of lies. Now, if in this fearful
+war, in which our nation is compelled to fight not only for its power,
+but for its very existence and its entire civilization, the work of
+destruction should be greater than in former wars, and if many a
+precious achievement of culture falls to ruin, the responsibility for
+all this entirely rests with those who were not content with letting
+loose this ruthless war, nay, who did not even shrink from pressing
+murderous weapons upon a peaceful population for them to fall
+surreptitiously upon our troops who trusted in the observance of the
+military usages of all civilized peoples. They alone are the guilty
+authors of everything which happens here. Upon their heads the verdict
+of history will fall for the lasting injury which culture suffers.
+
+September, 1914.
+
+
+UNIVERSITIES.
+
+Tuebingen, Berlin, Bonn, Breslau, Erlangen, Frankfurt, Freiburg,
+Giessen, Goettingen, Greifswald, Halle, Heidelberg, Jena, Kiel,
+Koenigsberg, Leipzig, Marburg, Muenchen, Muenster, Rostock, Strassburg,
+Wuerzburg.
+
+
+
+
+*Reply to the German Professors*
+
+*By British Scholars.*
+
+
+We see with regret the names of many German professors and men of
+science, whom we regard with respect and, in some cases, with personal
+friendship, appended to a denunciation of Great Britain so utterly
+baseless that we can hardly believe that it expresses their spontaneous
+or considered opinion. We do not question for a moment their personal
+sincerity when they express their horror of war and their zeal for "the
+achievements of culture." Yet we are bound to point out that a very
+different view of war, and of national aggrandizement based on the
+threat of war, has been advocated by such influential writers as
+Nietzsche, von Treitschke, von Buelow, and von Bernhardi, and has
+received widespread support from the press and from public opinion in
+Germany. This has not occurred, and in our judgment would scarcely be
+possible, in any other civilized country. We must also remark that it is
+German armies alone which have, at the present time, deliberately
+destroyed or bombarded such monuments of human culture as the Library at
+Louvain and the Cathedrals at Rheims and Malines.
+
+
+*The Diplomatic Papers.*
+
+No doubt it is hard for human beings to weigh justly their country's
+quarrels; perhaps particularly hard for Germans, who have been reared in
+an atmosphere of devotion to their Kaiser and his army; who are feeling
+acutely at the present hour, and who live under a Government which, we
+believe, does not allow them to know the truth. Yet it is the duty of
+learned men to make sure of their facts. The German "White Book"
+contains only some scanty and carefully explained selections from the
+diplomatic correspondence which preceded this war. And we venture to
+hope that our German colleagues will sooner or later do their best to
+get access to the full correspondence, and will form therefrom an
+independent judgment.
+
+They will then see that, from the issue of the Austrian note to Servia
+onward, Great Britain, whom they accuse of causing this war, strove
+incessantly for peace, Her successive proposals were supported by
+France, Russia, and Italy, but, unfortunately, not by the one power
+which could by a single word at Vienna have made peace certain. Germany,
+in her own official defense--incomplete as that document is--does not
+pretend that she strove for peace; she only strove for "the localization
+of the conflict." She claimed that Austria should be left free to
+"chastise" Servia in whatever way she chose. At most she proposed that
+Austria should not annex a portion of Servian territory--a futile
+provision, since the execution of Austria's demand would have made the
+whole of Servia subject to her will.
+
+Great Britain, like the rest of Europe, recognized that, whatever just
+grounds of complaint Austria may have had, the unprecedented terms of
+her note to Servia constituted a challenge to Russia and a provocation
+to war. The Austrian Emperor in his proclamation admitted that war was
+likely to ensue. The German "White Book" states in so many words: "We
+were perfectly aware that a possible warlike attitude of Austria-Hungary
+against Servia might bring Russia upon the field and therefore involve
+us in war. * * * We could not, however, * * * advise our ally to take a
+yielding attitude not compatible with his dignity." The German
+Government admits having known the tenor of the Austrian note
+beforehand, when it was concealed from all the other powers; admits
+backing it up after it was issued; admits that it knew the note was
+likely to precipitate war; and admits that, whatever professions it made
+to the other powers, in private it did not advise Austria to abate one
+jot of her demands. This, to our minds, is tantamount to admitting that
+Germany has, together with her unfortunate ally, deliberately provoked
+the present war.
+
+One point we freely admit. Germany would very likely have preferred not
+to fight Great Britain at this moment. She would have preferred to
+weaken and humiliate Russia; to make Servia a dependent of Austria; to
+render France innocuous and Belgium subservient; and then, having
+established an overwhelming advantage, to settle accounts with Great
+Britain. Her grievance against us is that we did not allow her to do
+this.
+
+
+*Britain's Love of Peace.*
+
+So deeply rooted is Great Britain's love of peace, so influential among
+us are those who have labored through many difficult years to promote
+good feeling between this country and Germany, that, in spite of our
+ties of friendship with France, in spite of the manifest danger
+threatening ourselves, there was still, up to the last moment, a strong
+desire to preserve British neutrality, if it could be preserved without
+dishonor. But Germany herself made this impossible.
+
+Great Britain, together with France, Russia, Prussia, and Austria, had
+solemnly guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium. In the preservation of
+this neutrality our deepest sentiments and our most vital interests are
+alike involved. Its violation would not only shatter the independence of
+Belgium itself: it would undermine the whole basis which renders
+possible the neutrality of any State and the very existence of such
+States as are much weaker than their neighbors. We acted in 1914 just as
+we acted in 1870. We sought from both France and Germany assurances that
+they would respect Belgian neutrality. In 1870 both powers assured us of
+their good intentions, and both kept their promises. In 1914 France gave
+immediately, on July 31, the required assurance; Germany refused to
+answer. When, after this sinister silence, Germany proceeded to break
+under our eyes the treaty which we and she had both signed, evidently
+expecting Great Britain to be her timid accomplice, then even to the
+most peace-loving Englishman hesitation became impossible. Belgium had
+appealed to Great Britain to keep her word, and she kept it.
+
+The German professors appear to think that Germany has in this matter
+some considerable body of sympathizers in the universities of Great
+Britain. They are gravely mistaken. Never within our lifetime has this
+country been so united on any great political issue. We ourselves have a
+real and deep admiration for German scholarship and science. We have
+many ties with Germany, ties of comradeship, of respect, and of
+affection. We grieve profoundly that, under the baleful influence of a
+military system and its lawless dreams of conquest, she whom we once
+honored now stands revealed as the common enemy of Europe and of all
+peoples which respect the law of nations. We must carry on the war on
+which we have entered. For us, as for Belgium, it is a war of defense,
+waged for liberty and peace.
+
+
+Sir CLIFFORD ALLBUTT, Regius Professor of Physics, Cambridge.
+
+T.W. ALLEN, Reader in Greek, Oxford.
+
+E. ARMSTRONG, Pro-Provost of Queen's College, Oxford.
+
+E.V. ARNOLD, Professor of Latin, University College of North Wales.
+
+Sir C.B. BALL, Regius Professor of Surgery, Dublin.
+
+Sir THOMAS BARLOW, President of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
+
+BERNARD BOSANQUET, formerly Professor of Moral Philosophy, St. Andrews.
+
+A.C. BRADLEY, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.
+
+W.H. BRAGG, Cavendish Professor of Physics, Leeds.
+
+Sir THOMAS BROCK, Membre d'honneur de la Societe des Artistes Francais.
+
+A.J. BROWN, Professor of Biology and Chemistry of Fermentation,
+University of Birmingham.
+
+JOHN BURNET, Professor of Greek, St. Andrews.
+
+J.B. BURY, Regius Professor of Modern History, Cambridge.
+
+Sir W.W. CHEYNE, Professor of Clinical Surgery, King's College, London,
+President of the Royal College of Surgeons.
+
+J. NORMAN COLLIE, Professor of Organic Chemistry and Director of the
+Chemical Laboratories, University College, London.
+
+F.C. CONYBEARE, Honorary Fellow of University College, Oxford.
+
+Sir HENRY CRAIK, M.P. for Glasgow and Aberdeen Universities.
+
+Sir JAMES CRICHTON-BROWNE, Vice President and Treasurer, Royal
+Institution.
+
+Sir WILLIAM CROOKES, President of the Royal Society.
+
+Sir FOSTER CUNLIFFE, Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
+
+Sir FRANCIS DARWIN, late Reader in Botany, Cambridge.
+
+A.V. DICEY, Fellow of All Souls College and formerly Vinerian Professor
+of English Law, Oxford.
+
+Sir S. DILL, Hon. Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
+
+Sir JAMES DONALDSON, Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of
+St. Andrews.
