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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Healing of Nations and the Hidden
+Sources of Their Strife, by Edward Carpenter
+
+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: The Healing of Nations and the Hidden Sources of Their Strife
+
+Author: Edward Carpenter
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2003 [EBook #10097]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEALING NATIONS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Dave Morgan and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+THE HEALING OF NATIONS AND THE HIDDEN SOURCES OF THEIR STRIFE
+
+
+By Edward Carpenter
+
+
+1915
+
+
+
+"_The Tree of Life ... whose leaves are for the Healing of the Nations_"
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I. INTRODUCTORY
+
+ II. WAR-MADNESS
+
+ III. THE ROOTS OF THE GREAT WAR
+
+ IV. THE CASE AGAINST GERMANY
+
+ V. THE CASE FOR GERMANY
+
+ VI. THE HEALING OF NATIONS
+
+ VII. PATRIOTISM AND INTERNATIONALISM
+
+ VIII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF WAR AND RECRUITING
+
+ IX. CONSCRIPTION
+
+ X. HOW SHALL THE PLAGUE BE STAYED?
+
+ XI. COMMERCIAL PROSPERITY THE PROSPERITY OF A CLASS
+
+ XII. COLONIES AND SEAPORTS
+
+ XIII. WAR AND THE SEX IMPULSE
+
+ XIV. THE OVER-POPULATION SCARE
+
+ XV. THE FRIENDLY AND THE FIGHTING INSTINCTS
+
+ XVI. NEVER AGAIN!
+
+ XVII. THE TREE OF LIFE
+
+ APPENDIX--
+
+ A New and Better Peace
+
+ The Change from the Old Germany to the New
+
+ Classes in Germany for and against the War
+
+ Political Ignorance
+
+ Purpose of the War: Max Harden
+
+ England's Perfidy: Professors Haeckel and Eucken
+
+ Manifesto of Professor Eucken
+
+ Nietzsche on Disarmament
+
+ The Effect of Disarmament
+
+ The Principle of Nationality: Winston Churchill
+
+ Conscription
+
+ Neutralization of the Sea: H.G. Wells
+
+ The War and Democracy: Arnold Bennett
+
+ The Future Settlement: G. Lowes Dickinson
+
+ Brutality of Warfare: H.M. Tomlinson
+
+ Patriotism: Romain Rolland
+
+ No Patriotism in Business!
+
+ Manifesto, Independent Labour Party
+
+ Responsibility of the whole Capitalist Class
+
+ Text of Karl Liebknecht's Protest in Reichstag
+
+ The Russian Danger
+
+ Letter on Russia by P. Kropotkin
+
+ On the Future of Europe, by the same
+
+ Servia: R.W. Seton-Watson
+
+ The Battlefield: Walt Whitman
+
+ Chinese Christians on the War: Dr. A. Salter
+
+ Essential Friendliness of Peoples
+
+ Reconciliation in Death
+
+ Christmas at the Front, 1914
+
+ Letter from the Trenches by Baron Marschall von Bieberstein
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY
+
+The following Studies and Notes, made during the earlier period of the
+present war and now collected together for publication, do not--as will
+be evident to the reader--pretend to any sort of completeness in their
+embrace of the subject, or finality in its presentation. Rather they are
+scattered thoughts suggested by the large and tangled drama which we are
+witnessing; and I am sufficiently conscious that their expression
+involves contradictions as well as repetitions.
+
+The truth is that affairs of this kind--like all the _great_ issues of
+human life, Love, Politics, Religion, and so forth, do not, at their
+best, admit of final dispatch in definite views and phrases. They are
+too vast and complex for that. It is, indeed, quite probable that such
+things cannot be adequately represented or put before the human mind
+_without_ logical inconsistencies and contradictions. But (perhaps for
+that very reason) they are the subjects of the most violent and dogmatic
+differences of opinion. Nothing people quarrel about more bitterly than
+Politics--unless it be Religion: both being subjects of which all that
+one can really say for certain is--that nobody understands them.
+
+When, as in the present war, a dozen or more nations enter into conflict
+and hurl at each other accusations of the angriest sort (often quite
+genuinely made and yet absolutely irreconcilable one with another), and
+when on the top of that scores and hundreds of writers profess to
+explain the resulting situation in a few brief phrases (but
+unfortunately their explanations are all different), and calmly affix
+the blame on "Russia" or "Germany" or "France" or "England"--just as if
+these names represented certain responsible individuals, supposed for
+the purposes of the argument to be of very wily and far-scheming
+disposition--whereas it is perfectly well known that they really
+represent most complex whirlpools of political forces, in which the
+merest accidents (as whether two members of a Cabinet have quarrelled,
+or an Ambassador's dinner has disagreed with him) may result in a long
+and fatal train of consequences--it becomes obvious that all so-called
+"explanations" (though it may be right that they should be attempted)
+fall infinitely short, of the reality.[1]
+
+Feeling thus the impossibility of dealing at all adequately with the
+present situation, I have preferred to take here and there just an
+aspect of it for consideration, with a view especially to the
+differences between Germany and England. I have thought that instead of
+spending time over recriminations one might be on safer ground by
+trying to get at the root-causes of this war (and other wars), thus
+making one's conclusions to some degree independent of a multitude of
+details and accidents, most of which must for ever remain unknown to us.
+
+There are in general four rather well-marked species of wars--Religious
+wars, Race wars, wars of Ambition and Conquest, and wars of Acquisition
+and Profit--though in any particular case the four species may be more
+or less mingled. The religious and the race motives often go together;
+but in modern times on the whole (and happily) the religious motive is
+not so very dominant. Wars of race, of ambition, and of acquisition are,
+however, still common enough. Yet it is noticeable, as I frequently have
+occasion to remark in the following papers, that it only very rarely
+happens that any of these wars are started or set in motion by the
+mass-peoples themselves. The mass-peoples, at any rate of the more
+modern nations, are quiescent, peaceable, and disinclined for strife.
+Why, then, do wars occur? It is because the urge to war comes, not from
+the masses of a nation but from certain classes within it. In every
+nation, since the dawn of history, there have been found, beside the
+toiling masses, three great main cliques or classes, the Religious, the
+Military, and the Commercial. It was so in far-back ancient India; it is
+so now. Each of these classes endeavours in its turn--as one might
+expect--to become the ruling class and to run the government of the
+nation. The governments of the nations thus become class-governments.
+And it is one or another of these classes that for reasons of its own,
+alone or in combination with another class, foments war and sets it
+going.
+
+In saying this I do not by any means wish to say anything against the
+mere existence of Class, in itself. In a sense that is a perfectly
+natural thing. There _are_ different divisions of human activity, and it
+is quite natural that those individuals whose temperament calls them to
+a certain activity--literary or religious or mercantile or military or
+what not--should range themselves together in a caste or class; just as
+the different functions of the human body range themselves in definite
+organs. And such grouping in classes may be perfectly healthy _provided
+the class so created subordinates itself to the welfare of the Nation_.
+But if the class does _not_ subordinate itself to the general welfare,
+if it pursues its own ends, usurps governmental power, and dominates the
+nation for its own uses--if it becomes parasitical, in fact--then it and
+the nation inevitably become diseased; as inevitably as the human body
+becomes diseased when its organs, instead of supplying the body's needs,
+become the tyrants and parasites of the whole system.
+
+It is this Class-disease which in the main drags the nations into the
+horrors and follies of war. And the horrors and follies of war are the
+working out and expulsion on the surface of evils which have long been
+festering within. How many times in the history of "civilization" has a
+bigoted religious clique, or a swollen-headed military clique, or a
+greedy commercial gang--caring not one jot for the welfare of the people
+committed to its charge--dragged them into a senseless and ruinous war
+for the satisfaction of its own supposed interests! It is here and in
+this direction (which searches deeper than the mere weighing and
+balancing of Foreign policies and Diplomacies) that we must look for the
+"explanation" of the wars of to-day.
+
+And even race wars--which at first sight seem to have little to do with
+the Class trouble--illustrate the truth of my contention. For they
+almost always arise from the hatred generated in a nation by an alien
+class establishing itself in the midst of that nation--establishing
+itself, maybe, as a governmental or dominant class (generally a military
+or landlord clique) or maybe as a parasitical or competing class (as in
+the case of the Jews in Europe and the Japanese in America and so
+forth). They arise, like all other wars, from the existence of a class
+within the nation which is not really in accord with the people of that
+nation, but is pursuing its own interests apart from theirs. In the
+second of the following papers, "The Roots of the Great War," I have
+drawn attention to the influence of the military and commercial classes,
+especially in Germany, and the way in which their policy, coming into
+conflict with a similar policy in the other Western nations, has
+inevitably led to the present embroilment. In Eastern Europe similar
+causes are at work, but there the race elements--and even the
+religious--constitute a more important factor in the problem.
+
+By a curious fatality Germany has become the centre of this great war
+and world-movement, which is undoubtedly destined--as the Germans
+themselves think, though in a way quite other than they think--to be of
+vast importance, and the beginning of a new era in human evolution. And
+the more one considers Germany's part in the affair, the more one sees,
+I think, that from the combined influence of her historical antecedents
+and her national psychology this fatality was to be expected. In roughly
+putting together these antecedent elements and influences, I have
+entitled the chapter "The Case _for_ Germany," because on the principle
+of _tout comprendre_ the fact of the evolution being inevitable
+constitutes her justification. The nations cannot fairly complain of her
+having moved along a line which for a century or more has been slowly
+and irresistibly prepared for her. On the other hand, the nations do
+complain of the manner and the methods with which at the last she has
+precipitated and conducted the war--as indeed they have shown by so
+widely combining against her. However right, from the point of view of
+destiny and necessity, Germany may be, she has apparently from the point
+of view of the moment put herself in the wrong. And the chapter dealing
+with this phase of the question I have called "The Case _against_
+Germany."
+
+Whatever further complications and postponements may arise, there will
+certainly come a time of recovery and reconstruction on a wide and
+extended scale over Europe and a large part of the world. To even
+outline this period would be impossible at present; but in the sixth
+chapter and the last, as well as in the intermediate pieces, I have
+given some suggestions towards this future Healing of the Nations.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Evil--huge and monstrous as it is--is not senseless, one may feel
+sure. Even now here in England one perceives an extraordinary pulling
+together and bracing up of the people, a development of solidarity and
+mutual helpfulness, a greater seriousness, and a disregarding of
+artificialities, which are all to the good. These things are gains, even
+though the way of their manifestation be through much of enmity and
+ignorance. And one may fairly suppose that similar results are traceable
+in the other nations concerned. Wounds and death may seem senseless and
+needless, but those who suffer them do not suffer in vain. All these
+shattering experiences, whether in a nation's career or in the career of
+an individual, cause one--they force one--to look into the bases of life
+and to get nearer its realities. If, in this case, the experiences of
+the war, and the fire which the nations are passing through, serve to
+destroy and burn up much of falsity in their respective habits and
+institutions, we shall have to admit that the attendant disasters have
+not been all loss--even though at the same time we admit that if we had
+had a grain of sense we might have mended our falsities in far more
+economical and sensible fashion.
+
+If in the following pages--chiefly concerned as they are with Germany
+and England--I have seemed to find fault with either party or to affix
+blame on one or the other, it is not necessary to suppose that one
+harbours ill-feeling towards either, or that one fails to recognize the
+splendid devotion of both the combatants. Two nations so closely related
+as the Germans and the English cannot really be so hopelessly different
+in temperament and character; and a great deal of the supposed
+difference is obviously artificial and class-made for the occasion.
+Still, there _are_ differences; and as we both think we are right, and
+as we are unable to argue the matter out in a rational way, there seems
+to be nothing for it but to fight.
+
+War has often been spoken of as a great Game; and Mr. Jerome K. Jerome
+has lately written eloquently on that subject. It is a game in which the
+two parties agree, so to speak, to differ. They take sides, and in
+default of any more rational method, resort to the arbitrament of force.
+The stakes are high, and if on the one hand the game calls forth an
+immense amount of resource, skill, alertness, self-control, endurance,
+courage, and even tenderness, helpfulness, and fidelity; on the other
+hand, it is liable to let loose pretty bad passions of vindictiveness
+and cruelty, as well as to lead to an awful accumulation of mental and
+physical suffering and of actual material loss. To call war "The Great
+Game" may have been all very well in the more rudimentary wars of the
+past; but to-day, when every horrible invention of science is conjured
+up and utilized for the express purpose of blowing human bodies to bits
+and strewing battlefields with human remains, and the human spirit
+itself can hardly hold up against such a process of mechanical
+slaughter, the term has ceased to be applicable. The affections and the
+conscience of mankind are too violently outraged by the spectacle; and a
+great mass of feeling is forming which one may fairly hope will ere long
+make this form of strife impossible among the more modern peoples.
+
+Still, even now, as Mr. Jerome himself contends, the term is partly
+justified by a certain fine feeling of which it is descriptive and which
+is indeed very noticeable in all ranks. Whether in the Army or Navy,
+among bluejackets or private soldiers or officers, the feeling is
+certainly very much that of a big game--with its own rules of honour and
+decency which must be adhered to, and carried on with extraordinary
+fortitude, patience, and good-humour. Whether it arises from the
+mechanical nature of the slaughter, or from any other cause, the fact
+remains that among our fighting people to-day--at any rate in the
+West--there is very little feeling of _hatred_ towards the "enemy." It
+is difficult, indeed, to hate a foe whom you do not even see. Chivalry
+is not dead, and at the least cessation of the stress of conflict the
+tendency to honour opponents, to fraternize with them, to succour the
+wounded, and so forth, asserts itself again. And chivalry demands that
+what feelings of this kind we credit to ourselves we should also credit
+to the other parties in the game. We do cordially credit them to our
+French and Belgian allies, and if we do not credit them quite so
+cordially to the Germans, that is _partly_ at least because every lapse
+from chivalrous conduct on the part of our opponents is immediately
+fastened upon and made the most of by our Press. Chivalry is by no means
+dead in the Teutonic breast, though the sentiment has certainly been
+obscured by some modern German teachings.