+
+F.W. DYSON, Astronomer Royal.
+
+Sir EDWARD ELGAR.
+
+Sir ARTHUR EVANS, Extraordinary Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology,
+Oxford.
+
+L.R. FARNELL, Rector of Exeter College, Oxford.
+
+C.H. FIRTH, Regius Professor of Modern History, Oxford.
+
+H.A.L. FISHER, Vice Chancellor of Sheffield University.
+
+J.A. FLEMING, Professor of Electrical Engineering in the University of
+London.
+
+H.S. FOXWELL, Professor of Political Economy in the University of
+London.
+
+Sir EDWARD FRY, Ambassador Extraordinary and First British
+Plenipotentiary to The Hague Peace Conference in 1907.
+
+Sir ARCHIBALD GEIKIE, Past President of the Royal Society.
+
+W.M. GELDART, Fellow of All Souls and Vinerian Professor of English Law,
+Oxford.
+
+Sir RICKMAN GODLEE, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Surgery, University
+College, London.
+
+B.P. GRENFELL, late Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.
+
+E.H. GRIFFITHS, Principal of the University College of South Wales and
+Monmouthshire.
+
+W.H. HADOW, Principal of Armstrong College, Newcastle.
+
+J.S. HALDANE, late Reader in Physiology, Oxford.
+
+MARCUS HARTOG, Professor of Zoology in University College, Cork.
+
+F.J. HAVERFIELD, Camden Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.
+
+W.A. HERDMAN, Professor of Zoology at Liverpool, General Secretary of
+the British Association.
+
+Sir W.P. HERRINGHAM, Vice Chancellor of the University of London.
+
+E.W. HOBSON, Sadleirian Professor of Pure Mathematics, Cambridge.
+
+D.G. HOGARTH, Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
+
+Sir ALFRED HOPKINSON, late Vice Chancellor of Manchester University.
+
+A.S. HUNT, Professor of Papyrology, Oxford.
+
+HENRY JACKSON, Regius Professor of Greek, Cambridge.
+
+Sir THOMAS G. JACKSON, R.A.
+
+F.B. JEVONS, Professor of Philosophy, Durham.
+
+H.H. JOACHIM, Fellow of Merton College, Oxford.
+
+J. JOLLY, Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Dublin.
+
+COURTNEY KENNY, Downing Professor of the Laws of England, Cambridge.
+
+Sir F.G. KENYON, Director and Principal Librarian, British Museum.
+
+HORACE LAMB, Professor of Mathematics, Manchester University.
+
+J.N. LANGLEY, Professor of Physiology, Cambridge.
+
+WALTER LEAF, Fellow of London University, President of the Hellenic
+Society.
+
+Sir SIDNEY LEE, Editor of the Dictionary of National Biography,
+Professor of the English Language and Literature in the University of
+London.
+
+Sir OLIVER LODGE, Principal of Birmingham University.
+
+Sir DONALD MACALISTER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Glasgow.
+
+R.W. MACAN, Master of University College, Oxford.
+
+Sir WILLIAM MACEWEN, Professor of Surgery, Glasgow.
+
+J.W. MACKAIL, formerly Professor of Poetry, Oxford.
+
+Sir PATRICK MANSON.
+
+R.R. MARETT, Reader in Social Anthropology, Oxford.
+
+D.S. MARGOLIOUTH, Laudian Professor of Arabic, Oxford.
+
+Sir H.A. MIERS, Principal of the University of London.
+
+FREDERICK W. MOTT, Fullerian Professor of Physiology, Royal Institution.
+
+LORD MOULTON OF BANK, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary.
+
+J.E.H. MURPHY, Professor of Irish, Dublin.
+
+GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek, Oxford.
+
+J.L. MYRES, Wykeham Professor of Ancient History, Oxford.
+
+G.H.F. NUTTALL, Quick Professor of Biology, Cambridge.
+
+Sir W. OSLER, Regius Professor of Medicine, Oxford.
+
+Sir ISAMBARD OWEN, Vice Chancellor of the University of Bristol.
+
+Sir WALTER PARRATT, Professor of Music, Oxford.
+
+Sir HUBERT PARRY, Director of Royal College of Music.
+
+W.H. PERKIN, Waynflete Professor of Chemistry, Oxford.
+
+W.M. FLINDERS PETRIE EDWARDS, Professor of Egyptology, University
+College, London.
+
+A.F. POLLARD, Professor of English History, London.
+
+Sir F. POLLOCK, formerly Corpus Professor of Jurisprudence, Oxford.
+
+EDWARD B. POULTON, Hope Professor of Zoology, Oxford.
+
+Sir E.J. POYNTER, President of the Royal Academy of Arts.
+
+Sir A. QUILLER-COUCH, King Edward VII. Professor of English Literature,
+Cambridge.
+
+Sir WALTER RALEIGH, Professor of English Literature, Oxford.
+
+Sir W. RAMSAY, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, London.
+
+Lord RAYLEIGH, Past President Royal Society, Nobel Laureate, Chancellor
+of Cambridge University.
+
+Lord REAY, First President British Academy.
+
+JAMES REID, Professor of Ancient History, Cambridge.
+
+WILLIAM RIDGEWAY, Disney Professor of Archaeology, Cambridge.
+
+T.F. ROBERTS, Principal of the University College of Wales, Aberystwith.
+
+J. HOLLAND ROSE, Reader in Modern History, Cambridge.
+
+Sir RONALD ROSS, formerly Professor of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool,
+Nobel Laureate.
+
+M.E. SADLER, Vice Chancellor of Leeds.
+
+W. SANDAY, Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity, Oxford.
+
+Sir J.E. SANDYS, Public Orator, Cambridge.
+
+Sir ERNEST SATOW, Second British Delegate to The Hague Peace Conference
+in 1907.
+
+A.H. SAYCE, Professor of Assyriology, Oxford.
+
+ARTHUR SCHUSTER, late Professor of Physics, Manchester.
+
+D.H. SCOTT, Foreign Secretary, Royal Society.
+
+C.S. SHERRINGTON, Waynflete Professor of Physiology, Oxford.
+
+GEORGE ADAM SMITH, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Aberdeen.
+
+G.C. MOORE SMITH, Professor of English Language and Literature,
+Sheffield.
+
+E.A. SONNENSCHEIN, Professor of Latin and Greek, Birmingham.
+
+W.R. SORLEY, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Cambridge.
+
+Sir C.V. STANFORD, Profesor of Music, Cambridge.
+
+V.H. STANTON, Ely Professor of Divinity, Cambridge.
+
+J. ARTHUR THOMSON, Regius Professor of Natural History, Aberdeen.
+
+Sir J.J. THOMSON, Professor of Experimental Physics, Cambridge.
+
+T.F. TOUT, Professor of Mediaeval and Modern History, Manchester.
+
+Sir W. TURNER, Principal and Vice Chancellor, Edinburgh.
+
+Sir C. WALDSTEIN, late Reader in Classical Archaeology and Slade
+Professor of Fine Art, Cambridge.
+
+Sir J. WOLFE-BARRY.
+
+Sir ALMROTH WRIGHT, formerly Professor of Pathology, Netley.
+
+C.T. HAGBERG WRIGHT, Librarian, London Library.
+
+JOSEPH WRIGHT, Professor of Comparative Philology, Oxford.
+
+*Concerning the German Professors*
+
+*By Frederic Harrison.*
+
+
+_To the Editor of the London Morning Post_:
+
+Sir: I was not invited to join the reply of our distinguished scholars
+and professors, perhaps because it is so many years since I was the
+colleague of James Bryce as Professor of Jurisprudence to the Inns of
+Court. And, indeed, I do not care to bandy recriminations with these
+German defenders of the attack on civilization by the whole imperial,
+military, and bureaucratic order. It seems to me waste of time and loss
+of self-respect to notice these pedants.
+
+The whole German press and the entire academic class seem to be banded
+together as an official bureau in order to spread mendacious insults and
+spiteful slanders. Not a word comes from them to excuse or deny the
+defiance of public law and the mockery of public faith by the German
+Emperor, his Ministers, and his armies. These professors seem to exult
+in serving the new Attila--rather let us say the new Caligula, for
+Attila at least was an open soldier and did not skulk under the Red
+Cross behind barbed wire fences.
+
+We have long known that all German academic and scholastic officials are
+the creatures of the Government, as obedient to orders as any Drill
+Sergeant. They seem to have sold their consciences for place. Not a word
+comes from them even of regret for the massacre of civilians on false
+charges, for the wanton murder of children, for the wholesale rape of
+women, the showering of bombs upon sleeping towns in sheer cruelty of
+destruction. The intellectual energies of Kultur seem concentrated on
+distorting the meaning of our dispatches and the speeches of our
+statesmen, and in manufacturing for their people and neutrals venomous
+falsehoods. German Geist today is a huge machine to cram lies upon their
+own people, and to insinuate lies to the world around. Their system of
+war is based upon lying at home and abroad, on treachery and terrorism.
+They think that murdering a few civilians would terrify France into
+surrender, and will drive England to betray the Allies. Their poor
+conscripts are told that we kill and torture prisoners; their monuments
+at home are bedizened with mock laurels; and neutrals are poisoned with
+wild inventions.
+
+For years past their public men, have
+
+[Illustration: ADOLF VON HARNACK.
+
+_See Page_ 198]
+
+[Illustration: THEODORE NIEMEYER.
+
+_See Page_ 206]
+
+been tricking our politicians, journalists, and professors to accept
+them as peaceful leaders of a higher civilization--- while all the while
+their soldiers, diplomats, and spies (the three are really but one
+class) were secretly courting our own royalties and society, studying
+our naval and military defenses, filling our homes with tens of
+thousands of reservists having secret orders to spy, to destroy our
+arsenals and roads, and even planting out bogus industries and laying
+concrete bases for cannon, to bombard the open towns of friendly
+nations. We have been living unsuspectingly with a nation of assassins
+plotting to destroy us. Did these professors of Kultur not know of this
+elaborate conspiracy of Kaisertum, which unites the stealthy treachery
+of a Mohawk or a thug to the miracles of modern science? For years past
+the ideal of Kultur has been to lay down secret mines to destroy their
+peaceful neighbors. Did these professors of the Fatheland not know this?
+Then they are unable to grasp the most obvious facts--the life work of
+their own masters under their own eyes. And, if they did know it, and
+must at least know it now, and yet approve and glory in it, they must be
+beneath contempt. Why argue with such hypocrites?
+
+Not a few of us have known and watched this conspiracy for years. I have
+preached this ever since the advent of Bismarckism and the new Europe
+that was formed forty years ago. Not a few of us have foretold not only
+the tremendous attack on the British Empire designed by German sea power
+but the precise steps of the war upon France, through Belgium, and to be
+executed by an overwhelming force of sudden shock in the midst of peace.
+For my part, nothing in this war since July 30 has at all surprised me,
+unless it be the foul cruelty with which Belgian civilians have been
+treated. Indeed, in January, 1913, I wrote a warning which reads now
+like a summary of events that have since happened. I was denounced as a
+senile alarmist by some who are now the loudest in calling to arms.
+Alas! too late is their repentance.
+
+May I ask why our eminent academicians and scholars who still profess
+"friendship and admiration" for their German confreres never even
+suspected the huge conspiracy of which civilization has been the victim?
+Why did they accept the stars and crosses of Caligula-Attila? Why
+hob-nob with the docile creatures of his chancery, and spread at home
+and abroad the worship of Geist and Kultur? Are they fit to instruct us
+about politics, public law, and international relations, when they were
+so egregiously mistaken, so blind, so befooled, with regard to the most
+portentous catastrophe in the memory of living men? I am glad that they
+see their blindness now--but why this sentimental friendliness for those
+who hoodwinked them?
+
+Surely this should open their eyes to the mountains of pretentious
+clouds on which the claims of Kultur rest. I am myself a student of
+German learning, and quite aware of the enormous industry, subtlety, and
+ingenuity of German scholarship. We owe deep gratitude to the older race
+of the Savignys, Rankes, Mommsens. Since 1851 I have been five times in
+Germany on different occasions down to 1900. I read and speak the
+language, and twice I lived in Germany for months together, even in the
+house of a distinguished man of science. I study their theology, their
+sociology, economics, history, and their classics. I am quite aware of
+the supremacy of German scholars in ancient literature, in many branches
+of science, in the record of the past in art, manners, and civilization.
+But to have edited a Greek play or to have discovered a new explosive, a
+new comet, another microbe, does not qualify a savant to dogmatize on
+international morals and the hegemony of the world. Sixty years ago in
+Leipzig the editor of a famous journal undertook to prove to me that
+Shakespeare was a German. Our poet, he said, was the grandest output of
+the Teutonic mind; nine-tenths of the Teutonic mind was German-argal,
+Shakespeare was a German, Q.E.D.
+
+With the vast accumulation of solid knowledge of provable facts there is
+too often in the German mind a sudden bounding up into a cloudland of
+crude and unproved guesswork. In the logic of Kultur there seems to be a
+huge gap in the reasoning of the middle terms. A savant unearths a
+manuscript in Syria, which he deciphers with marvelous industry,
+learning, and ingenuity. Straightway he cries, "Eureka, behold the
+original Gospel--the true Gospel!" and he proceeds to turn Christianity
+upside down. He may have experimented on cultures of microbes for a
+generation; and then he calls on earth and heaven to acknowledge the
+mystery of the self-creation of the universe. We hear much of Treitschke
+today--no doubt a man of genius with a gift for research--but what
+ferocious pyrotechnics were poured forth by this apostle of mendacious
+swagger. And as to Nietzsche, he was anticipated by Shakespeare in
+Timon--a diseased cynic--
+
+ henceforth hated be
+ Of Timon, man and all humanity.
+
+They seem to think that to have put the critics right about a few lines
+in Sophocles, or to have discovered a new chemical dye, dispenses the
+German Superman from being bound to humanity, truthfulness, and honor.
+Charge them with the mutilation of little girls and the violation of
+nuns in Belgium, and they reply: Yes! but think of Kant and Hegel! It is
+treason to philosophy, they say, that a man who has translated
+Schopenhauer should condemn Germans for burning Malines and making
+captive women a screen for troops in battle. Kultur, it seems, has its
+own "higher law," which its professors expound to the decadent nations
+of Europe.
+
+Let us hold no parley with these arrogant sophists. Let all intellectual
+commerce be suspended until these official professors have unlearned the
+infernal code of "military necessity" and "world policy" which, to the
+indignation of the civilized world, they are ordered by the Vicegerent
+of God at Potsdam to teach to the great Teutonic Super-race. Yours, &c.,
+
+FREDERIC HARRISON.
+
+Bath, Oct. 29.
+
+
+
+
+*The Reply From France*
+
+
+*By M. Yves Guyot and Prof. Bellet.*
+
+ _The following is the text of an open lettert addressed by M. Yves
+ Guyot, Editor-in-Chief of the Journal des Economistes, and M.
+ Bellet, Professor at the Schools of Political Science and
+ Commercial Studies, to Prof. Brentano of the University of Munich,
+ the communication being a reply to the recent German Appeal to
+ Civilized Nations on the subject of the war_:
+
+
+PARIS, Oct. 15, 1914.
+
+_To Prof. Brentano of the University of Munich_:
+
+Very Learned Professor and Colleague: On reading the Appeal to Civilized
+Nations, (among which France is evidently not included,) which has just
+been sent forth by ninety-three persons declaring themselves to be
+representatives of German science and art, we were not surprised to find
+Prof. Schmoller's signature. He had already shown his hatred for France
+by refusing to assist at the gatherings organized, a little more than
+two years ago, to celebrate the seventieth anniversary of the Paris
+Society of Political Economy, (gatherings at which we were happy to
+enjoy your presence and that of your colleague, Mr. Lotz.) In his
+Rector's speech at the Berlin University, in 1897, he declared that
+German science had no other object than to celebrate the imperial
+messages of 1880 and 1890; and he pointed out that every disciple of
+Adam Smith who was not willing to make it a servant of that policy
+"should resign his seat." But we felt painful surprise when, at the foot
+of the said factum, we found your name side by side with his.
+
+You and the other representatives of German science and art accuse
+France, Great Britain, Belgium, and Russia of falsehood. Would you have
+submitted, on the part of one of your pupils, to so grave an imputation,
+so lightly bandied? Admitting you to be in absolute ignorance of the
+documents published since the war declaration, you have certainly been
+acquainted with the ultimatum pronounced by Austria to Servia. It must
+have struck you with surprise; for it stands as a unique diplomatic
+document in all history. Did you not ask yourselves whether the demands
+of Austria did not go beyond all bounds, seeing that they insisted on
+the abdication of an independent State? You learned that, in spite of
+Servia's humble reply, because it contained a reservation, immediately,
+without discussion, the Ambassador of Austria-Hungary left Belgrade, and
+that the following day Austria declared war. You do not ignore the steps
+taken by Great Britain and France, the demand for delay made by Russia,
+and the reply of the German Chancellor "that none should intervene
+between Austria and Servia." He elegantly qualified the attitude thus
+adopted as "localizing the conflict."