+
+While these present war-producing conditions last, we have to face them
+candidly and with as much good sense as we can command (which is for the
+most part only little!). We have to face them and make the best of
+them--though by no means to encourage them. Perhaps after all even a war
+like the present one--monstrous as it is--does not denote so great a
+deviation of the old Earth from its appointed orbit as we are at first
+inclined to think. Under normal conditions the deaths on our planet (and
+many of them exceedingly lingering and painful) continue at the rate of
+rather more than one every second--say 90,000 a day. The worst battles
+cannot touch such a wholesale slaughter as this. Life at its normal best
+is full of agonizings and endless toil and sufferings; what matters,
+what _it is really there for_, is that we should learn to conduct it
+with Dignity, Courage, Goodwill--to transmute its dross into gold. If
+war _has_ to continue yet for a time, there is still plenty of evidence
+to show that we can wrest--even from its horrors and insanities--some
+things that are "worth while," and among others the priceless jewel of
+human love and helpfulness.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] Some people take great pleasure in analysing White Books and Grey
+Books and Orange Books and Yellow Books without end, and proving this or
+that from them--as of course out of such a mass of material they can
+easily do, according to their fancy. But when one remembers that almost
+all the documents in these books have been written with a _view_ to
+their later publication; and when one remembers also that, however
+incompetent diplomatists as a class may be, no one supposes them to be
+such fools as to entrust their _most_ important _ententes_ and
+understandings with each other to printed records--why, one comes to the
+conclusion that the analysis of all these State papers is not a very
+profitable occupation.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+WAR-MADNESS
+
+_September_, 1914.
+
+How mad, how hopelessly mad, it all seems I With fifteen to twenty
+million soldiers already mobilized, and more than half that number in
+the fighting lines; with engines of appalling destruction by land and
+sea, and over the land and under the sea; with Northern France, Belgium,
+and parts of Germany, Poland, Russia, Servia, and Austria drenched in
+blood; the nations exhausting their human and material resources in
+savage conflict--this war, marking the climax, and (let us hope) the
+_finale_ of our commercial civilization, is the most monstrous the old
+Earth has ever seen. And yet, as in a hundred earlier and lesser wars,
+we hardly know the why and wherefore of it. It is like the sorriest
+squabbles of children and schoolboys--utterly senseless and unreasoning.
+But broken bodies and limbs and broken hearts and an endless river of
+blood and suffering are the outcome.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+THE ROOTS OF THE GREAT WAR[2]
+
+_October_, 1914.
+
+In the present chapter I wish especially to dwell on (1) the danger to
+society, mentioned in the Introduction, of class-ascendancy and
+class-rule; and (2) the hope for the future in the international
+solidarity of the workers.
+
+Through all the mist of lies and slander created on such an occasion--by
+which each nation after a time succeeds in proving that its own cause is
+holy while that of its opponent is wicked and devilish; through the
+appeals to God and Justice, common to both sides; through the shufflings
+and windings of diplomats, and the calculated attitudes of politicians,
+adopted for public approval; through the very real rage and curses of
+soldiers, the desperate tears and agony of women, the murder of babes,
+and the smoke of burning towns and villages: it is difficult, indeed, to
+arrive at clear and just conclusions.
+
+When the war first broke out no one could give an adequate reason for
+it. It all seemed absurd, monstrous, impossible. Then arose a Babel of
+explanations. It was that Germany desired to crush France finally; it
+was that she was determined to break Great Britain's naval and
+commercial supremacy; it was that she must have an outlet on the sea
+through Belgium and Holland; that she must force a way to the
+Mediterranean through Servia; that she must carry out her financial
+schemes in Asia Minor and the Baghdad region. It was her hatred of the
+Slav and her growing dread of Russia; it was her desire for a Colonial
+Empire; it was fear of a revolution at home; it was the outcome of long
+years of Pan-Germanist philosophy; it was the result of pure military
+ambition and the class-domination of the Junkers. Each and all of these
+reasons (and many others) were in turn cited, and magnified into the
+mainspring of the war; and yet even to-day we cannot say which _was_ the
+main reason, or if we admit them all we cannot say in what exact
+proportions their influences were combined.
+
+Moreover, they all assume that Germany was the aggressor; and we have to
+remember that this would not be admitted for a moment by a vast number
+of the Germans themselves--who cease not to say that the war was simply
+forced upon them by the hostile preparations of Russia, by the
+vengefulness of France, by the jealous foreign policy of England, and by
+the obvious threat embodied in the _Entente_ between those three
+nations; and that if they (the Germans) made preparations for, or even
+precipitated it, that was only out of the sheer necessity of
+self-preservation.[3]
+
+Thus we are still left without any generally accepted conclusion in the
+matter. Moreover, we are struck, in considering the list of reasons
+cited, by a feeling that they are all in their way rather partial and
+superficial--that they do not go to the real root of the subject.
+
+Out of them all--and after the first period of confusion and doubt has
+passed--our own people at home have settled down into the conviction
+that German militarism in general, and Prussian Junkerdom in particular,
+are to blame, and that for the good of the world as well as for our own
+good we are out to fight these powers of evil. Prussian
+class-militarism, it is said, under which for so long the good people of
+Germany have groaned, has become a thing intolerable. The arrogance, the
+insolence, of the Junker officer, his aristocratic pretension, his
+bearish manners, have made him a byword, not only in his own country but
+all over Europe; and his belief in sheer militarism and Jingo
+imperialism has made him a menace. The Kaiser has only made things
+worse. Vain and flighty to a degree, and, like most vain people, rather
+shallow, Wilhelm II has supposed himself to be a second and greater
+Bismarck, destined by Providence to create the said Teutonic
+world-empire. It is simply to fight these powers of evil that we are
+out.
+
+Of course, there is a certain amount of truth in this view; at the same
+time, it is lamentably insufficient. The fact is that in the vast flux
+of destiny which is involved in such a war as the present, and which no
+argument can really adequately represent, we are fain to snatch at
+_some_ neat phrase, however superficial, by way of explanation. And we
+are compelled, moreover, to find a phrase which will put our own efforts
+in an ideal light--otherwise we cannot go on fighting. No nation can
+fight confessedly for a mean or base object. Every nation inscribes on
+its banner _Freedom, Justice, Religion, Culture_ versus _Barbarism_, or
+something of the kind, and in a sense redeems itself in so fighting. It
+saves its soul even though bodily it may be conquered. And this is not
+hypocrisy, but a psychological necessity, though each nation, of course,
+accuses the other of hypocrisy.
+
+We are fighting "to put down militarism and the dominance of a military
+class," says the great B.P., and one can only hope that when the war is
+over we shall remember and rivet into shape this great and good
+purpose--not only with regard to foreign militarism, but also with
+regard to our own. Certainly, whatever other or side views we may take
+of the war, we are bound to see in it an illustration of the danger of
+military class-rule. You cannot keep a 60-h.p. Daimler motor-car in your
+shed for years and years and still deny yourself the pleasure of going
+out on the public road with it--even though you know you are not a very
+competent driver; and you cannot continue for half a century perfecting
+your military and naval organization without in the end making the
+temptation to become a political road-hog almost irresistible.
+
+Still, accepting for the moment the popular explanation given above of
+Germany's action as to some degree justified, we cannot help seeing how
+superficial and unsatisfactory it is, because it at once raises the
+question, which, indeed, is being asked in all directions, and not
+satisfactorily answered: "How does it happen that so peace-loving,
+sociable, and friendly a people as the great German mass-folk, as we
+have hitherto known them, with their long scientific and literary
+tradition, their love of music and philosophy, their lager beer and
+tobacco, and their generally democratic habits, should have been led
+into a situation like the present, whether by a clique of Junkers or by
+a clique of militarist philosophers and politicians?" And the answer to
+this is both interesting and important.
+
+It resolves itself into two main causes: (1) the rise of the great
+German commercial class; and (2) the political ignorance of the German
+people.
+
+It is obvious, I think, that a military aristocracy alone, or even with
+the combined support of empire-building philosophers and a jack-boot
+Kaiser, could not have hurried the solid German nation into so strange a
+situation. In old days, and under an avowedly feudal order of society,
+such a thing might well have happened. But to-day the source and seat of
+power has passed from crowned heads and barons into another social
+stratum. It is the financial and commercial classes in the modern States
+who have the sway; and unless these classes desire it the military
+cliques may plot for war in vain. Since 1870, and the unification of
+Germany, the growth of her manufactures and her trade has been enormous;
+her commercial prosperity has gone up by leaps and bounds; and this
+extension of trade, especially of international trade, has led--as it
+had already so conspicuously done in England--to the development of
+corresponding ideals and habits of life among the population. The
+modest, simple-living, middle-class households of fifty years ago have
+largely disappeared, and in their place have sprung up, at any rate in
+the larger towns, the very same commercial and parasitical classes, with
+their Philistine luxury and fatuous ideals, which have been so
+depressing and distressing a feature of _our_ social life during the
+same period. Naturally, the desire of these classes has been for the
+glorification of Germany, the establishment of an absolutely world-wide
+commercial supremacy, and the ousting of England from her markets.
+
+"Germany," said Peter Kropotkin[4] a year or two ago, "on entering a
+striking period of juvenile activity, quickly succeeded in doubling and
+trebling her industrial productivity, and soon increasing it tenfold;
+and now the German middle classes covet new sources of enrichment in
+the plains of Poland, in the prairies of Hungary, on the plateaux of
+Africa, and especially around the railway line to Baghdad--in the rich
+valleys of Asia Minor, which can provide German capitalists with a
+labouring population ready to be exploited under one of the most
+beautiful skies in the world. It may be so with Egypt some day.
+Therefore it is ports for exports, and especially military ports, in the
+Adriatic, the Persian Gulf, on the African coast in Beira, and also in
+the Pacific, that these schemers of German colonial trade wish to
+conquer. Their faithful servant, the German Empire, with its armies and
+ironclads, is at their service for this purpose."
+
+It is this class, then, which by backing both financially and morally
+the military class has been chiefly responsible for bringing about the
+war. Not that I mean, in saying so, that the commercial folk of Germany
+have directly instigated its outbreak at the present moment and in the
+present circumstances--for many, or most of them, must have seen how
+dangerous it was likely to prove to their trade. But in respect of the
+general policy which they have so long pursued they are responsible. One
+cannot go on for years (and let England, too, remember this) preaching
+militarism as a means of securing commercial advantage, and then refuse
+to be answerable for the results to which such a policy may lead. The
+Junker classes of Prussia and their Kaiser might be suffering from a bad
+attack of swelled head; vanity and arrogance might be filling them with
+dreams of world-empire; but there would have been no immediate European
+war had not the vast trade-interests of Germany come into conflict, or
+seemed to come into conflict, with the trade-interests of the
+surrounding nations--had not the financial greed of the nation been
+stirred, as well as its military vanity.
+
+And talking of general trade and finance, one must not forget to include
+the enormous powers exercised in the present day by individual
+corporations and individual financiers who intrude their operations into
+the sphere of politics. We saw _that_ in our own Boer War; and behind
+the scenes in Germany to-day similar influences are at work. The
+Deutsche Bank, with immense properties all over the world, and some
+L85,000,000 sterling in its hands in deposits alone, initiated
+financially the Baghdad Railway scheme. Its head, Herr Arthur von
+Gwinner, the great financier, is a close adviser of the Kaiser. "The
+railway is already nearly half built, and it represents a German
+investment of between L16,000,000 and L18,000,000. Let this be thought
+of when people imagine that Germany and Austria went to war with the
+idea of avenging the murder of an Archduke.... All German trade would
+suffer if the Baghdad Railway scheme were to fail."[5] Then there is
+Herr August Thyssen--"King Thyssen"--who owns coalmines, rolling mills,
+harbours, and docks throughout Germany, iron-ore mines in France,
+warehouses in Russia, and _entrepots_ in nearly every country from
+Brazil and Argentina to India.[6] He has declared that German interests
+in Asia Minor must be safeguarded at all costs. But Russia also has
+large prospective commercial interests in Asia Minor. The moral is clear
+and needs no enforcing. Such men as these--and many others, the
+Rathenaus, Siemens, Krupps, Ballins, and Heinekens--exercise in Germany
+an immense political influence, just as do our financial magnates at
+home. They represent the peaks and summits of wide-spreading commercial
+activities whose bases are rooted among the general public. Yet through
+it all it must not be forgotten that they represent in each case (as I
+shall explain more clearly presently) the interests of a _class_--the
+commercial class--but not of the whole nation.
+
+One must, then, modify the first conclusion, that the blame of the war
+rests with the military class, by adding a second factor, namely, the
+rise and influence of the commercial class. These two classes, acting
+and reacting on each other, and pushing--though for different
+reasons--in the same direction, are answerable, as far as Germany is
+concerned, for dragging Europe into this trouble; and they must share
+the blame.
+
+If it is true, as already suggested, that Germany's action has only been
+that of the spark that fires the magazine, still her part in the affair
+affords such an extraordinarily illuminating text and illustration that
+one may be excused for dwelling on it.