+
+Is there a single member among those who signed the document of
+Intellectuals who has been able to believe--have you been able to
+believe, Mr. Brentano, with your quick and perspicacious mind?--that
+this reply from Berlin did not imply war as a fatal consequence; for any
+nation accepting it was certain to be treated in future, by Germany, as
+the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy treated Servia? How, then, knowing the
+initial pretext of the war, are you able to realize that there was no
+other relation between this cause and the effect produced than the will
+of those who made use of it to provoke either a dishonoring humiliation
+for the countries accepting such a situation, or a general
+conflagration? How, then, do you, and the signatories of your appeal,
+dare to state: "It is not true that Germany provoked the war"? You dare
+to speak of proofs taken from authentic documents. Those published by
+Great Britain, Russia, and Belgium are known. All agree; and they give
+clear proof that the Austro-Hungarian ultimatum was pronounced with full
+complicity of the Berlin Chancellery. They prove, moreover, that the
+German Ambassador at Petrograd, fearing a withdrawal on the part of
+Hungary, precipitated events while your Emperor kept himself out of the
+way. Meanwhile, your General Staff had, in underhanded manner, mobilized
+a portion of its troops, by individual call, while in France we waited,
+unable to imagine that the German Government had resolved to engage in
+European war without motives. In the pocketbooks of your reservists have
+been found forms calling them to the army long before the end of July.
+Our friend and colleague, Courcelle-Seneuil, has seen the military book
+of a German living in Switzerland, at Bex, containing this call.
+
+
+*Bismarckian Loyalty.*
+
+Correspondence of official nature has been stopped at the Cape, which
+should have reached in full time officers of the German Navy, warning
+them to prepare for mid-July. Such advance taken by your troops has
+rendered the task the more difficult for ours. We were very simple, for
+we believed in the affirmations of your statesmen. You state that these
+are loyal war methods; so be it. That belongs to the diplomatic rules of
+loyalty bequeathed by Bismarck to his successors. But to attempt to
+carry on this falsehood, you have no longer the excuse of its utility.
+It is clear to all, except, it seems, the representatives of science and
+art in Germany, who are sufficiently devoid of perspicacity to ignore
+it.
+
+They affirm, moreover, that Germany has not violated the neutrality of
+Belgium; she merely contented herself with "taking the first step."
+Beyond the authentic proofs which have been published, we would draw
+your attention to an undeniable fact. Trusting in the treaty which
+guaranteed Belgium neutrality--and at the foot of which figured
+Germany's signature--in the promise made a short while ago to the King
+of the Belgians by your Emperor, we unfortunately left our northern
+frontier unguarded. You must be aware, professor, that the English did
+not move until Belgian soil had been effectively violated. It is true
+that we knew the plan of campaign set forth by Gen. Bernhardi, but we
+naively believed that, whatever might be the opinion of a General, the
+Chancellor of the Empire would consider a treaty bearing the imperial
+signature as something more than a mere "bit of paper." Germany has also
+been untrue to her signature by violating the treaty of neutrality of
+Luxembourg. You forgot to state that there also you only "took the first
+step." Your appeal echoes the German papers, which declare that it was
+the Belgians, and particularly the women, who "began against your
+troops." An American paper replied by stating that if it was the Belgian
+women who attacked German soldiers on Belgian soil, what were the
+soldiers doing there? The truth is that your troops, obeying their
+officers, as is proved by papers which have been seized and which you
+would find quoted in the report presented by the Belgian Commission to
+President Wilson, have executed orders which seem inspired by the
+ferocious inscriptions of Assyrian Kings, no doubt exhumed on the Bagdad
+railway line; and you think it quite natural that massacre and arson
+should have been perpetrated at Louvain because the civil population
+fired on your soldiers; but an inquiry made together with the
+representatives of the United States (whom you deign to consider
+sufficiently to ask them to represent your defenses) proved that the
+civil population was unarmed. If you today approve of the burning of the
+Louvain Library, have you until now approved of the destruction of the
+library at Alexandria? It is true there was no Deutsch Kultur there. The
+result of German culture as regards military matters is to place your
+soldiers on a stratum of civilization anterior to that of the Vandals,
+who, when taking Hippone, spared the library.
+
+In Paris, if one of us passing, on Friday, Oct. 9, in the Rue
+d'Edimbourg, to an office of the Societe d'Economie Politique, situated
+at No. 14, had passed near to that address, he might have been murdered
+by a bomb thrown from one of your Taubes on the civil population of a
+town whose bombarding had not been notified. Another Taube caused,
+through the throwing of a bomb, a fire at the Cathedral of Notre Dame.
+You cannot, to excuse such an assault, invoke the pretext put forward to
+excuse the destruction of the Cathedral of Rheims. No observer could
+have caught sight of a German soldier from the top of the towers.
+
+
+*Barbarian Soldiery.*
+
+Your co-signatories and you express indignation because the civilized
+world describes your soldiers as barbarians. Do you therefore consider
+such deeds as those specified to be a high expression of civilization?
+And here is the dilemma: either you are in ignorance of these deeds,
+then you are indeed very careless, or you approve of them, in which case
+you must make the defense of them enter into your works on right and
+ethics. In doing so you would only be following the theories of your
+military authors who have insisted on the necessity of striking terror
+into the hearts of the civil population, in order that it may weigh on
+its Government and its army so strongly that they may be forced to ask
+for peace. But those of your colleagues who profess psychology must, if
+they have approved such a theory, confess today that they made a great
+mistake; for such deeds, far from forcing the people to cowardly action,
+awaken indignation in all hearts and fire the courage of our soldiers.
+Nevertheless, your military authors have not stated that theft was a
+means of assuring victory. And yet the Crown Prince, your Emperor of
+tomorrow, gathered together at the castle of the Count of Baye articles
+in precious metals, belonging to a collection, which he had carefully
+packed up and sent off. Some of your officers' trunks have been found
+stuffed with goods which would constitute the stock of a second-hand
+clothes seller. Do you and your co-signatories include in German science
+and art the science and art of housebreaking? Are the law professors and
+the economists willing to defend such a manner of acquiring property?
+And, if so, what becomes of your penal code?
+
+You and your co-signatories affirm that the present struggle is directed
+against "German culture." If such culture teaches that the rights of men
+include contempt of treaties, contempt of private property, contempt of
+the lives of non-combatants, you cannot be surprised that the other
+nations show no desire to preserve it for your benefit and their
+detriment.
+
+It is not by arms but by arguments and facts that economists like us,
+faithful to the teachings of the physiocrats and of Adam Smith, have
+sought to protect ourselves against it. On the eve of the war, at the
+inauguration of Turgot's Monument, we set forth his ideas of liberty and
+humanity in opposition to the German realpolitik. We hope that the
+present events will cure those among our professors whom it had
+contaminated, and that they will cease to constitute themselves
+accomplices of that, form of Pan-Germanism which they introduced to
+public opinion and to our legislation. The acts of your diplomatists and
+of your Generals, and the approbation given them by you and other
+representatives of German science, are a terrible demonstration, but
+conclusive, of the dangers and vanity of German culture. You are its
+true destroyers.
+
+
+*Militarism and Civilization.*
+
+"Without our miltarism," say you, "our civilization would have been
+annihilated long ago." And you invoke the inheritance of Goethe,
+Beethoven, Kant. But Goethe, born in the free city of Frankfort, lived
+at the Court of Charles Augustus, which was a liberal and artistic
+centre ever threatened by Prussia. But Beethoven was of Flemish origin,
+and lived in Holland until the age of twenty-four, spending the rest of
+his life in Vienna, and he has nothing in common with Prussian
+militarism, so redoubtable for Austria. But Kant, if he was born and
+lived at Koenisberg, the true capital of the Prussian Kingdom, welcomed
+the French Revolution, and when he died in 1804 it was not Prussian
+militarism which had recommended his writings to the world.
+
+But the solidarity which you establish between German militarism and
+German culture, of which you and your colleagues claim to be the
+representatives, is a proof of the confusion of German conceptions.
+
+To present Goethe, Beethoven, and Kant to the world you surround them
+with bayonets. In the same manner every tradesman and every merchant
+throughout Germany has got into the habit of saying: "I have four
+million bayonets behind me!" Your Emperor said to some tradesmen who
+complained of bad business: "I must travel!" And he went to
+Constantinople; he went to Tangier, after the speech at Bremen. In every
+one of his words, in each of his gestures, he affirmed the subordination
+of economic civilization to military civilization. He considered that it
+was his duty to open up markets and assert the value of German products
+with cannon and sword. Hence his formidable armaments, his perpetual
+threats which held all nations in a constant state of anxiety.
+
+There is the deep and true cause of the war. And it is due entirely to
+your Emperor and his environment. We readily understand that the greater
+number of "representatives of German science and art" who signed the
+appeal are incapable of fathoming this fact; but this is not your case,
+you who denounced the abuses and consequences of German protectionism,
+and we remember that at the Antwerp Congress you agreed with us in
+recognizing its aggressive nature.
+
+In conclusion, we beg to express the deep consideration which we feel
+for your science, hitherto so unerring.
+
+
+
+
+*To Americans In Germany*
+
+*By Prof. Adolf von Harnack.*
+
+
+Citizens of the United States, ladies and gentlemen: It is my pleasure
+and my privilege to address to you today a few words.
+
+Let me begin with a personal recollection. Ten years ago I was in the
+United States and I came away with some unforgettable memories. What
+impression was the strongest? Not the thundering fall of Niagara, not
+the wonderful entrance into New York Harbor with its skyscrapers, not
+the tremendous World's Fair of St. Louis in all its proud grandeur, not
+the splendid universities of Harvard and Columbia or the Congressional
+Library in Washington--these are all works of technique or of nature and
+cannot arouse our deepest admiration and make the deepest impression.
+What was the deepest impression? It was two-fold: first, the great work
+of the American Nation, and next, American hospitality.
+
+The great work of the American Nation, that is, the nation itself! From
+the smallest beginning the American Nation has in 200 years developed
+itself to a world power of more than 100,000,000 souls, and has not only
+settled but civilized the whole section of the world from the Atlantic
+to the Pacific, from the great lakes to the West Indies. And not only
+civilized: everything which has drifted to it has been welded together
+by this nation with an indescribable power, welded together to the unity
+of a great, noble nation of educated men--such a thing as has never
+before happened in all history. After two or at the most, three
+generations, all are welded together in the American body and the
+American spirit, and this without petty rules, without political
+pressure. In the definite frame of this people every individual
+character fits in without coercion, becomes American and yet retains its
+own quality. The world has never witnessed such a spectacle but it is
+witnessing it continually now. On the one side it hears and sees the
+fact that every alien after a short time announces, "America is now my
+Fatherland!" and on the other hand the old country still continues
+undisturbed the bond between them. Yes, here is at once a national
+strength and freedom which another could not copy from you very easily.
+
+
+*The Spirit of America.*
+
+But, further: Among those who have wandered to your shores are millions
+of Germans--several millions! For more than two years--where shall I
+begin to relate--since the days of Steuben and of Carl Schurz--but how
+can I name names?--they have been all received as brothers, bringing
+their best; and their best was not lost. More I cannot say.
+
+Furthermore, what sort was the spirit which received them? Upon each
+one, without and within, that spirit has imprinted its seal. Concerning
+this spirit I shall speak later, but for the present I will only say, it
+is the spirit of common courage and common freedom! And from this unity
+I saw had developed a tremendous contribution as the work of this
+nation, a contribution to agriculture, to technology, and, as we of the
+German universities have known for several decades, an extraordinary
+contribution to science. And this contribution has been derived from a
+combination such as we in Europe cannot effect, of the good old
+traditional wisdom which has been brought down out of the history of
+Europe and a youthful courage, I might almost say, a childlike spirit.
+These two combined, this circumspection and at the same time this
+courage of youth, which I met everywhere and which has stamped itself
+upon all American work, is what I have admired.
+
+And the second was the American hospitality!
+
+Like a warm breeze, this hospitality surrounded me and my friends.
+Wherever we went we breathed the air of this friendship, indeed, it
+almost took away our powers of will, so thoroughly did it anticipate
+every plan and every need. Like parcels of friendship, we were sent from
+place to place, always the feeling that we had all known each other
+forever. That was an experience for which all of us--for who of us
+Germans who have come over here has not experienced it?--will be
+perpetually thankful. That will never be forgotten.
+
+
+*Friendship for Germany.*
+
+But beautiful and noble as that was, your nation has furnished ours with
+something still more unforgettable. In those horrible days of 1870, when
+a great number of Germans were shut up in unfortunate Paris, the
+American Ambassador assumed the care of them, and what America did at
+that time she is again doing for all of our country--men who, surprised
+in the enemy's country by the war, have been detained there. They are
+intrusted to the special care of the American Ambassador, and we know
+with as much certainty as though it were an actual fact already that
+that care will be the best and the most loyal. That, my friends, is true
+service of friendship, which is not mere convention but such as it is in
+the Catechism: "Give us our daily bread and good friends." They belong
+together.
+
+But to answer the question why you are our good friends we must reflect
+a little for the answer which we might have given a few days ago--"You
+are our good friends as our blood relations"--alas! that answer no
+longer holds. That is over! God grant that in later days we may again be
+able to say it, but by a circumstance which has torn our very
+heartstrings it has been proved that blood is not thicker than water.
+But where then is the deep-lying reason for this friendship? Does it
+rest in the fact that we have so many Germans over there; that they have
+been received so cordially; that they have done so much for the building
+up of America, soul and body, or that we find friends in so many
+Americans on this side of the water? This is an important consideration,
+but it is not the ultimate cause we are seeking.
+
+My friends, when it is a powerful relationship, imbedded in rock as it
+were, which is under consideration, then the matter is more than
+superficial, and that which is at the bottom of this deeper fact,
+history is at this very moment showing us as she writes in characters of
+bronze before our eyes; because we have a common spirit which springs
+from the very depths of our hearts, for that reason are we friends!
+
+And what is that spirit? It is the spirit of the deep religious and
+moral culture which has possessed us through a succession of centuries
+and out of which this powerful American offshoot has sprung. To this
+culture belong three things, or, rather, it rests upon three pillars.
+The first pillar is the recognition of the eternal value of every human
+soul, consequently the recognition of personality and individuality.
+These are respected, nourished, striven for. Second is the recognition
+of the duty at any time to risk this human soul, which is to each one of
+us so dear, for that great ideal--"God, freedom, and the Fatherland."
+The dearer that human soul, that life, is prized by us, Germans and
+Americans, the more surely do we give it up willingly and joyously when
+a high cause demands it. And the third pillar is respect for law and
+therewith the capability for powerful organization in all lines and in
+all manner of communities.
+
+
+*A Different Culture.*
+
+But now before my eyes I see rising up against the culture which rests
+upon these three pillars--personality, duty to sacrifice all for ideals,
+law and organization--another culture, a culture of the horde whose
+Government is patriarchal, a civilization of the mob which is brought
+together and held together by despots, the Byzantine--I must extend it
+further--Mongolian-Muscovite culture.
+
+My friends, this was once a true culture, but it is no longer. This
+culture was not able to bear the light of the eighteenth century, still
+less that of the nineteenth, and now, in this twentieth century, it
+breaks out and threatens us--this unorganized mob, this mob of Asia;
+like the sands of the desert it would sweep down over our harvest
+fields. That we already know; we are already experiencing it. That, too,
+the Americans know, for every one who has stood upon the ground of our
+civilization and who with a keen glance regards the present situation
+knows that the word must be: "Peoples of Europe, save your most hallowed
+possessions!"
+
+
+*"I Cover My Head!"*
+
+This, our culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in large part,
+yes, almost wholly, intrusted to three peoples: to us, to the Americans,
+and--to the English. I will say no more! I cover my head! Two still
+remain, and must stand all the more firmly together where this culture
+is menaced. It is a question of our spiritual existence, and Americans
+will realize that it is also their existence. We have a common culture,
+and a common duty to protect it!
+
+To you, American citizens, we give the holy pledge that we shall offer
+our last drop of blood in the cause of this culture. May I in addition
+say to you, since I have made this pledge, that we shall as a matter of
+course protect those of you here in our land and care for you and do
+everything for you? If we have made the greater pledge, surely we can
+manage these trifles.
+
+But you, my dear fellow-countrymen, we are all thinking with one mind on
+what is now going on about us. It is a very grave but a splendid time.
+Whatever in the last analysis we shall go through, at present there is
+no longer any one of us who any longer regards life in the role of a
+blase or critical spectator, but each one of us stands in the very midst
+of life, and, indeed, in the very midst of a higher life. God has of a
+sudden brought us out of the wretchedness of the day to a high place to
+which we have never before spiritually attained. But always where life
+emerges, a higher life or merely life itself, wherever there is a thirst
+for life, there is it set close around by death, as at every birth when
+something new comes to the light of day, and so if the most precious
+thing is to be gained, then death will stand close by life. But this we
+also know, that when death and life intertwine in this fashion, the fear
+of death vanishes away; in the intertwining, life only appears and full
+of life man goes through death and into death. It brings to my mind an
+old song, the powerful song of victory of our fathers:
+
+ It was a famous battle,
+ Fought 'twixt Life and Death;
+ Life came out the victor,
+ Triumphant over Death;
+ Already it was written
+ How one Death killed the other,
+ So making mock of Death!