+
+Here, in her case, we have the divisions of a nation's life set out in
+well-marked fashion. We have a military clique headed by a personal and
+sadly irresponsible ruler; we have a vulgar and much swollen commercial
+class; and then, besides these two, we have a huge ant's nest of
+professors and students, a large population of intelligent and
+well-trained factory workers, and a vast residuum of peasants. Thus we
+have at least five distinct classes, but of these the last three
+have--till thirty or forty years ago--paid little or no attention to
+political matters. The professors and students have had their noses
+buried in their departmental science and _fach_ studies; the artisans
+have been engrossed with their technical work, and have been only
+gradually drifting away from their capitalist employers and into the
+Socialist camp; and the peasants--as elsewhere over the world, absorbed
+in their laborious and ever-necessary labours--have accepted their fate
+and paid but little attention to what was going on over their heads.
+Yet these three last-mentioned classes, forming the great bulk of the
+nation, have been swept away, and suddenly at the last, into a huge
+embroilment in which to begin with they had no interest or profit.
+
+This may seem strange, but the process after all is quite simple, and to
+study it in the case of Germany may throw helpful light on our own
+affairs. However the blame may be apportioned between the Junker and
+commercial classes, it is clear that, fired by the Bismarckian
+programme, and greatly overstretching it, they played into each other's
+hands. The former relied for the financing of its schemes on the support
+of the commercials. The latter saw in the militarists a power which
+might increase Germany's trade-supremacy. Vanity and greed are met
+together, patriotism and profits have kissed each other. A Navy League
+and an Army League and an Air League arose. Professors and teachers were
+subsidized in the universities; the children were taught Pan-Germanism
+in the schools; a new map of Europe was put before them. An enormous
+literature grew up on the lines of Treitschke, Houston Chamberlain, and
+Bernhardi, with novels and romances to illustrate side-issues, and the
+Press playing martial music. The students and intellectuals began to be
+infected; the small traders and shopkeepers were moved; and the
+war-fever gradually spread through the nation. As to the artisans, they
+may, as I have said, have largely belonged to the Socialist party--with
+its poll of four million votes in the last election--and in the words of
+Herr Haase in the Reichstag just before the war, they may have wished to
+hold themselves apart from "this cursed Imperialist policy"; but when
+the war actually arrived, and the fever, and the threat of Russia, and
+the fury of conscription, they perforce had to give way and join in. How
+on earth could they do otherwise? And the peasants--even if they escaped
+the fever--could not escape the compulsion of authority nor the old
+blind tradition of obedience. They do not know, even to-day, why they
+are fighting; and they hardly know whom they are fighting, but in their
+ancient resignation they accept the inevitable and shout "Deutschland
+ueber Alles" with the rest. And so a whole nation is swept off its feet
+by a small section of it, and the insolence of a class becomes, as in
+Louvain and Rheim's, the scandal of the world.[7]
+
+And the people bleed; yes, it is always the people who bleed. The trains
+arrive at the hospital bases, hundreds, positively hundreds of them,
+full of wounded. Shattered human forms lie in thousands on straw inside
+the trucks and wagons, or sit painfully reclined in the passenger
+compartments, their faces grimed, their clothes ragged, their toes
+protruding from their boots. Some have been stretched on the battlefield
+for forty-eight hours, or even more, tormented by frost at night,
+covered with flies by day, without so much as a drink of water. And
+those that have not already become a mere lifeless heap of rags have
+been jolted in country carts to some railway-station, and there, or at
+successive junctions, have been shunted on sidings for endless hours.
+And now, with their wounds still slowly bleeding or oozing, they are
+picked out by tender hands, and the most crying cases are roughly,
+dressed before consigning to a hospital. And some faces are shattered,
+hardly recognizable, and some have limbs torn away; and there are
+internal wounds unspeakable, and countenances deadly pallid, and
+moanings which cannot be stifled, and silences worse than moans.
+
+Yes, the agony and bloody sweat of battlefields endured for the
+domination or the ambition of a class is appalling. But in many cases,
+though more dramatic and appealing to the imagination, one may doubt if
+it is worse than the year-long and age-long agony of daily life endured
+for the same reason.
+
+Maeterlinck, in his eloquent and fiery letter to the _Daily Mail_ of
+September 14th, maintained that the whole German nation is equally to
+blame in this affair--that all classes are equally involved in it, with
+no _degrees_ of guilt. We may excuse the warmth of personal feeling
+which makes him say this, but we cannot accept the view. We are bound to
+point out that it is only by some such analysis as the above, and
+estimation of the method by which the delusions of one class may be
+communicated to the others, that we can guard ourselves, too, from
+falling into similar delusions.
+
+I mentioned that besides the growth of the commercial class, a second
+great cause of the war was the political ignorance of the German people.
+And this is important. Fifty years ago, and before that, when Germany
+was divided up into scores of small States and Duchies, the mass of its
+people had no practical interest in politics. Such politics as existed,
+as between one Duchy and another, were mere teacup politics. Read
+Eckermann's _Conversations_, and see how small a part they played in
+Goethe's mind. That may have been an advantage in one way. The brains of
+the nation went into science, literature, music. And when, after 1870,
+the unification of Germany came, and the political leadership passed
+over to Prussia, the same state of affairs for a long time continued;
+the professors continued their investigations in the matters of the
+thyroid gland or the rock inscriptions in the Isle of Thera, but they
+left the internal regulation of the State and its foreign policy
+confidently in the hands of the Kaiser and the nominees of the great
+and rising _bourgeoisie_, and themselves remained unobservant and
+uninstructed in such matters. It was only when these latter powers
+declared--as in the Emperor's pan-German proclamation of 1896--that a
+Teutonic world-empire was about to be formed, and that the study of
+_Welt-politik_ was the duty of every serious German, that the thinking
+and reading portion of the population suddenly turned its attention to
+this subject. An immense mass of political writings--pamphlets,
+prophecies, military and economic treatises, romances of German
+conquest, and the like--naturally many of them of the crudest sort, was
+poured forth and eagerly accepted by the public, and a veritable Fool's
+Paradise of German suprernacy arose. It is only in this way, by noting
+the long-preceding ignorance of the German citizen in the matter of
+politics, his absolute former non-interference in public affairs, and
+the dazed state of his mind when he suddenly found himself on the
+supposed pinnacle of world-power--that we can explain his easy
+acceptance of such cheap and _ad hoc_ publications as those of
+Bernhardi and Houston Chamberlain, and the fact that he was so easily
+rushed into the false situation of the present war.[8] The absurd
+_canards_ which at an early date gained currency, in Berlin--as that the
+United States had swallowed Canada, that the Afghans in mass were
+invading; India, that Ireland was plunged in civil war--point in the
+same direction; and so do the barbarities of the Teutonic troops in the
+matters of humanity and art. For though in all war and in the heat of
+battle there are barbarities perpetrated, it argues a strange state of
+the German national psychology that in this case a heartless severity
+and destruction of the enemy's life and property should have been
+preached beforehand, and quite deliberately, by professors and
+militarists, and accepted, apparently, by the general public. It argues,
+to say the least, a strange want of perception of the very unfavourable
+impression which such a programme must inevitably excite in the mind of
+the world at large.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is, no doubt, pleasant in its way for us British to draw this picture
+of Germany, and to trace the causes which led the ruling powers there,
+years ago, to make up their minds for war, because, of course, the
+process in some degree exonerates us. But, as I have already said, I
+have dwelt on Germany, not only because she affords such a good
+illustration of what to avoid, but also because she affords so clear an
+example of what is going on elsewhere in Europe--in England and France
+and Italy, and among all the modern nations. We cannot blame Germany
+without implicitly also blaming these.
+
+What, indeed, shall we say of England? Germany has for years maintained
+that with her own growing population and her growing trade she needs a
+more extended seaboard in Europe, and coaling stations and colonies in
+other regions of the globe, but that England, jealous of commercial
+supremacy, has been determined to deny her these, and, if possible, to
+crush her; that she (Germany) has lived in perpetual fear and panic;
+and that if in this case she has been the first to strike, it has only
+been because to wait England's opportunity would have been to court
+defeat. Allowing for the exaggerations inseparable from opposed points
+of view, is there not some justification for this plea? England, who
+plunged into the Crimean War in order to _prevent_ Russia from obtaining
+a seaboard and her natural commercial expansion, and who afterwards
+joined with Russia in order to plunder Persia and to prevent Germany
+from getting her railways along the Persian Gulf; who calmly
+appropriated Egypt, with its valuable cottonlands and market; who, at
+the behest of a group of capitalists and financiers, turned her great
+military machine on a little nation of Boer farmers in South Africa;
+who, it is said,[9] sold 300,000 tons of coal to Russia to aid her fleet
+against Japan, and at the same time furnished Japan with gold at a high
+rate of interest for use against Russia--what trust can be placed in
+her? "England," says Bernhardi, "in spite of all her pretences of a
+liberal and philanthropic policy, has never sought any other object
+than personal advantage and the unscrupulous suppression of her rivals."
+Let us hope that this "never" is _too_ harsh; let us at least say
+"hardly ever"; but still, are we not compelled to admit that if the rise
+of commercial ambition in Germany has figured as a danger to _us_, our
+far greater commercial ambitions have not only figured as a danger to
+Germany, but, in conjunction with our alliance with France and Russia,
+her ancient foes, may well have led to a state of positive panic among
+her people? And if, as the Allies would doubtless say, there was really
+no need for any such panic, the situation was obviously sufficiently
+grave to be easily made use of by a military class for its own ends, or
+by an armaments ring or a clique of financiers for theirs. Indeed, it
+would be interesting to know what enormous profits Kruppism (to use H.G.
+Wells' expressive term) _has_ already made out of this world-madness.
+Nor can it be denied that the commercial interest in England, if not
+deliberately intending to provoke war with Germany, has not been at all
+sorry to seize this opportunity of laying a rival Power low--if only in
+order to snatch the said rival's trade. That, indeed, the daily Press
+reveals only too clearly.
+
+From all this the danger of class-domination emerges more and more into
+relief. In Prussia the old Feudal caste remains--in a decadent state,
+certainly, but perhaps for that very reason more arrogant, more vulgar,
+and less conscious of any _noblesse oblige_ than even before. By itself,
+however, and if unsupported by the commercial class, it would probably
+have done little harm. In Britain the Feudal caste has ceased to be
+exclusively military, and has become blended with the commercial class.
+The British aristocracy now consists largely or chiefly of retired
+grocers and brewers. Commercialism here has become more confessedly
+dominant than in Germany, and whereas there the commercial class may
+_support_ the military in its ambitions, here the commercial class
+_uses_ the military as a matter of course and for its own ends. We have
+become a Nation of Shopkeepers having our own revolvers and machine-guns
+behind the counter.
+
+And yet not really a Nation of Shopkeepers, but rather a nation ruled
+by a shopkeeping _class_.
+
+[This is the point in the text referred to by Footnote 25 below]
+
+People sometimes talk as if commercial prosperity and the interests of
+the commercial folk represented the life of the whole nation. That is a
+way of speaking, and it illustrates certainly a common modern delusion.
+But it is far from the truth. The trading and capitalist folk are only a
+class, and they do _not_, properly speaking, represent the nation. They
+do not represent the landowning and the farming interests, both of which
+detest them; they do not represent the artisans and industrial workers,
+who have expressly formed themselves into unions in order to fight them,
+and who have only been able to maintain their rights by so doing; they
+do not represent the labourers and peasants, who are ground under their
+heel. It would take too long to go into the economics of this subject,
+interesting though they are.[10] But a very brief survey of facts shows
+us that wherever the capitalist and trading classes have triumphed--as
+in England early last century, and until Socialistic legislation was
+called in to check them--the condition of the mass of the people has by
+no means improved, rather the contrary. Japan has developed a world
+trade, and is on the look out for more, yet never before has there been
+such distress among her mass-populations. Russia has been lately moving
+in the same direction; her commercial interests are rapidly progressing,
+but her peasantry is at a standstill, France and Italy have already
+grown a fat _bourgeoisie_, but their workers remain in a limbo of
+poverty and strikes. And in all these countries, including Germany,
+Socialism has arisen as a protest against the commercial order--which
+fact certainly does not look as if commercialism were a generally
+acknowledged benefit.
+
+No, commercial prosperity means only the prosperity of a class. Yet such
+is the curious glamour that surrounds this, subject and makes a fetish
+of statistics about "imports and exports," that nothing is more common
+than for such prosperity to be taken to mean the prosperity of the
+nation as a whole. The commercial people, having command of the Press,
+and of the avenues and highways of public influence, do not find it at
+all difficult to persuade the nation that _they_ are its
+representatives, and that _their_ advantage is the advantage of all.
+This illusion is only a part, I suppose, of a historical necessity,
+which as the Feudal regime passes brings into prominence the Commercial
+regime; but do not let us be deluded by it, nor forget that in
+submitting to the latter we are being nose-led by a class just as much
+as the Germans have been in submitting to the Prussian Junkers. Do not
+let us, at the behest of either class, be so foolish as to set out in
+vain pursuit of world-empire; and, above all, do not let us, in freeing
+ourselves from military class-rule, fall under the domination of
+financiers and commercial diplomats. Let us remember that wars for
+world-markets are made for the benefit of the merchant _class_ and not
+for the benefit of the mass-people, and that in this respect England has
+been as much to blame as Germany or any other nation--nay, pretty
+obviously more so.
+
+What is clearly wanted--and indeed is the next stage of human evolution
+in England and in all Western lands--is that the people should
+emancipate themselves from class-domination, class-glamour, and learn
+to act freely from their own initiative. I know it is difficult. It
+means a spirit of independence, courage, willingness to make sacrifice.