+
+Death which is willingly met kills the great death and secures the
+higher life. Death makes us free. Thus spake Luther.
+
+Let me say a few words in closing. Before all of us there stands in time
+of crisis an image under which are the plain words: "He was faithful
+unto death, yea, even to death on the cross." Now the time for great
+faithfulness has come for us, for this obedience for which our neighbors
+in former times have ridiculed us, saying: "See, these are the faithful
+Germans, the men who do all on command and are so obedient!" Now they
+shall see that this great obedience was not mere discipline, but a
+matter of will. It was and still is discipline, but it is also will.
+They shall see that this great obedience is not pettiness and death, but
+power and life.
+
+From the east--I say it once more--the desert sands are sweeping down
+upon us; on the west we are opposed by old enemies and treacherous
+friends. When will the German be able to pray again, confessing:
+
+ God is the Orient,
+ God is the Occident;
+ Northernmost and Southern lands
+ Rest in peace beneath His hands.
+
+We shall hope that God may give us strength to make this true, not only
+for us but for all Europe.
+
+Until then, since we see the very springs of our higher life and our
+existence threatened, we shout: "Father, protect our springs of life and
+save us from the Huns."
+
+
+
+
+*A Reply to Prof. Harnack*
+
+*By Some British Theologians.*
+
+
+Prof. Harnack.
+
+Honored Sir: We, the undersigned, a group of theologians who owe more
+than we can express to you personally and to the great host of German
+teachers and leaders of thought, have noticed with pain a report of a
+speech recently delivered by you, in which you are said to have
+described the conduct of Great Britain in the present war as that of a
+traitor to civilization.
+
+We are quite sure that you could never have been betrayed into such a
+statement if you had been acquainted with the real motives which actuate
+the British Nation in the present crisis.
+
+Permit us, in the interests of a better understanding now and
+subsequently, to state to you the grounds on which we, whose obligations
+to Germany, personal and professional, are simply incalculable, have
+felt it our duty to support the British Government in its declaration of
+war against the land and people we love so well.
+
+We are not actuated by any preference for France over Germany--still
+less by any preference for Russia over Germany. The preference lies
+entirely the other way. Next to the peoples that speak the English
+tongue, there is no people in the world that stands so high in our
+affection and admiration as the people of Germany. Several of us have
+studied in German universities. Many of us have enjoyed warm personal
+friendship with your fellow-countrymen. All of us owe an immeasurable
+debt to German theology, philosophy, and literature. Our sympathies are
+in matters of the spirit so largely German that nothing but the very
+strongest reasons could ever lead us to contemplate the possibility of
+hostile relations between Great Britain and Germany.
+
+Nor have we the remotest sympathy with any desire to isolate Germany, or
+to restrict her legitimate expansion, commercial and colonial. We have
+borne resolute witness against the endeavor made by foes of Germany to
+foment anti-German suspicion and ill-will in the minds of our
+fellow-countrymen.
+
+
+*The Sanctity of Treaties.*
+
+But we recognize that all hopes of settled peace between the nations,
+and indeed of any civilized relations between the nations, rest on the
+maintenance inviolate of the sanctity of treaty obligations. We can
+never hope to put law for war if solemn international compacts can be
+torn up at the will of any power involved. These obligations are felt by
+us to be the more stringently binding in the case of guaranteed
+neutrality. For the steady extension of neutralization appears to us to
+be one of the surest ways of the progressive elimination of war from the
+face of the earth. All these considerations take on a more imperative
+cogency when the treaty rights of a small people are threatened by a
+great world power. We therefore believe that when Germany refused to
+respect the neutrality of Belgium, which she herself had guaranteed,
+Great Britain had no option, either in international law or in Christian
+ethics, but to defend the people of Belgium. The Imperial Chancellor of
+Germany has himself admitted, on Aug. 4, that the protest of the
+Luxembourg and Belgian Governments was "just," and that Germany was
+doing "wrong" and acting "contrary to the dictates of international
+law." His only excuse was "necessity"--which recalls our Milton's
+phrase, "necessity, the tyrant's plea." It has cost us all the deepest
+pain to find the Germany which we love so intensely committing this act
+of lawless aggression on a weak people, and a Christian nation becoming
+a mere army with army ethics. We loathe war of any kind. A war with
+Germany cuts us to the very quick. But we sincerely believe that Great
+Britain in this conflict is fighting for conscience, justice, Europe,
+humanity, and lasting peace.
+
+
+*Dictated Terms.*
+
+This conviction is deepened by the antecedents of the present unhappy
+war. In allowing her ally Austria to dictate terms to Servia which were
+quite incompatible with the independence of that little State, Germany
+gave proof of her disregard for the rights of smaller States. A similar
+disregard for the sovereign rights of greater States was shown in the
+demand that Russia should demobilize her forces. It was quite open to
+Germany to have answered Russia's mobilization with a
+counter-mobilization without resorting to war. Many other nations have
+mobilized to defend their frontiers without declaring war. Alike
+indirectly in regard to Servia and directly in regard to Russia, Germany
+was indisputably the aggressor. And this policy of lawless aggression
+became more nakedly manifest in the invasion of Belgium. Great Britain
+is not bound by any treaty rights to defend either Servia or Russia. But
+she is bound by the most sacred obligations to defend Belgium,
+obligations which France undertook to observe. We have been grieved to
+the heart to see in the successive acts of German policy a disregard of
+the liberties of States, small or great, which is the very negation of
+civilization. It is not our country that has incurred the odium of being
+a traitor to civilization or to the conscience of humanity.
+
+Doubtless you read the facts of the situation quite differently. You may
+think us entirely mistaken. But we desire to assure you, as
+fellow-Christians and fellow-theologians, that our motives are not open
+to the charge which has been made.
+
+We have been moved to approach you on this matter by our deep reverence
+for you and our high appreciation of the great services you have
+rendered to Christendom in general. We trust that you will receive what
+we have said in the spirit in which it was sent.
+
+We have the honor to be,
+
+Yours very sincerely,
+
+
+P.J. FORSYTH, M.A., D.D., Aberdeen University. Principal of Hackney
+College (Divinity School: University of London).
+
+HERBERT T. ANDREWS, B.A. Oxon. Professor of New Testament, Exegesis,
+Introduction and Criticism. New College, London (Divinity School:
+University of London).
+
+J. HERBERT DARLOW, M.A. Cambridge. Literary Superintendent of the
+British and Foreign Bible Society.
+
+JAMES R. GILLIES, M.A. Edinburgh, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church
+of England. Pastor of Hampstead Presbyterian Church, London.
+
+R. MACLEOD, Pastor of Frognal Presbyterian Church, London.
+
+W.M. MACPHAIL, M.A. Glasgow. General Secretary of the Presbyterian
+Church of England.
+
+RICHARD ROBERTS, Pastor of Crouch Hill Presbyterian Church, London.
+
+H.H. SCULLARD, M.A. Cambridge, M.A., D.D. London. Professor of
+Ecclesiastical History, Christian Ethics, and the History of Religions
+in New College (Divinity School: University of London).
+
+ALEX RAMSAY, M.A., B.D. Pastor of the Highgate Presbyterian Church,
+London.
+
+W.B. SELBIE, M.A., D.D. Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford. Chairman
+of the Congregational Union of England and Wales.
+
+J. HERBERT STEAD, M.A. Glasgow. Warden of the Robert Browning
+Settlement, London.
+
+
+
+
+*Prof. Harnack in Rebuttal*
+
+
+BERLIN, Sept. 10, 1914.
+
+Gentlemen: The words, "The conduct of Great Britain is that of a traitor
+to civilization," were not used by me, but you have expressed my general
+judgment of this conduct correctly. The sentence in question in my
+speech reads: "This, our culture, the chief treasure of mankind, was in
+large part, yes, almost wholly, intrusted to three peoples: To us, to
+the Americans, and--to the English, I will say no more. I cover my
+head." To my deep sorrow I must, even after your communication, maintain
+this judgment.
+
+You claim that England has drawn and must draw the sword purely for the
+protection of the small nations of Servia and Belgium and for the sake
+of an international treaty. In this claim I see at the very least a
+fearful self-delusion.
+
+It is an actual fact that what Servia desired was that her Government
+should in no wise be mixed up with the shameful crime of Serajevo, and
+it is also an established fact that for years Servia, with the support
+of Russia, has attempted by the most despicable means to incite to
+rebellion the Austrian South Slavs. When Austria finally issued to her a
+decided ultimatum without making any actual attack on her territory, it
+was the duty of every civilized land--England as well--to keep hands
+off, for Austria's royal house, Austria's honor, and Austria's existence
+were attacked. Austria's yielding to Servia would mean the sovereignty
+of Russia in the eastern half of the Balkans, for Servia is nothing more
+than a Russian satrapy, and the Balkan federation brought about by
+Russia had for its ultimate purpose opposition to Austria. This is as
+well known in England as in Germany. If, gentlemen, in spite of this,
+you can presume to judge that in this circumstance it was purely a case
+of protecting the right of a small nation against a large one, I shall
+find great difficulty in believing in your good faith.
+
+
+*Against Pan-Slavism.*
+
+It was not a question of little Servia but of Austria's battle for life
+and the struggle of Western culture against Pan-Slavism. Servia is,
+after all, only an outpost of Russia and as opposed to this nation,
+Servia's "sovereignty" is less than a mere shadow; in fact it can hardly
+be protected by England, for in reality it does not exist. For in
+addition Servia, through the most dastardly murder known to history,
+struck her name from the list of the nations with which one does
+business as equals. What would England have done had the Prince of Wales
+been assassinated by the emissary of a little nation which had
+continually been inciting the Irish to revolt? Would it have issued a
+milder ultimatum than Austria's? But of all this you say not a word in
+your communication, but instead persist on seeing in the situation into
+which Servia and Russia have brought Austria, only the necessity of an
+oppressed little country to whose help haste must be made! Thus to judge
+would be more than blindness, indeed, it would be a crime that cries
+unto heaven, were it not known that the life problems of other great
+powers do not exist for Great Britain, because she is only concerned
+about her own life problems and those of little nations whose support
+can be useful to her.
+
+At bottom Servia is of as little consequence to you as to us. Austria,
+too, is of no consequence to you; and you realize that Austria had the
+right to punish Servia. But because Germany, who stands behind Austria,
+is to be struck; therefore Servia is the guiltless little State which
+must be spared! What is the result? Great Britain sides with Russia
+against Germany. What does that mean? That means that Great Britain has
+torn down the dike which has protected West Europe and its culture from
+the desert sands of the Asiatic barbarism of Russia and of Pan-Slavism.
+Now we Germans are forced to stop up the breach with our bodies. We
+shall do it amid streams of blood, and we shall hold out there. We must
+hold out, for we are protecting the labor of thousands of years for all
+of Europe, and for Great Britain! But that day when Great Britain tore
+down the dam will never be forgotten in the history of the world, and
+history's judgment shall read: On that day when Russian-Asiatic power
+rushed down upon the culture of Europe Great Britain declared that she
+must side with Russia because "the sovereignty of the murderer-nation
+Servia had been violated!"
+
+
+*As to Neutrality.*
+
+But no, the maintenance of Servians sovereignty is not according to your
+communication the first, but only the second reason for Great Britain's
+declaration of war against us. The first reason is our violation of
+Belgian neutrality; "Germany broke a treaty which she herself had
+guaranteed." Shall I remind you how Great Britain has disported herself
+in the matter of treaties and pleasant promises? How about Egypt for
+example? But I do not need to go into these flagrant and repeated
+violations of treaty rights, for a still more serious violation of the
+rights of a people stands today on your books against you; it has been
+proved that your army is making use of dumdum bullets and thereby
+turning a decent war into the most bloody butchery. In this Great
+Britain has severed herself from every right to complain about the
+violation of the rights of a people.
+
+But aside from that--in your communication you have again emphasized the
+main point. We did not declare war against Belgium, but we declared that
+since Russia and France compelled us to wage a war with two fronts
+(190,000,000 against 68,000,000) we had then to suffer defeat if we
+could not march through Belgium; that we should do that but that we
+should carefully keep from harming Belgium in any way and would
+indemnify all damage incurred--our hand upon it! Would Great Britain,
+had she been in our position, have hesitated a moment to do likewise?
+And would Great Britain have drawn the sword for us if France had
+violated the neutrality of Belgium by marching through it? You know well
+enough that both these questions must be answered in the negative.
+
+Our Imperial Chancellor has with his characteristic conscientiousness
+declared that we have on our side committed a certain wrong. I cannot
+agree with him in this judgment, and I cannot even recognize the
+commission of a formal wrong, for we were in a situation where
+formalities no longer obtain, and where moral duties only prevail. When
+David, in the extremity of his need, took the show-bread from the Table
+of the Lord, he was in every sense of the word justified, for the letter
+of the law ceased at that moment to exist. It is as well known to you as
+to me that there is a law of necessity which breaks iron asunder, to say
+nothing of treaties.
+
+Appreciate our position! Prove to me that Germany has flippantly
+constructed a law of necessity; prove it to me in this hour, when your
+country has gone over to our enemies, and we have half the world to
+fight. You cannot do that; you could not do it on the 4th of August, and
+consequently you have assumed the most miserable of pretexts, because
+you wished to destroy us. From your letter, gentlemen, I must believe
+that you are far from holding this view; but do you believe, and would
+you really try to make me believe, that your statesmen would have
+declared war against us only because we were determined to march through
+Belgium? You could not consider them so foolish and so flippant.
+
+
+*An Earlier Treachery.*
+
+But I am not yet at an end. It is not we who have first violated the
+neutrality of Belgium. Belgium, as we feared and as we now, informed by
+the actual facts, see still more clearly, was for a long time in
+alliance with France and--with you. France's airmen were flying over
+Belgium before we marched in; negotiations with France had already taken
+place, and in Maubeuge there was found an arsenal full of English
+munitions which had been stationed there before the declaration of war.
+This arsenal--you know where Maubeuge is situated!--points to agreements
+which Great Britain had made with France, and to which Belgium was also
+party. These agreements are before the whole world today, for the chain
+of evidence is complete and the treacherous plot of Great Britain is
+revealed. She has encouraged and pledged the Belgians against us, and
+therefore it is she who must answer for all the misery which has been
+visited upon that poor country. Had it been our responsibility, not a
+single hair of a Belgian's head should have been harmed. If, then, the
+Belgian wrongs like those of Servia are only the flimsiest pretexts for
+Great Britain's declaration of war against us, there remains,
+unfortunately, no other reason for this declaration of war save the
+intention of your statesmen either to destroy us or so to weaken us that
+Great Britain will rule supreme on the seas and in all distant parts of
+the world. This intention you personally deny and thus far I must take
+your word for it. But do you deny it also for your Government? That you
+cannot do, for the facts have been brought to light; when Great Britain
+determined to join the coalition of Russia with France, which is ruled
+by Russia, when it put aside all the differences that stood between her
+and Russia, when it set upon us not only the hordes of Russia but the
+scrupulous Japanese, "the yellow peril," and called upon all Europe,
+when it also sunk in the ocean its duties to European culture--for all
+of that there is but one explanation: England believes that the hour for
+our destruction has struck. Why does she wish to destroy us? Because she
+will not endure our power, our zeal, our perfection of growth! There is
+no other explanation!
+
+
+*Lifting Humanity.*
+
+We and Great Britain in alliance with America were able in peaceful
+co-operation to lift humanity to a higher plane, and to lead the world
+in peace, allowing to each his rights. We Germans, now know no, and have
+never known any, higher ideal than this. In order to realize this ideal
+the German Kaiser and the German people have made many sacrifices in the
+past 43 years. In proportion to the development of our strength, we
+should be able to lay claim to more territory than we now possess in the
+world. But we have never attempted to force this claim. We held that the
+strength of our nation should be in its zeal and in the peaceful fruits
+of that zeal. Great Britain has begrudged us that; she has been jealous
+of our powers, jealous of our fleet, jealous of our industries and our
+commerce, and jealousy is the root of all evil. Jealousy it is which has
+driven Great Britain into the most fearful war which history knows and
+the end of which is unforseen.
+
+What course is open to you, gentlemen, once you are enlightened as to
+the policy of your country? In the name of our Christian culture, which
+your Government has frivolously placed in jeopardy, I can offer you but
+one counsel: To burden your consciences no longer with Servia and
+Belgium, which you must protect, but to face about and stop your
+Government in its headlong course; it may not be too late. As far as we
+Germans are concerned, our way is clearly indicated, though not so our
+fate. Should we fall, which God and our strong arm prevent, then there
+sinks with us to its grave all the higher culture of our part of the
+world, whose defenders we were called to be; for neither with Russia nor
+against Russia will Great Britain be able longer to maintain that
+culture in Europe. Should we conquer--and victory is for us something
+more than mere hope--then shall we feel ourselves responsible, as
+formerly, for this culture, for the learning and the peace of Europe,
+and shall put from us any idea of setting up a hegemony in Europe. We
+shall stand by the one who, together in fraternal union with us, will
+create and maintain such a peaceful Europe.