+It means education, alertness to guard against the insidious schemes of
+wire-pullers and pressmen, as well as of militarists and commercials. It
+means the perception that only through eternal vigilance can freedom be
+maintained. Yet it is the only true Democracy; and the logic of its
+arrival is assured to us by the historical necessity that progress in
+all countries must pass through the preliminary stages of feudalism and
+commercialism on its way to realize the true life of the mass-peoples.
+
+To-day the uprising of Socialist ideals, of the power of Trade Unions,
+and especially the formation of International Unions, show us that we
+are on the verge of this third stage. We are shaping our way towards the
+real Democracy, with the attainment of which wars--though they will not
+cease from the world--will certainly become much rarer. The
+international _entente_ already establishing itself among the manual
+workers of all the European countries--and which has now become an
+accepted principle of the Labour movement--is a guarantee and a promise
+of a more peaceful era; and those who know the artisans and peasants of
+this and other countries know well how little enmity they harbour in
+their breasts against each other. Racial and religious wars will no
+doubt for long continue; but wars to satisfy the ambitions of a military
+clique or a personal ruler, or the ambitions of a commercial group, or
+the schemes of financiers, or the engineering of the Press--wars from
+these all too fruitful causes will, under a sensible Democracy, cease.
+If Britain, during the last twenty years, had really favoured the cause
+of the People and their international understanding, there would have
+been no war now, for her espousal of the mass-peoples' cause would have
+made her so strong that it would have been too risky for any Government
+to attack her. But of course that could not have happened, for the
+simple reason that Conservatism and Liberalism are not Democracy.
+Conservatism is Feudalism, Liberalism is Commercialism, and Socialism
+only is in its essence Democracy. It is no good scolding at Sir Edward
+Grey for making friends with the Russian Government; for his only
+alternative would have been to join the "International"--which he
+certainly could not do, being essentially a creature of the commercial
+regime. The "Balance of Power" and the _ententes_ and alliances of
+Figure-head Governments _had_ to go on, till the day--which we hope is
+at hand--when Figure-heads will be no more needed.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[2] Reprinted by kind permission from the _English Review_ for December,
+1914.
+
+[3] As an example of this belief, read the manifesto of Professor
+Eucken, who represents such a large section of German opinion, and note
+the absolute sincerity of its tone--as well as its simplicity.
+
+[4] _Wars and Capitalism_, by P. Kropotkin. (Freedom Press.)
+
+[5] See _Nash's Magazine_ for October, 1914, article by "Diplomatist."
+
+[6] Ibid.
+
+[7] In order to realize how easy such a process is, we have only to
+remember the steps by which the outbreak of the Boer War in 1899 was
+engineered.
+
+[8] Of course we must remember that there has been all along and is now
+in Germany a very large party, Socialist and other, which has _not_ been
+thus carried away; but for the moment its mouth is closed and it cannot
+make itself heard.
+
+[9] See Kropotkin's _War and Capitalism_, p. 12.
+
+[10] See note _infra_ on "Commercial Prosperity," p. 167.
+(Chapter XI below)
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+THE CASE AGAINST GERMANY;
+
+_November_, 1914.
+
+With every wish to do justice to Germany, to whose literature I feel I
+owe such a debt, and among whose people I have so many personal friends;
+allowing also the utmost for the general causes in Europe which have
+been for years leading up towards war--and some of which I have
+indicated already in the pages above--I still feel it is impossible not
+to throw on her the _immediate_ blame for the present catastrophe.
+
+However we distribute the indictment and the charges among the various
+parties concerned, whether we accuse mainly the sway of Prussian
+Militarism or the rise of German Commercialism, or the long tradition
+and growth of a _Welt-politik_ philosophy, or the general political
+ignorance which gave to these influences such rash and uncritical
+acceptance; or whether we accuse the somewhat difficult and variable
+personal equation of the Kaiser himself--the fact still remains that for
+years and years this war has been by the German Government most
+deliberately and systematically prepared for. The fact remains that
+Britain--though for a long period she had foreseen danger and had on the
+naval side slowly braced herself to meet it--was on the military side
+caught at the last moment unprepared; that France was so little
+intending war that a large portion of the nation was actually still
+protesting against an increase in the size of the standing army; and
+that Russia--whatever plans she may have had, or not had, in mind--was
+confessedly at the same period two years or so behind in the
+organization and completion of her military establishment.
+
+Whether right or wrong, it can hardly be denied that the moment of the
+precipitation of war was chosen and insisted on by Germany. After
+Austria's monstrous and insulting dictation to Servia (23rd July), and
+Servia's incredibly humble apology (25th), Austria was still not
+allowed to accept the latter, and the conference proposed (26th July) by
+Sir E. Grey--though accepted by France, Russia, and Italy--was refused
+by Germany (27th). On the 28th Austria declared war on Servia. It was
+perfectly clear to every one that Russia--after what had happened before
+in 1908-9, with regard to Bosnia and Herzegovina--could not possibly
+allow this insult to Servia to pass. Germany, therefore, by this move
+forced Russia's hand; and at a moment when Russia was known or supposed
+to be comparatively unprepared.[11] France had been involved in some
+military scandals and was still debating as to the two years' instead of
+three years' period for her normal military service. The German
+Ambassador at Vienna had openly said that France was not in a condition
+for facing a war. England was currently supposed in Germany to be
+seriously hampered by domestic troubles at home--chiefly of course
+among the Irish, but also amongst the Suffragettes(!) _and_ by
+widespread disaffection in India. It was thought, therefore, that
+England would certainly remain neutral--and I think we may fairly say
+that the extent to which Germany counted on this expected neutrality is
+evidenced by her disappointment and public rage when she found that she
+was mistaken.
+
+Germany's initiative in the matter is further evidenced by her _instant
+readiness_ to attack. She was in Luxemburg within a few hours of the
+declaration of war with Russia; and it was clearly her intention to
+"rush" Paris and then turn back upon Russia.
+
+It may be said that from her own point of view Germany was quite right
+to take the initiative. If she sincerely believed that the _Entente_ was
+plotting her downfall, she was justified in attacking instead of waiting
+to be attacked. That may be so. It is the line to which General
+Bernhardi again returns in his latest book (_Britain as Germany's
+Vassal_, translated by J. Ellis Barker). But it does not alter the fact
+that this was an immense responsibility to take, and that the immediate
+onus of the war rests with Germany. If she under all the above
+circumstances precipitated war, she can hardly be surprised if the
+judgment of Europe (one may also say the world) is against her. If she
+has played her cards so badly as to put herself entirely in the wrong,
+she must naturally "dree her weird."
+
+There remains the case of her treatment of Belgium. Britain
+certainly--who has only lately assisted at the dismemberment of Persia,
+and who is even now allowing Russia (in the face of Persian protests) to
+cross neutral territory in the neighbourhood of Tabriz on her way to
+attack Turkey, who has uttered, moreover, no word of protest against the
+late Ukase (of mid-November) by which the independent rights of Finland
+have been finally crushed--Britain, I say, need talk no cant about
+Belgian neutrality. Britain, for her own absolute safety, has always
+required and still requires Belgian neutrality to be respected. And that
+by itself is a sufficient, and the most honest, reason. But in the eyes
+of the world at large Germany's deliberate and determined sacrifice of
+Belgium, simply because the latter stood in the way of the rapid
+accomplishment of her warlike designs against France (and England), can
+never be condoned--little Belgium who had never harmed or offended
+Germany in any way. Add to this her harsh and brutish ill-treatment of
+the Belgian civilian people, her ravage of their ancient buildings and
+works of art, and her clearly expressed intention both in word and deed
+to annex their territory by force should the fortunes of war favour
+her--all these facts, which we may say are proven beyond the shadow of a
+doubt, form a most serious indictment. They substantiate the charge that
+Germany by acting throughout in this high-handed way has deeply violated
+the natural laws of the Comity of Nations, which are the safeguards of
+Civilization, and they confirm the rightful claim of Europe to sit in
+judgment on her.
+
+I say nothing at the moment about the charges of atrocities committed by
+German troops, partly because such charges are always in warfare made by
+each side against the other, and partly because their verification
+should be the subject of a world-inquiry later on. It may be said,
+however, that the Belgian and French Commissions of inquiry have
+certainly presented material and evidence which _ought_ to be
+investigated later--material which would hardly be credible of so humane
+and cultured a people as the Germans, were it not for the fact, alluded
+to already, of such severities having been deliberately recommended
+beforehand by the philosophical writers, military and political, who
+have during the last half-century moulded German public opinion.
+
+England, as I say, is in no position herself to sit in judgment on
+Germany and lecture her--much as she undoubtedly enjoys doing so.
+England's long-standing policy of commercial greed, leading to political
+grab in every part of the world; her infidelity in late years towards
+small peoples, like the Boers and the Persians; her neglect of treaty
+obligations and silence about them when they do not suit her; her most
+dubious alliance with a military despotism like Russia: all render it
+impossible for her to accuse Germany. The extraordinary thing is that in
+the face of such prevarications as these, which are patent to the whole
+world, Britain at any moment of serious crisis always comes forward
+with the air of utmost sincerity and in an almost saintly pose as the
+champion of political morality! How is it? The world laughs and talks of
+_heuchlerei_ and _cant Britannique_. But I almost think (perhaps I
+stretch a point in order to save the credit of my country) that the real
+cause is not so much British hypocrisy as British _stupidity_--stupidity
+which keeps our minds in watertight compartments and prevents us
+perceiving how confused and inconsistent our own judgments are and how
+insincere they appear to our neighbours. At any rate, whether the cause
+is pure hypocrisy or pure stupidity, or whether a Scotch mixture of
+these, it cannot be denied that its result is most irritating to
+decent-minded people.
+
+It is curious how a certain strain or vein of temperament, like that
+just mentioned, will run through a nation's whole life, and colour its
+actions in all departments, recognized and commented on by the whole
+outside world, and yet remain unobserved by the nation itself.
+
+Every one who has known the Germans at home--even years back--has been
+conscious of a certain strain in the Teutonic character which has had a
+like bearing in the German national life. How shall I describe it? It is
+a certain want of tact, unperceptiveness--a kind of overbearing
+simplicity of mind. Whether it be in the train or the hotel or the
+private house, the German does not always seem to see the personal
+situation. Whether you prefer to talk or remain silent, whether you wish
+the window open or shut, whether you desire to partake of such and such
+a dish or whether you don't--of such little matters he (or she) seems
+unaware. Perhaps it is that the Teutonic mind is so vigorous that it
+overrides you without being conscious of doing so, or that it is so
+convinced of its own Tightness; or perhaps it is that the scientific
+type of mind, depending always on formulae and statistics, necessarily
+loses a certain finer quality. Anyhow, the fact remains that sociable,
+kindly, _gemuethlich_ and so forth as the Germans are, there is a lack of
+delicate touch and perception about them, of gentle manners, and a
+certain insensitiveness to the opinion of those with whom they have to
+deal. The strain may not be without its useful bearings in the
+direction of strength and veracity, but it runs curiously through the
+national life, and colours deeply, not only the domestic and social
+relations of the people but their foreign politics also, and even their
+war tactics and strategy.
+
+I have spoken before of the political ignorance of the German
+mass-people, which, dating from years back, caused them to be easily led
+by their empire-building philosophers to a certain very dangerous
+pinnacle of ambition, and there tempted. The same want of perception of
+how their actions would be viewed by the world in general caused the
+Government to act in the most egregiously high-handed manner in the
+matter of the precipitation and declaration of the war itself, and
+subsequently likewise in the ruthless invasion of Belgium and treatment
+of her people and her cities. The want of discernment of what was going
+on outside the sphere of her own psychology led her into fatal delusions
+as to the attitude of England, of Ireland, of Belgium, Italy, India, and
+so forth. It caused her generals to miscalculate and seriously
+under-estimate the strategic forces opposed to them, both in France and
+Russia; and in actual battles it has caused them to adopt, with
+disastrous results, tactics which were foolishly inspired by contempt of
+the enemy. Without insisting too much on the stories of
+atrocities--which are still to a certain extent _sub judice_--it does
+rather appear that even those excesses which the Commissions of inquiry
+have reported (and which occurred, be it said, chiefly in the early days
+of the campaign) were due to an intoxication, not merely of champagne
+but of excited self-glorification and blindness to the human rights of
+peoples at least as brave as themselves.[12]
+
+However that last point may be, it is certainly curious to think
+how--whether it be in the case of the German or the English or any other
+people--a vein of temperament or character may decide a nation's fate or
+colour its history quite as much as or even more than matters of wealth
+and armament.
+
+Personally one feels sorry for the great and admirable German
+people--though I do not suppose it will matter to them whether one feels
+sorry or not! And I look forward to the day when there will come a
+better understanding between them and ourselves--better perhaps than has
+ever been before--when we shall forgive them their sins against us, and
+they will forgive us our sins against them, one of which certainly is
+our meanness and shopkeeperiness in rejoicing in the war as a means of
+"collaring their trade." I feel sure that the German mass-people will
+wake up one day to the knowledge that they have been grossly betrayed at
+home, not only by Prussian militarism but by pan-German commercial
+philosophy and bunkum, as well as by their own inattention to, and
+consequent ignorance of, political affairs. And I hope they will wake up
+to the conviction that Destiny and the gods in this matter are after all
+bringing them to a conclusion and a consummation far finer than anything
+they have perhaps imagined for themselves. If, indeed, when the war is
+over, they are fortunate enough to be compelled by the terms of
+settlement to abandon their Army and Navy--or _all_ but the merest
+residue of these--the consequences undoubtedly will be that, freed from
+the frightful burdens which the upkeep of these entails, they will romp
+away over the world through an era of unexampled prosperity and
+influence. Their science, liberated, will give them the lead in many
+arts and industries; their philosophy and literature, no longer crippled
+by national vanities, will rise to the splendid world-level of former
+days; their colonizing enterprise, unhindered by conscriptionist vetoes,
+will carry them far and wide over the globe; and even their trade will
+find that without fortified seaports and tariff walls it will, in these
+days of universal movement and intercommunication, do fully as well as,
+if not much better than, ever it did before. In that day, however, let
+us hope that--the more communal conception of public life having
+prevailed and come to its own--the success of Trade, among any nation or
+people, will no longer mean the successful manufacture of a dominant and
+vulgar class, but the real prosperity and welfare of the whole nation,
+including all classes.
+
+And in that day, possibly, the other nations, witnessing the
+extraordinary prosperity and success of that one which has abandoned
+armaments and Kruppisms, will--if they have a grain of sense left in
+them--follow suit and, voluntarily divesting themselves too of their
+ancient armour, give up the foolishness of national enmities and
+jealousies, and adopt the attitude of humanity and peace, which alone
+can be the worthy and sensible attitude for us little mortals, when we
+shall have arrived at years of discretion upon the earth.
+
+[Just after writing the above I received the following remarks in a
+letter of a friend from South America, which may be worth reprinting. He
+says: "In spite of the events of 1815 and 1870, French 'culture' is
+supreme to-day over all South America. South America is a suburb of
+Paris, and French culture has won its triumphs wholly irrespective of
+the defeat of French arms. Therefore I incline to think that true German
+culture in science and music will gain rather than lose by the
+destruction of German arms. Not only will that nation cease to spend its
+time writing dull military books, but other nations will be more likely
+to appreciate what there is in German thought and culture when this is
+no longer offered us at the point of the bayonet! German commerce in
+South America has suffered rather than gained by talk of 'shining
+armour.' And the poet, scientist and business man will gain rather than
+lose if no longer connected with Potsdam."]
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[11] It is said that Russia took some steps towards mobilization as
+early as the 25th. If she did, that would seem quite natural under the
+circumstances.
+
+[12] There may possibly be found another explanation of these
+excesses--namely, in the galling strictness of the Prussian military
+regime. After years and years of monotonously regulated and official
+lives, it may be that to both officers and men, in their different ways,
+orgies of one kind or another came as an almost inevitable reaction.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+
+THE CASE FOR GERMANY
+
+Having put in the last chapter some of the points which seem to throw
+the immediate blame of the war on Germany, it would be only fair in the
+present chapter to show how in the long run and looking to the general
+European situation to-day as well as to the history of Germany in the
+past, the war had become inevitable, and in a sense necessary, as a
+stage in the evolution of European politics.
+
+After the frightful devastation of Germany by the religious dissensions
+of the early part of the seventeenth century and the Thirty Years War,
+it fell to Frederick the Great, not only to lay a firm foundation for
+the Prussian State but to elevate it definitely as a rival to Austria in
+the leadership of Germany. Thenceforth Prussia grew in power and
+influence, and became the nucleus of a new Germany. It would almost seem
+that things could not well have been otherwise. Germany was seeking for
+a new root from which to grow. Clerical and ultra-Catholic Austria was
+of no use for this purpose. Bavaria was under the influence of France.
+Lutheran Prussia attracted the best elements of the Teutonic mind. It
+seems strange, perhaps, that the sandy wastes of the North-East, and its
+rather arid, dour population, _should_ have become the centre of growth
+for the new German nation, considering the latter's possession of its
+own rich and vital characteristics, and its own fertile and beautiful
+lands; but so it was. Perhaps the general German folk, with their
+speculative, easygoing, almost sentimental tendencies, _needed_ this
+hard nucleus of Prussianism--and its matter-of-fact, organizing type of
+ability--to crystallize round.
+
+The Napoleonic wars shattered the old order of society, and spread over
+Europe the seeds of all sorts of new ideas, in the direction of
+nationality, republicanism, and so forth. Fichte, stirred by Napoleon's
+victory at Jena (Fichte's birthplace) and the consequent disaster to
+his own people, wrote his _Addresses to the German Nation_, pleading
+eloquently for a "national regeneration." He, like Vom Stein,
+Treitschke, and many others in their time, came to Berlin and
+established himself there as in the centre of a new national activity.
+Vom Stein, about the same time, carried out the magnificent and
+democratic work by which he established on Napoleonic lines (and much to
+Napoleon's own chagrin) the outlines of a great and free and federated
+Germany. Carl von Clausewitz did in the military world much what Stein
+did in the civil world. He formulated the strategical methods and
+teachings of Napoleon, and in his book _Vom Krieg_ (published 1832) not
+only outlined a greater military Germany, but laid the basis, it has
+been said, of all serious study in the art of war. Vom Stein and
+Clausewitz died in the same year, 1831. In 1834 Heinrich von Treitschke
+was born.
+
+The three Hohenzollern kings, all named Frederick William, who reigned
+from the death of Frederick the Great (1786) to the accession of William
+I (1861) did not count much personally. The first and third of those
+mentioned were decidedly weakminded, and the third towards the close of
+his reign became insane. But the ideas already initiated in Germany
+continued to expand. The Zollverein was established, the Teutonic
+Federation became closer, and the lead of Prussia more decided. With the
+joint efforts of William I and Bismarck the policy became more
+governmental, more positive, and more deliberate--the policy of
+consolidation and of aggrandisement; and with this definite programme in
+view, Bismarck engineered the three wars of 1864, 1866, and 1870,
+against Denmark, Austria, and France. They all three had the effect of
+confirming the military power of Prussia. The first war gave her a much
+desired increase of access to the North Sea; the second led to the
+treaty with Austria, and ultimately to the formation of the Triple
+Alliance; the third ended in the definite establishment of the Prussian
+hegemony, the crowning of William I as Emperor, and the union and
+consolidation of all the German States under him; but alas! it left a
+seed of evil in the wresting of Alsace-Lorraine from France. For
+France never forgave this. Bismarck and Moltke knew she would not
+forgive, and were sorely tempted to engineer a _second_ war which should
+utterly disable her; but this war never came off. The seed of Revenge,
+however, remained with France, and the seed of Fear with Germany; and
+these two things were destined to lead to a harvest of disaster.
+
+In 1866 Treitschke came to Berlin. Though Saxon by birth, he became
+ultra-Prussian in sympathy and temperament. Somewhat deaf, and by no
+means yielding or facile in temper, he was not cut out for a political
+career. But politics were his interest; his lectures on history were
+successful at Leipzig and had still more scope at Berlin. He became the
+strongest of German Unionists, and with a keen but somewhat narrow mind
+took an absolute pleasure in attacking every movement or body of people
+that seemed to him in any way to stand in the path of Germany's
+advancement, or not to assist in her consolidation. Thus he poured out
+his wrath in turn on Saxony (his own land) and on Hanover, on the Poles,
+the Socialists, and the Catholics, and ultimately in his later years on
+Britain.[13]
+
+He conceived, following the lines of the Prussian tradition, that
+Germany had a great military mission to fulfil. Her immense energy and
+power, which had bulked so large in the early history of Europe, and
+which had been so sadly scattered during the religious wars, was now to
+come to its own again. She was to make for herself a great place in
+Europe, and to expand in colonies over the world. It was a pleasing and
+natural ambition, and the expression of it gave a great vogue and
+popularity to Treitschke's lectures. The idea was enormously reinforced
+by the cause which I have already mentioned and dwelt upon--the growth
+of the commercial interest in Germany. From 1870 onwards this growth was
+huge and phenomenal. In a comparatively short time a whole new social
+class sprang up in the land, and a whole new public opinion. If
+expansion from the point of view of Junker ambition had been desirable
+before, the same from the point of view of the financial and trading
+classes was doubly so now. If a military irruption into the politics of
+the world was favoured before, it was clamoured for now when a powerful
+class had arisen which not only, called the tune but could pay the
+piper.
+
+Thus by the combination of military and commercial interests and
+entanglements the web of Destiny was woven and Germany was hurried along
+a path which--though no definite war was yet in sight--was certain to
+lead to war. The general military, programme of Treitschke, the
+conviction that force and force alone could give his country her
+rightful place in the world, was more and more cordially adopted. In a
+sense this was a perfectly natural and logical programme, and amid the
+surrounding European conditions excusable--as I shall point out
+presently. But before long it became a weird enthusiasm, almost an
+obsession. It was taken up over the land, and repeated in a thousand
+books and on as many platforms. One of these propagandists was General
+von Bernhardi, who entered in more detail into the technical and
+strategical aspects of the programme. The rude and almost brutal
+frankness of both writers may be admired; but the want of real depth and
+breadth of view cannot be concealed and must be deplored. The arguments
+in favour of force, of unscrupulousness, of terrorism are--especially in
+Bernhardi[14]--casuistical to a degree. They are those of a man who is
+determined to press his country into war at all costs, and who will use
+any kind of logic as long as it will lead in his direction. The whole
+movement--largely made possible by the political ignorance of the
+mass-people, of which I have spoken in a former chapter--culminated in
+an extraordinary national fever of ambition; and in the announcement of
+schemes for the Germanization of the world, almost juvenile in the want
+of experience and the sense of proportion which they display. It would
+not be fair to take one writer as conclusive; but as a _specimen_ of the
+kind of thing we may quote the following extract (given by Mr. H.A.L.
+Fisher, the Oxford historian, in his able brochure _The War: Its Causes
+and Issues_) from the writings of Bronsart von Schellendorf: "Do not let
+us forget the civilizing task which the decrees of Providence have
+assigned to us. Just as Prussia was destined to be the nucleus of
+Germany, so the regenerated Germany shall be the nucleus of a future
+Empire of the West. And in order that no one shall be left in doubt, we
+proclaim from henceforth that our continental nation has a right to the
+sea, not only to the North Sea, but to the Mediterranean and Atlantic.
+Hence we intend to absorb one after another all the provinces which
+neighbour on Prussia. We will successively annex Denmark, Holland,
+Belgium, Northern Switzerland, then Trieste and Venice, finally Northern
+France from the Sambre to the Loire. This programme we fearlessly
+pronounce. It is not the work of a madman. The Empire we intend to found
+will be no Utopia. We have ready to our hands the means of founding it,
+and no coalition in the world can stop us."
+
+Bronsart von Schellendorf (1832-91) was one of the Prussian Generals who
+negotiated the surrender of the French at Sedan. He became Chief of the
+Staff, and War Minister (1883-9), and wrote on Tactics, etc. His above
+utterance, therefore, cannot be neglected as that of an irresponsible
+person.
+
+There is, as I have already had occasion to say, a certain easygoing
+absurdity in the habit we commonly have of talking of nations
+--"Germany," "France," "England," and so forth--as if they were
+simple and plainly responsible persons or individuals, when all the time
+we know perfectly well that they are more like huge whirlpools of
+humanity caused by the impact and collision of countless and often
+opposing currents flowing together from various directions. Yet there is
+this point of incontestable similarity between nations and individual
+persons, that both occasionally go mad! If Germany was afflicted by a
+kind of madness or divine _dementia_ previous to the present war,
+Britain can by no means throw that in her teeth, for Britain certainly
+went mad over Mafeking; and it was sheer madness that in 1870 threw the
+people of France and Napoleon III--utterly unready for war as they
+were, and over a most trifling quarrel--into the arms of Bismarck for
+the fulfilment of his schemes.
+
+But that some sort of madness did, in consequence of the above-mentioned
+circumstances, seize the German people shortly before the outbreak of
+the present war we can hardly doubt, though (remembering the proverb) we
+must not put the blame for that on her, but on the gods. It was a heady
+intoxication, caused largely, I believe, by that era of unexampled
+commercial prosperity following upon a period of great political and
+military expansion, and confirmed by the direct incitement of the
+military and political teachers I have mentioned. All these things,
+acting on a people unskilled in politics--of whom Bernhardi himself says
+"We are a non-political people"[15]--had their natural effect. But it
+seems part of the irony of fate that at this very juncture Germany
+should have fallen under the influence of a man who of all the world was
+perhaps least fitted to guide her steadily through a difficult crisis.
+"We all know the Kaiser," says Mr. Fisher, "the most amazing and amusing
+figure on the great stage of politics. The outlines of his character are
+familiar to everybody, for his whole life is spent in the full glare of
+publicity. We know his impulsiveness, his naivete, his heady fits of
+wild passion, his spacious curiosity and quick grasp of detail, his
+portentous lack of humour and delicacy, his childish vanity and
+domineering will. A character so romantic, spontaneous, and robust must
+always be a favourite with the British people, who, were his lunacies
+less formidable, would regard him as the most delectable burlesque of
+the age."
+
+However the British generally may regard him, it is certain that the
+German nation accepted him as their acclaimed leader. Clever,
+good-looking, versatile, imperious, fond of the romantic pose, Wilhelm
+was exactly the hero in shining armour that would capture the enthusiasm
+of this innocent people. They idolized him. And it is possible that
+their quick response confirmed him in his rather generous estimate of
+his own capabilities. He dismissed Bismarck and became his own Foreign
+Secretary, and entered upon a perilous career as Imperial politician,
+under the aegis of God and the great tradition of the Hohenzollerns, a
+career made all the more perilous by his constant change of role and his
+real uncertainty as to his own mind. His "seven thousand speeches and
+three hundred uniforms" were only the numerous and really emblematic
+disguises of a character unable to concentrate persistently and
+effectively on any one settled object. With a kind of theatrical
+sincerity he made successive public appearances as War Lord or William
+the Peaceful, as Artist, Poet, Architect, Biblical Critic, Preacher,
+Commercial Magnate, Generalissimo of land forces and Creator of a World
+Navy; and with Whitman he might well have said, "I can resist anything
+better than my own diversity."