+
+For the continuation of your cordial attitude toward me I am personally
+grateful. I would not unnecessarily sever the bond which holds me to the
+upright Christians and the learning of your country, but at the present
+moment this bond has no value for me.
+
+PROF. VON HARNACK.
+
+
+P.S.--It is in your power now to wage a battle which would be of honor
+to you. As a fourth great power arrayed against Germany, the lying
+international press has raised itself up, flooded the world with lies
+about our splendid and upright army, and slandered everything that is
+German. We have been almost entirely cut off from any possibility of
+protecting ourselves against this "beast of the pit." Do not believe the
+lies, and spread abroad the truth about us. We are today no different
+than Carlyle pictured us to you. HARNACK.
+
+
+
+
+*The Causes of the War*
+
+*By Theodore Niemeyer*
+
+ _Theodore Niemeyer, Kaiser Wilhelm Exchange Professor at Columbia
+ University for 1914-15, and well-known Professor of Kiel
+ University, has addressed the following letter to the editor of The
+ New Yorker Staats-Zeitung._
+
+
+KIEL, 14th August, 1914.
+
+_To the Editor of the New Yorker Staats-Zeitung_:
+
+Dear Sir: English papers publish a telegram from Mr. Andrew Carnegie, in
+which the view is expressed that the German Emperor, "in declining to
+take part In the peace conference proposed by Sir Edward Grey, an
+advocate of peace," proved unfaithful to that love of peace which he has
+shown during the past twenty-five years--that he, on the contrary, has
+taken up the role of a disturber of the peace of Europe.
+
+To the best of my knowledge, the German press has only referred to this
+telegram with the simple remark that intelligence of the real state of
+affairs has evidently not yet reached the ears of the sender of the
+telegram.
+
+This attitude of the German press is in conformity with its firm
+consciousness of the justice of its cause and its confidence in the
+ultimate triumph of truth. Both in this consciousness and in this
+confidence I will not be surpassed by any one, but to observe silence in
+the face of such accusations is beyond my power. To allow such a
+misconstruction to pass unchallenged through the world seems to me (and
+doubtless to many thousands besides me) unbearable.
+
+The misunderstanding about the Peace Conference is easily put right. Sir
+Edward Grey did not propose any peace conference at all, but a
+conference of the Ambassadors of those four powers which were at that
+time not directly concerned, namely Germany, England, France, and Italy.
+These powers were to attempt to exert their influence on Austria-Hungary
+and Russia in the same way as the Ambassador's Conference (or rather
+Ambassadorial Reunion) in London had done, in 1912 and 1913, on the
+Balkan States and Turkey. What the united six powers at that time
+undertook toward the Balkan States was now to be done by
+four--discordant--powers upon two others who are in a state of highest
+political tension. To this proposal Germany replied that the apparatus
+of an Ambassadorial Conference does not work quickly or effectually
+enough for the emergency of the moment, or to be able to ease the tense
+political situation.
+
+
+*The Kaiser's Efforts.*
+
+In place of this, however, the German Emperor undertook to negotiate in
+person with the Russian and Austrian monarch and was overwhelmed with
+grief when the leaders of Muscovite policy frustrated all his exertions
+by completely ignoring his efforts for peace, (made at the express
+desire of the Czar,) and then in real earnest amassing Russian forces on
+the German frontier, evidently resolved to force on a war under any
+circumstances--even against the will of the Czar.
+
+It is here that the clue to all the terrible events of the present day
+is to be found.
+
+The incessant intriguing of the Russian military party for many years
+past has at last succeeded in drawing first France and then England to
+their cause, by turning the mistrust, the dread of competition, the
+hopes of revenge, and the ever-increasing armaments to their use with
+incomparable skill. The task was facilitated by Germany's industrial
+up-growth, which--in willful misconstruction of the truths of the laws
+of international communities--has been represented as a calamity for
+other States.
+
+
+*England's Growing Friendship.*
+
+In quite recent times people in England began to recognize this
+misconstruction of facts as such. They began to understand that
+friendship with Germany might be a blessing and that in this way peace
+would be possible. This, however, meant the possibility of the Muscovite
+policy being completely frustrated. An Anglo-German understanding seemed
+already to be shaking the very foundations of the Triple Entente. Russia
+had been obliged during the two Balkan wars (the London Ambassadorial
+Conference was in fact the clearing house for this) to make important
+concessions to the detriment of her proteges, Servia and Montenegro, in
+order to retain the friendship of England, which ardently strove for
+peace. Now, however, it was highest time for Russia to pocket her gains;
+for the English people were slowly beginning to realize that in St.
+Petersburg they were trying to engage England in the cause of
+Pan-Slavism. The unnatural alliance was becoming more and more unpopular
+from day to day. How long would it be before Russia lost England's help
+forever?
+
+Before this took place Russia must bring about a European war. The iron,
+which had been prepared with the help of the English military party, had
+to be forged, for never again would there be a moment so favorable for
+the complete destruction of Austria and the humiliation of Germany.
+Servia was thrust to the front. Russia's Ambassador managed that
+wonderfully. The fire was set in so skillful a manner that the
+incendiaries knew in advance there was no possibility of extinguishing
+it. The conflagration must spread and soon blaze in all corners of
+Europe.
+
+What was the use of a Peace Conference in such circumstances? Conscious
+of the irresistible consequences of their action the real rulers of
+Russia sent forward their armies; it was now or never, if the work was
+to be done with the help of England. And without England perhaps even
+France would not consent to join.
+
+Thus it came about, and thus we have seen the peaceful policy of the
+German Emperor, which he has upheld for twenty-five years, completely
+wrecked.
+
+We are now fighting not only for our Fatherland, but also for the
+emancipation of our culture from a menace that has become insupportable.
+
+Yours faithfully,
+
+TH. NIEMEYER,
+
+Kaiser Wilhelm Professor, Columbia University.
+
+
+
+
+*Comment by Dr. Max Walter*
+
+
+To the letter addressed by Prof. Th. Niemeyer to the editor of The New
+Yorker Staats-Zeitung (see No. 237, 3, 2, of Frankfurter Zeitung) I
+should like to add the following remarks: During my activity as
+Professor of the Methodics of Foreign Language Teaching at Teachers
+College, Columbia University, New York, (January-June, 1911,) I was
+introduced to Mr. Andrew Carnegie, with whom I had a long interview. He
+expressed his views upon the peace question and arbitration, and spoke
+for a long time about the German Emperor who had repeatedly received him
+during his visits to Germany. He expressed his great appreciation of the
+important services rendered by our Emperor for the maintenance of peace,
+and declared that he, above all others, deserved the title of the
+Peace-loving Monarch, (Friedensfuerst.) To him it was chiefly due that,
+during the various crises which had repeatedly brought Europe to the
+brink of war, the disaster had again and again been averted. The German
+Emperor, he considered, looked upon it as his chief pride that no war
+should take place during his reign, that Germany should develop and
+prosper in peaceful emulation with other countries, and his greatest
+desire was that other nations should recognize ungrudgingly that all
+Germany did to raise the moral and ethical standard of mankind was for
+the benefit of all.
+
+If now Carnegie has really declared, as this letter maintains, that he
+considers the German Emperor the "Disturber of Peace," it shows clearly
+how baleful the influence of the English press has been--that it could
+shake such a firm conviction in our Emperor's love of peace. Let us hope
+that this letter of Prof. Niemeyer's and other explanations to the same
+effect will induce him to recognize the horrible misrepresentations of
+English papers and to return to his former conviction.
+
+It was on this occasion, too, that Andrew Carnegie indorsed Prof.
+Burgess's view, that the three nations--America, Germany, and
+England--should unite, and then they would be able to keep the peace of
+the world. When I expressed my doubts in the real friendship of England,
+he replied, then America and Germany, at least, must hold together to
+secure universal peace. Hitherto I have refrained from publishing this
+interview, but now I consider it my duty to make known the views that
+Carnegie once held, and to which, if he has really changed them, we may
+hope he, who has done so much in his noble striving after peace, will
+return right away.
+
+If there should remain the least doubt in Mr. Andrew Carnegie's mind, he
+has only to read the telegrams exchanged between the Emperor William and
+the Czar on the one hand, and King George and the Emperor on the other.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of New York Times, Current History, Vol
+1, Issue 1, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEW YORK TIMES, CURRENT ***
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