+
+If Wilhelm II was popular (as he was) among his own mass-people, it may
+well be guessed that he was a perfect terror to his own political
+advisers and generals. Undoubtedly a large share of responsibility for
+the failure of German diplomacy before the war, and of German strategy
+during the war, must be laid to the account of his ever-changing plans
+and ill-judged interferences. It is difficult, indeed, to imagine a
+character more dangerous as a great nation's leader. But out of dangers
+great things do often arise. A kind of fatality, as I have said, has
+enveloped the whole situation, and still leads on to new and pregnant
+evolutions for the German people and for the whole world. Germany will
+in the end be justified, but in a way far different from what she
+imagined.
+
+Up to the period of Germany's rising commercial prosperity Germany and
+England had been on fairly friendly terms. There was no particular cause
+of difference between them. But when Commercial and Colonial expansion
+became a definite and avowed object of the former's policy, she found,
+whereso she might look, that Britain was there, in the way--"everywhere
+British colonies, British coaling stations, and floating over a fifth of
+the globe the British flag." Could anything be more exasperating? And
+these "absent-minded beggars" the English, without any forethought or
+science or design, without Prussian organization or Prussian bureaucracy
+and statecraft, had simply walked into this huge inheritance without
+knowing what they were doing! It certainly was most provoking. But what
+England had done why should not Germany do--and do it indeed much
+better, with due science and method? Britain had shown no scruple in
+appropriating a fifth part of the globe, and dealing summarily with her
+opponents, whether savage or civilized; why should Germany show scruple?
+
+And it must be confessed that here Germany had a very good case.
+Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. And if Germany, approving
+Britain's example, could only show herself strong enough to imitate it
+in actual fact, Britain at least could not blame her. Besides, in her
+internal industrial development Germany was already showing her equality
+with England. In her iron and steel manufactures, her agricultural
+machines, her cutlery, her armament works, her glass works, her aniline
+dyes, her toys, and her production of a thousand and one articles (like
+lamps) of household use, she was showing a splendid record--better in
+some ways than England. For while England was losing ground, Germany was
+gaining all the time. England was becoming degenerate and lacking in
+enterprise. The Zeiss glassworks at Jena have now become the centre of
+the optical-glass industry of the world. Carl Zeiss, the founder, tried
+hard at one time to get the English glass-makers to turn out a special
+glass for his purpose, with very high refractive index. They would not
+trouble about it. Zeiss consequently was forced to take the matter up
+himself, succeeded at last in getting such glass made in Germany, and
+"collared" the trade. The same happened in other departments.
+
+A certain amount of friction arose. The Germans at one time, knowing the
+English reputation for cutlery, marked their knives and razors as "made
+in Scheffield." The English retaliated in what seemed an insulting way,
+by marking the Fatherland's goods as "made in Germany." With Germany's
+success, commercial jealousy between the two nations (founded on the
+utterly mistaken but popular notion that the financial prosperity of
+the country you trade with is inimical to your own prosperity) began to
+increase. On the German side it was somewhat bitter. On the English
+side, though not so bitter, it was aggravated by the really shameful
+ignorance prevailing in this country with regard to things German, and
+the almost entire neglect of the German tongue in our schools and
+universities and among our literary folk. As an expression (though one
+hopes exceptional) of commercial jealousy on our side I may quote a
+passage from a letter from a business friend of mine in Lancashire. He
+says: "I remember about a _fortnight before_ the war broke out with
+Germany having a conversation with a business man in Manchester, and he
+said to me that we most certainly ought to join in with the other
+nations and sweep the Germans off the face of the earth; I asked him
+_why_, and his only answer was, '_Look at the figures of Germany's
+exports; they are almost as high as ours_!' All he had against them was
+their enterprise--commercial jealousy."
+
+On the other hand, the head of a large warehouse told me only a few days
+later that when travelling in Germany for his firm some fifteen years
+ago he had a conversation with a German, in the course of which he (the
+Englishman) said: "I find your people so obliging and friendly that I
+think surely whatever little differences there are between us as nations
+will be dispelled by closer intercourse, and so all danger of war will
+pass away." "No," replied the German, "you are quite mistaken. You and I
+are friendly; but that is only as individuals. As nations we shall never
+rest till we have war. The English nation may well be contented because
+they have already _got_ all the good things of the Earth--their trade,
+their ports, their colonies; but Germany will not allow this to go on
+for ever. She will fight for her rightful position in the world; she
+will challenge England's mercantile supremacy. She will have to do so,
+and she will not fail."[16]
+
+Thus the plot thickened; the entanglement increased. The Boer War roused
+ill-feeling between England and Germany. The German Navy Bill followed
+in 1900, and the Kaiser announced his intention of creating a sea-power
+the equal of any in the world. Britain of course replied with her Navy
+Bills; and the two countries were committed to a mad race of armaments.
+The whole of Europe stood by anxious. Fear and Greed, the two meanest of
+human passions, ruled everywhere. Fear of a militarist Germany began to
+loom large upon the more pacific States of Europe. On the other hand,
+the fatality of Alsace-Lorraine loomed in Germany, full of forebodings
+of revenge. France had found a friend in Russia--a sinister alliance.
+Britain, convinced that trouble was at hand, came to an understanding
+with France in 1904 and with Russia in 1907. The Triple Entente was born
+as a set-off against the Triple Alliance. The Agadir incident in 1911
+betrayed the purely commercial nature of the designs of the four Powers
+concerned--France, Spain, England, and Germany--and a war over the
+corpse of Morocco was only narrowly avoided. Germany felt quite
+naturally that she was the victim of a plot, and thenceforth was
+alternately convulsed by mad Ambition and haunted by a lurking Terror.
+
+And now we come to the last act of the great drama. So far the
+relations of Germany with Russia had not been strained. If there was any
+fear of Russia, it was quite in the background. The Junkers--themselves
+half Slavs--had supplied a large number of the Russian officials, men
+like Plehve and Klingenberg; the Russian bureaucracy was founded on and
+followed the methods of the German. The Japanese War called Russia's
+attention away to another part of the world, and at the same time
+exposed her weakness. But if Germany was not troubled about Russia, a
+different sentiment was growing up in Russia itself. The people there
+were beginning to hate the official German influence and its hard
+atmosphere of militarism, so foreign to the Russian mind. They were
+looking more and more to France. Bismarck had made a great mistake in
+the Treaty of Berlin--mistake which he afterwards fully recognized and
+regretted. He had used the treaty to damage and weaken Russia, and had
+so thrown Russia into the arms of France.
+
+A strange Nemesis was preparing. The programme of German
+expansion--natural enough in itself, but engineered by Prussia during
+all this long period with that kind of blind haughtiness and overbearing
+assurance which indeed is a "tempting of Providence"--had so far not
+concerned itself much about Muscovite policy; but now there arose a
+sudden fear of danger in that quarter. Hitherto the main German
+"objective" had undoubtedly been England and France, Belgium and
+Holland--the westward movement towards the Atlantic and the great world.
+But now all unexpectedly, or at any rate with dramatic swiftness, Russia
+appeared on the scenes, and there was a _volte face_ towards the East.
+The Balkan Wars of 1912 and 1913 broke out. Whatever simmerings of
+hostility there may have been between Germany and Russia before, the
+relations of the two now became seriously strained. The Balkan League,
+formed under Russian influence, was nominally directed against Turkey;
+but it was also a threat to Austria. It provided a powerful backing to
+the Servian agitation, it was a step towards the dissolution of Austria,
+and it decisively closed the door on Germany's ambition to reach
+Salonika and to obtain a direct connection with the Baghdad Railway.
+Germany and Austria all at once found themselves isolated in the midst
+of Europe, with Russia, Servia, France, and England hostile on every
+side. It was indeed a tragic situation, and all the more so when viewed
+as the sorry outcome and culmination of a hundred years of Prussian
+diplomacy and statecraft.
+
+Why under these circumstances Austria (with Germany of course behind
+her) should have dictated most insulting terms to Servia, and then
+refused to accept Servia's most humble apology, is difficult to
+understand. The only natural explanation is that the Germanic Powers on
+the whole thought it best, even as matters stood, to precipitate war;
+that notwithstanding all the complications, they thought that the
+long-prepared-for hour had come. The German White Book puts the matter
+as a mere _necessity_ of self-defence. "Had the Servians been allowed,
+with the help of Russia and France, to endanger the integrity of the
+neighbouring Monarchy much longer, the consequence must have been the
+gradual disruption of Austria and the subjection of the whole Slav
+world to the Russian sceptre, with the result that the position of the
+German race in Central Europe would have become untenable"; but it is
+obvious that this plea is itself untenable, since it makes a quite
+distant and problematic danger the excuse for a sudden and insulting
+blow--for a blow, in fact, almost certain to precipitate the danger! How
+the matter was decided in Berlin we cannot at present tell, or what the
+motives exactly were. It seems rather probable that the Kaiser threw his
+weight on the side of peace. The German Executive at any rate saw that
+the great war they had so long contemplated and so long prepared for was
+close upon them--only in an unexpected form, hugely complicated and
+threatening. They must have realized the great danger of the situation,
+but they very likely may have thought that by another piece of bluff
+similar to that of 1908-9 they might intimidate Russia a second time;
+and they believed that Russia was behindhand in her military
+preparations. They also, it appears, thought that England would not
+fight, being too much preoccupied with Ireland, India, and other
+troubles. And so it may have seemed that Now was the psychological
+moment.
+
+Austria opened with war on Servia (28th of July), and the next day
+Russia declared a considerable though not complete mobilization. From
+that moment a general conflagration was practically inevitable. The news
+of Russia's warlike movement caused a perfect panic in Berlin. The
+tension of feeling swung round completely for the time being from enmity
+against England and France to fear of Russia. The final mobilization of
+the Russian troops (31st of July) was followed by the telegrams between
+the Kaiser and the Tsar, and by the formal mobilization (really already
+complete) of the German Army and Navy on the 1st of August. War was
+declared at Berlin on the 1st of August, and the same or next day the
+German forces entered Luxemburg. On August 4th they entered Belgium, and
+war was declared by England against Germany.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Looking back at the history of the whole affair, one seems to see, as I
+have said, a kind of fatality about it. The great power and vigour of
+the German peoples, shown by their early history in Europe, had been
+broken up by the religious and other dissensions of the sixteenth and
+seventeenth centuries. It fell to Prussia to become the centre of
+organization for a new Germany. The rich human and social material of
+the German States--their literary, artistic, and scientific culture,
+their philosophy, their learning--clustered curiously enough round the
+hard and military nucleus of the North. It was perhaps their instinct
+and, for the time, their salvation to do so. The new Germany, hemmed in
+on all sides by foreign Powers, could only see her way to reasonable
+expansion and recognition, and a field for her latent activities, by the
+use of force, military force. A long succession of political
+philosophers drilled this into her. She embarked in small wars and
+always with success. She became a political unity and a Great Power in
+Europe. And then came her commercial triumph. Riches beyond all
+expectation flowed in; and a mercantile class arose in her midst whose
+ideals of life were of a corresponding character--the ideals of the
+wealthy shopkeeper. What wonder that, feeling her power, feeling herself
+more than ever baulked of her rights, she cast her eyes abroad, and
+coveted the imperial and commercial supremacy of the world?
+
+In this she had the example of Britain before her. Britain had laid land
+to land and market to market over the globe, and showed no particular
+scruple in the matter. Why should not Germany do the same? It was true
+that Britain always carried the Bible with her--but this was mere
+British cant. Britain carried the Bible in her left hand, but in her
+right a sword; and when she used the latter she always let the former
+drop. Germany could do likewise--but without that odious pretence of
+morality, and those crocodile tears over the unfortunates whom she
+devoured. It was only a question of Might and Organization and Armament.
+
+So far Germany seems to have had a perfectly good case; and though we in
+England might not like her ambitions, we could not reasonably find fault
+with motives so perfectly similar to our own. We might, indeed, make a
+grievance of the frank brutality displayed in her methods and the
+defence of them; but then, she might with equal right object to our
+everlasting pretence of "morality," and our concealment of mercenary
+and imperial aims under the cloak of virtue and innocence. One really
+must confess that it is difficult to say which is the worse.
+
+But if the crystallization of Germany round the Prussian nucleus was for
+the time the source of Germany's success, it is a question whether it is
+not even now becoming something quite different, and the likely cause of
+a serious downfall. It would seem hardly probable that the amalgamation
+between elements so utterly dissimilar can permanently endure. The
+kindly, studious, sociable, rather naively innocent German mass-people
+dragged by the scruff of the neck into the arena of militarism and
+world-politics, may for a time have had their heads turned by the
+exalted position in which they found themselves; but it is not likely
+that they will continue for long to enjoy the situation. With no great
+instinct for politics, nor any marked gift of tact and discernment,
+unsuccessful as a rule as colonists,[17] and with no understanding of
+how to govern--except on the Prussian lines, which are every day
+becoming more obsolete and less adapted to the modern world--the role
+which their empire-building philosophers set out for them is one which
+they are eminently unfitted to fulfil. It is sad, but we cannot blame
+them for the defect. They blame the world in general for siding against
+them in this affair, but do not see that in most cases it has been their
+own want of perception which has left them on the wrong side of the
+hedge.
+
+Bismarck, with his "Blood and Iron" policy, made a huge blunder in not
+perceiving that in the modern world spiritual forces are arising which
+must for ever discredit the same. He emphasized the blunder by wresting
+Alsace-Lorraine from France, and again by crippling Russia in the treaty
+of 1878--thus making enemies where generosity might have brought him
+friends. The German Executive in July of last year (1914) showed
+extraordinary want of tact in not seeing that Russia, rebuffed in 1908
+over Bosnia and Herzegovina, would never put up with a _second_ insult
+of the same kind over Servia. The same Government was strangely unable
+to perceive that whatever it might tactically gain by the invasion and
+devastation of Belgium would be more than lost by the moral effect of
+such action on the whole world; and notwithstanding its army of spies,
+it had not the sense to see that England, whether morally bound to or
+not, was certain, at all costs, to fight in defence of Belgium's
+neutrality. So true it is that without the understanding which comes
+from the heart, all the paraphernalia of science and learning and the
+material results of organization and discipline are of little good.
+
+But however we choose to apportion the blame or at least the
+responsibility for the situation among the various Governments
+concerned, the main point and the main lesson of it all is to see that
+any such apportionment does not much matter! As long as our Governments
+are constructed as they are--that is, on the principle of representing,
+not the real masses of their respective peoples, but the interests of
+certain classes, especially the commercial, financial, and military
+classes--so long will such wars be inevitable. The real blame rests,
+not with the particular Foreign policy of this or that country but with
+the fact that Europe, already rising through her mass-peoples into a far
+finer and more human and spiritual life than of old, still lies bound in
+the chains of an almost Feudal social order.
+
+When the great German mass-peoples find this out, when they discover the
+little rift in the lute which now separates their real quality from the
+false standards of their own dominant military and commercial folk, then
+their true role in the world will begin, and a glorious role it will be.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[13] "A German," he said, "could not live long in the atmosphere of
+England--an atmosphere of sham, prudery, conventionality, and
+hollowness"! See article on "Treitschke," by W.H. Dawson, in the
+_Nineteenth Century_ for January 1915.
+
+[14] The influence, however, of Bernhardi in his own country has been
+somewhat exaggerated in England.
+
+[15] It seems that the same remark is made about the Germans in the
+U.S.A., that they take little interest in politics there.
+
+[16] This attitude is exactly corroborated by Herr Maximilian Harden's
+manifesto, originally published in _Die Zukunft,_ and lately reprinted
+in the _New York Times_.
+
+[17] Though this is only, perhaps, true of their State colonies. In
+their individual and missionary colonizing groups, and as pioneer
+settlers, they seem to have succeeded well.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+THE HEALING OF, NATIONS[18]
+
+It is quite possible that the little rift within the lute, alluded to in
+the concluding paragraph of last chapter, may widen so far as to cause
+before long great internal changes and reconstructions in Germany
+herself; but short of that happening, it would seem that there is no
+alternative for the Allies but to continue the war until her Militarism
+can be put out of court, and that for long years to come. There is no
+alternative, because she has revealed her hand too clearly as a
+menace--if she should prevail--of barbarous force to the whole world. It
+is this menace which has roused practically the whole world against her.
+And there is this amount of good in the situation, namely, that while
+with the victory of Germany a German "terror" might be established
+through the world, with the victory of the Allies neither England, nor
+France, nor Russia, nor little Belgium, nor any other country, could
+claim a final credit and supremacy. With the latter victory we shall be
+freed from the nightmare claim of any one nation's world-empire.
+
+But in order to substantiate this result England must also abdicate her
+claim. She must abdicate her mere crass insistence on commercial
+supremacy. The "Nation of Shopkeepers" theory, which has in the past
+made her the hated of other nations, which has created within her
+borders a vulgar and unpleasant class--the repository of much arrogant
+wealth--must cease to be the standard of her life. I have before me at
+this moment a manifesto of "The British Empire League," patronized by
+royalty and the dukes, and of which Lord Rothschild is treasurer. The
+constitution of the League was framed in 1895; and I note with regret
+that positively the five "principal objects of the League" mentioned
+therein have solely to do with the extension and facilitation of
+Britain's trade, and the "co-operation of the military and naval forces
+of the Empire with a special view to the due protection of the trade
+routes." Not a word is said _in the whole manifesto_ about the human and
+social responsibilities of this vast Empire; not a word about the
+guardianship and nurture of native races, their guidance and assistance
+among the pitfalls of civilization; not a word about the principles of
+honour and just dealing with regard to our civilized neighbour-nations
+in Europe and elsewhere; not a word about the political freedom and
+welfare of all classes at home. One rubs one's eyes, and looks at the
+document again; but it is so. Its one inspiration is--Trade. Seeing
+that, I confess to a sinking of the heart. Can we blame Germany for
+struggling at all costs to enlarge her borders, when _that_ is what the
+British Empire means?
+
+Until we rise, as a nation, to a conception of what we mean by our
+national life, finer and grander than a mere counting of trade-returns,
+what can we expect save failure and ill-success?
+
+Possibly in the conviction that she is fighting for a worthy object (the
+ending of militarism), and in the determination (if sincerely carried
+out) of once more playing her part in the world as the protector of
+small nations, Britain may find her salvation, and a cause which will
+save her soul. It is certainly encouraging to find that there is a
+growing feeling in favour of the recognition and rehabilitation of the
+small peoples of the world. If it is true that Britain by her grasping
+Imperial Commercialism in the past (and let us hope that period _is_
+past) has roused jealousy and hatred among the other nations, equally is
+it true that Germany to-day, by her dreams of world-conquest, has been
+rousing hatred and fear. But the day has gone by of world-empires
+founded on the lust of conquest, whether that conquest be military or
+commercial. The modern peoples surely are growing out of dreams so
+childish as that. The world-empire of Goethe and Beethoven is even now
+far more extensive, far more powerful, than that which Wilhelm II and
+his Junkers are seeking to encompass. There is something common,
+unworthy, in the effort of domination; and while the Great Powers have
+thus vulgarized themselves, it is the little countries who have gone
+forward in the path of progress. "In modern Europe what do we not owe to
+little Switzerland, lighting the torch of freedom six hundred years ago,
+and keeping it alight through all the centuries when despotic monarchies
+held the rest of the European Continent? And what to free Holland, with
+her great men of learning and her painters surpassing those of all other
+countries save Italy? So the small Scandinavian nations have given to
+the world famous men of science, from Linnaeus downwards, poets like
+Tegner and Bjoernson, scholars like Madvig, dauntless explorers like
+Fridthiof Nansen. England had, in the age of Shakespeare, Bacon, and
+Milton, a population little larger than that of Bulgaria to-day. The
+United States, in the days of Washington and Franklin and Jefferson and
+Hamilton and Marshall, counted fewer inhabitants than Denmark or
+Greece."[19]
+
+In all their internal politics and social advancement, Switzerland,
+Holland, Denmark, Norway and Sweden, Finland (until the paw of the Bear
+was on her) and Belgium (till the claw of the Spread-Eagle) have been
+well to the fore. It is they who have carried on the banner of idealism
+which Germany herself uplifted when she was a small people or a group of
+small peoples. It is they who have really had prosperous, healthy,
+independent, and alert populations. How much more interesting, we may
+say, would Europe be under the variety of such a regime than under the
+monotonous bureaucracy and officialism of any Great Power! And to some
+such scheme we must adhere. It would mean, of course, the alliance of
+all the States of Western Europe, large and small (and including both a
+remodelled Germany and a largely remodelled Austria) in one great
+Federation--whose purpose would be partly to unite and preserve Europe
+against any common foe, from the East or elsewhere, and partly to
+regulate any overweening ambition of a member of the Federation, such as
+might easily become a menace to the other members. A secondary but most
+important result of the formation of such a United States of Europe
+would be that while each State would probably preserve a small military
+establishment of its own, the enormous and fatal incubus of the present
+armaments system would be rendered unnecessary, and so at last the
+threat of national bankruptcy and ruin, which has of late pursued the
+nations Like an evil dream, might pass away. But in that matter of
+finance it cannot be disguised that a terrible period still awaits the
+European peoples. Already the moneylenders sitting on their chests form
+a veritable nightmare; but with fresh debts by the thousand million
+sterling being contracted, there is great danger that the mass-peoples
+beneath will be worse paralysed and broken even than they are
+now--unless, indeed, with a great effort they rouse themselves and throw
+off the evil burden.
+
+That the world is waking up to a recognition of _racial_ rights--that
+is, the right of each race to have as far as possible its own
+Government, instead of being lorded over by an alien race--is a good
+sign; and a European settlement along that line must be pressed for. At
+last, after centuries of discomfort, we at home are finding our solution
+of the Irish question in this very obvious way; and it may be that
+Europe, tired of war, may finally have the sense to adopt the same
+principle. Of course, there are cases where populations are so mixed,
+as, for instance, the Czechs and Slovaks and Germans in Bohemia and
+Moravia, or where small colonies of one race are so embedded in the
+midst of another race, as are the Germans among the Roumanians of
+Transylvania, that this solution may be difficult. That is no reason,
+however, why the general principle should not be applied. It _must_,
+indeed, be applied if Europe is not to return to barbarism.
+
+And it interests us--having regard to what I have said about _class_
+rule being so fruitful a cause of war--to remember that the rule of one
+race by another always does mean class rule. The alien conquerors who
+descend upon a country become the military and landlord caste there.
+Thus the Norman barons in England, the English squires in Ireland, the
+Magyars in Hungary, the German barons in East Prussia and the Baltic
+provinces, and so forth. They make their profit and maintain themselves
+out of the labour and the taxation of the subject peoples.
+
+In the earlier forms of social life, when men lived in tribes, a rude
+equality and democracy prevailed; there was nothing that could well be
+called class-government; there was simply custom and the leadership of
+the elders of the tribe. Then with the oncoming of what we call
+civilization, and the growth of the sense of property, differences
+arose--accumulations of wealth and power by individuals, enslavements of
+tribes by other tribes; and classes sprang up, and class-government, and
+so the material of endless suffering and oppression and hatred and
+warfare. I have already explained (in the Introduction) that Class in
+itself as the mere formation within a nation of groups of similar
+occupation and activity--working harmoniously with each other and with
+the nation--is a perfectly natural and healthy phenomenon; it is only
+when it means groups pursuing their own interests counter to each other
+and to the nation that it becomes diseased. There will come a time when
+the class-element in this latter sense will be ejected from society, and
+society will return again to its democratic form and structure. There
+will be no want, in that time, of variety of occupation and talent, or
+of differentiation in the social organism; quite the contrary; but
+simply there will be no predatory or parasitical groups within such
+organism, whose, interests will run counter to the whole, and which will
+act (as such classes act now) as foci and seedbeds of disease and strife
+within the whole. With a return to the recognition of racial rights and
+autonomies over the world, it is clear that one great cause of strife
+will be removed, and we shall be one step nearer to the ending of the
+preposterous absurdity of war.
+
+And talking about the difficulty of sorting out mixed populations, or of
+dealing with small colonies of one race embedded in the midst of another
+race, it is evident that once you get rid of autocratic or military or
+class-government of any kind, and return to democratic forms, this
+difficulty will be much reduced or disappear. Small democratic communes
+are perfectly simple to form in groups of any magnitude or minuteness
+which may be desirable; and such groups would easily federate or ally
+themselves with surrounding democracies of alien race, whereas if
+lorded over by alien conquerors they would be in a state of chronic
+rebellion. Of such democratic alliance and federation of peoples of
+totally different race, Switzerland supplies a well-recognized and
+far-acclaimed example.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That in the future there will be an outcry in favour of Conscription
+made by certain parties in Britain goes without saying; but that must be
+persistently opposed. The nation says it is fighting to put down
+Militarism. Why, then, make compulsory militarism foundational in our
+national life? To abolish militarism _by_ militarism is like "putting
+down Drink" by swallowing it! The whole lesson of this war is against
+conscription. Germany could never have "imposed herself" on Europe
+without it. And yet her soldiers, brave as they naturally are, and
+skilfully as they have fought, have not done themselves justice. How
+could they under such conditions--forced into battle by their officers,
+flung in heaps on the enemy's guns? The voluntary response in Britain to
+the call to arms has been inspiriting; and if voluntaryism means
+momentary delay in a crisis, still it means success in the end. No
+troops have fought more finely than the British. Said Surgeon-General
+Evatt, speaking in London in October--and General Evatt's word in such a
+matter ought to carry weight: "After long experience in studying
+Russian, German, Bavarian, Saxon, French, Spanish, and American fighting
+units, my verdict is unhesitatingly in favour of the British.... What
+has occurred lately has been a splendid triumph of citizenship, because
+people were allowed their proper liberty and the consciousness of
+freely, sharing in a great Empire."
+
+Besides it must always be remembered that conscription gives a
+Government power to initiate an iniquitous war, whereas voluntaryism
+keeps the national life clean and healthy. A free people will not fight
+for the trumped-up schemes and selfish machinations of a class--not,
+indeed, unless they are grossly deceived by, Press and Class plots.
+Anyhow, to force men to fight in causes which they do not approve, to
+compel them to adopt a military career when their temperaments are
+utterly unsuited to such a thing, or when their consciences or their
+religion forbid them--these things are both foolish and wicked.
+
+If the nation wants soldiers it must pay for them. England, for example,
+is rolling in wealth; and it is simply a scandal that the wealthy
+classes should sit at home in comfort and security and pay to the man in
+the trenches--who is risking his life at every moment, and often living
+in such exhaustion and misery as actually to wish for the bullet which
+will _end_ his life--no more than the minimum wage of an ordinary
+day-labourer; and that they should begrudge every penny paid to his
+dependents--whether he be living or dead--or to himself when he returns,
+a lifelong cripple, to his home. To starve and stint your own soldiers,
+to discourage recruiting, and then to make the consequent failure of men
+to come forward into an excuse for conscription is the meanest of
+policies. As a matter of fact, the circumstances of the present war show
+that with anything like decent reward for their services there is an
+abundant, an almost over-abundant, supply of men ready to flock to the
+standard of their country in a time of necessity. Nor must it be
+forgotten, in this matter of pay, that the general type and average of
+our forces to-day, whether naval or military, is far higher than it was
+fifty, years ago. The men are just as plucky, and more educated, more
+alert, more competent in every way. To keep them up to this high
+standard of efficiency they need a high standard of care and
+consideration.
+
+It may, however, be said--in view of our present industrial conditions,
+and the low standard of physical health and vitality prevailing among
+the young folk of our large towns--that physical drill and scout
+training, including ambulance and other work, and qualification in
+_some_ useful trade, might very well be made a part of our general
+educational system, for rich and poor alike, say, between the ages of
+sixteen and eighteen. Such a training would to each individual boy be
+immensely valuable, and by providing some rudimentary understanding of
+military, affairs and the duties of public service and citizenship,
+would enable him to choose _how_ he could be helpful to the
+nation--provided always he were not forced to make his choice in a
+direction distasteful or repugnant to him. In any good cause, as in a
+war of _defence_ against a foreign enemy, it is obvious enough, as I
+have said, that there would be plenty of native enthusiasm forthcoming
+without legal or official pressure. However, I have enlarged a little on
+the subject of Conscription in a later chapter, and will say no more
+here.
+
+But the burning and pressing question is: Why should we--we, the
+"enlightened and civilized" nations of Europe--get involved in these
+senseless wars at all? And surely _this_ war will, of all wars, force an
+answer to the question. Here, for the last twenty years, have these
+so-called Great Powers been standing round, all professing that their
+one desire is peace, and all meanwhile arming to the teeth; each
+accusing the others of militant intentions, and all lamenting that "war
+is inevitable." Here they have been forming their _Ententes_ and
+Alliances, carrying on their diplomatic cabals and intrigues, studying
+the map and adjusting the Balance of Power--all, of course, with the
+best intentions--and lo! with the present result! What nonsense! What
+humbug! What an utter bankruptcy of so-called diplomacy! When will the
+peoples themselves arise and put a stop to this fooling--the people who
+give their lives and pay the cost of it all? If the present-day,
+diplomats and Foreign Ministers have sincerely striven for peace, then
+their utter incapacity and futility have been proved to the hilt, and
+they must be swept away. If they have not sincerely striven for peace,
+but only pretended to so strive, then also they must be swept away, for
+deceit in such a matter is unpardonable.
+
+And no doubt the latter alternative is the true one. There has been a
+pretence of the Governments all round--a pretence of deep concern for
+humanity and the welfare of the mass-peoples committed to their charge;
+but the real moving power beneath has been _class_-interest--the
+interest of the great commercial class in each nation, with its acolyte
+and attendant, the military or aristocratic. It is this class, with its
+greeds and vanities and suspicions and jealousies, which is the cause of
+strife; the working-masses of the various nations have no desire to
+quarrel with each other. Nay, they are animated by a very different
+spirit.
+
+In an interesting article published by the German Socialist paper
+_Vorwaerts_, on September 27, 1914, and reproduced in our Press, occurred
+the following passage, in which the war is traced to its commercial
+sources: "Germany has enjoyed an economical prosperity such as no other
+country has experienced during the last decade. That meant with the
+capitalist class a revival of strong Imperialist tendencies, which have
+been evident enough. This, again, gave rise to mistrust abroad, at
+least in capitalist circles, who did their best to communicate their
+feelings to the great masses, ... and so the German people as a whole
+has been made responsible for what has been the work of a small
+class.... The comrades abroad can be assured that though German workmen
+are ready to defend their country they will, above all, not forget that
+their interests are the same as those of the proletariat in other
+countries, who also against their will were forced into the war and now
+do their duty. They can rest assured that the German people are not less
+humane than others--a result to which education through workmen's
+organizations has greatly contributed. If German soldiers in the
+excitement of war should commit atrocities, it can be said that among
+us--and also in other circles--there will not be a single person to
+approve of them."
+
+Reading this statement--so infinitely more sensible and human than
+anything to be found in the ordinary Capitalist Press of England and
+Germany--one cannot help feeling that there is practically little hope
+for the future _until_ the international working masses throughout
+Europe come forward and, joining hands with each other, take charge of
+the foolish old Governments (who represent the remains of the decadent
+feudal and commercial systems), and shape the Western world at last to
+the heart's desire of the peoples that inhabit it.
+
+"The peoples of the world desire peace," said Bourtzeff, the Russian
+exile[20]--and he, who has been in many lands, ought to know. But they
+also--if they would obtain peace--must exercise an eternal vigilance
+lest they fall into the hands of class-schemers and be betrayed into
+that which they do _not_ desire. The example of Germany--which we have
+considered above--shows how easily a good and friendly and pacific
+people may, by mere political inattention and ignorance, and by a
+quasi-scientific philosophy, which imposes on its political ignorance,
+be led into a disastrous situation. It shows how preposterous it is that
+Governments generally--as at present constituted--should set themselves
+up as the representatives of the mass-peoples' wishes, and as the
+arbiters of national destinies. And it shows how vitally necessary it is
+that the people, even the working masses and the peasants, should have
+some sort of political education and understanding.
+
+In that matter, of the political education of the masses, America, in
+her United States and Canada, yields a fine example. Though not
+certainly perfect, her general standard of education and alertness is
+infinitely superior to that of the peoples of the Old World. And some
+writers contend that it is just in that--in her general level and not in
+her freaks of genius--that America's claim lies to distinction among the
+nations of the earth. If you consider the peoples of the Old World,
+whether in England, Scotland, or Ireland, in France, Spain, Italy,
+Germany, Austria, Russia, or farther East and farther South over the
+earth, you will find the great masses, on the land or in the workshops,
+still sunk in vast ignorance, apathy, and irresponsibility. Only here
+and there among those I have mentioned, and notably among the smaller
+peoples of Western Europe, like Switzerland, Holland, Denmark, and
+Sweden, are the masses beginning to stir, as it were, towards the
+daylight. It can only be with the final opening of their eyes and
+awakening from slumber that the rule of the classes will be at an end.
+But that awakening--with the enormous spread of literature and
+locomotion and intercommunication of all kinds over the modern world,
+cannot now, one would say, be long delayed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile, and until that era arrives, we can only insist (at any rate
+in our own country) on a different kind of foreign policy from what we
+have had--a policy open and strong, not founded on Spread-Eagleism, and
+decidedly not founded on commercialism and the interests of the trading
+classes (as the Empire League seem to desire), but directed towards the
+real welfare of the masses in our own and other lands. If our rulers and
+representatives really seek peace, here is the obvious way to ensue and
+secure it--namely, by making political friends of those in all countries
+who _desire peace_ and are already stretching hands of amity to each
+other. What simpler and more obvious way can there be? "We hail our
+working-class comrades of every land," says the Manifesto of the
+Independent Labour Party. "Across the roar of guns we send greeting to
+the German Socialists. They have laboured unceasingly to promote good
+relations with Britain, as we with Germany. They are no enemies of ours,
+but faithful friends. In forcing this appalling crime upon the nations,
+it is the rulers, the diplomats, the militarists, who have sealed their
+doom. In tears and blood and bitterness the greater Democracy will be
+born. With steadfast faith we greet the future; our cause is holy and
+imperishable, and the labour of our hands has not been in vain."
+
+Yes, we must have a foreign policy strong and sincere--and not only so,
+but open and avowed. The present Diplomatic system is impossible of
+continuance. It has grown up in an automatic way out of antiquated
+conditions, and no one in particular can be blamed for it. But that
+young men, profoundly ignorant of the world, and having the very _borne_
+outlook on life which belongs to our gilded youth (67 per cent. of the
+candidates for the Diplomatic Corps being drawn from Eton alone), having
+also in high degree that curious want of cosmopolitan sympathy and
+adaptability which is characteristic of the English wealthy classes
+(every candidate for the Corps must have at least L400 a year of his
+own)--that such a type should be charged with the representation of the
+United Kingdom in foreign affairs is to-day a hopeless anomaly, and
+indeed a very great danger. The recommendations just published of the
+Royal Commission are in the right direction, but they need urgent
+reinforcement and extension by the pressure of public opinion. And if in
+the present-day situation of affairs we cannot refer every question
+which arises directly to the nation, we must at least do away with the
+one-man-Secretary system, and have in his place a large and responsible
+committee, representative, not of any one party or class but as far as
+possible of the whole people. [At this moment, for instance, as far as
+we know, the terms of settlement of the present war may actually be
+being arranged over our heads, and yet that may be taking place quite
+apart from the approval and the wishes of the most weighty portion of
+the nation.]
+
+Another thing that we must look to with some hope for the future is the
+influence of Women. Profoundly shocked as they are by the senseless
+folly and monstrous bloodshed of the present conflict, it is certain
+that when this phase is over they will insist on having a voice in the
+politics of the future. The time has gone by when the mothers and wives
+and daughters of the race will consent to sit by meek and silent while
+the men in their madness are blowing each other's brains out and making
+mountains out of corpses. It is hardly to be expected that war will
+cease from the earth this side of the millennium; but women will surely
+only, condone it when urged by some tremendous need or enthusiasm; they
+will not rejoice--as men sometimes do--in the mere lust of domination
+and violence. With their keen perception of the little things of life,
+and the way in which the big things are related to these, they will see
+too clearly the cost of war in broken hearts and ruined homes to allow
+their men to embark in it short of the direst necessity.
+
+And through the women I come back to the elementary causes and roots of
+the present war--the little fibres in our social life which have fed,
+and are still feeding, the fatal tree whose fruits are, not the healing
+but the strife of nations. In the present day--though there may be other
+influences--it is evident enough that rampant and unmeasured commercial
+greed, concentrating itself in a special class, is the main cause, the
+tap-root, of the whole business. And this, equally evidently, springs
+out of the innumerable greed of _individuals_--the countless fibres that
+combine to one result--the desire of private persons to get rich quick
+at all costs, to make their gains out of others' losses, to take
+advantage of each other, to triumph in success regardless of others'
+failures. And these unworthy motives and inhuman characteristics again
+spring obviously out of the mean and materialistic ideals of life which
+still have sway among us--the ideals of wealth and luxury and
+display--of which the horrors of war are the sure and certain obverse.
+As long as we foster these things in our private life, so long will they
+lead in our public life to the embitterment of nation against nation.
+What is the ruling principle of the interior and domestic conduct of
+each nation to-day--even within its own borders--but an indecent
+scramble of class against class, of individual against individual? To
+rise to noisy power and influence, and to ill-bred wealth and riches, by
+trampling others down and profiting by their poverty is--as Ruskin long
+ago told us--the real and prevailing motive of our peoples, whatever
+their professions of Christianity may be. Small wonder, then, if out of
+such interior conditions there rise to dominance in the great world
+those very classes who exhibit the same vulgarities in their most
+perfect form, and that _their_ conflict with each other, as between
+nation and nation, exhibit to us, in the magnified and hideous form of
+war, the same sore which is all the time corrupting our internal
+economy. The brutality, and atrocity of modern war is but the reflection
+of the brutality and inhumanity of our commercial regime and ideals. The
+slaughter of the battlefields may be more obvious, but it is less
+deliberate, and it is doubtful whether it be really worse, than the
+daily and yearly slaughter of the railways, the mines, and the
+workshops. That being so, it is no good protesting against, and being
+shocked at, an evil which is our very own creation; and to cry out
+against war-lords is useless, when it is _our_ desires and ambitions
+which set the war-lords in motion. Let all those who indulge and
+luxuriate in ill-gotten wealth to-day (and, indeed, their name is
+Legion), as well as all those who meanly and idly groan because their
+wealth is taken from them, think long and deeply on these things. Truth
+and simplicity of life are not mere fads; they are something more than
+abstractions and private affairs, something more than social ornaments.
+They are vital matters which lie at the root of national well-being.
+They are things which in their adoption or in their denial search right
+through the tissue of public life. To live straightforwardly by your
+own labour is to be at peace with the world. To live on the labour of
+others is not only to render your life false at home, but it is to
+encroach on those around you, to invite resistance and hostility; and
+when such a principle of life is favoured by a whole people, that people
+will not only be in a state of internal strife, but will assuredly raise
+up external enemies on its borders who will seek its destruction.
+
+The working masses and the peasants, whose lives are in the great whole
+honest--who support themselves (and a good many others besides) by their
+own labour--_have no quarrel_; and they are the folk who to-day
+--notwithstanding lies and slanders galore, and much of race-prejudice
+and ignorance--stretch hands of amity and peace to each other wellnigh
+all over the world. It is of the modern moneyed classes that we may say
+that their life-principle (that of taking advantage of others and living
+on their labour) is essentially false[21]; and these are the classes
+which are distinctively the cause of enmities in the modern world, and
+which, as I have explained above, are able to make use of the military
+class in order to carry out their designs. It can only be with the
+ending of the commercial and military classes, as classes, that peace
+can come to the world. China, founded on the anti-commercial principles
+of Confucius, disbanded her armies a thousand years ago, and only quite
+lately--under the frantic menace of Western civilization--felt compelled
+to reorganize them. She was a thousand years before her time. It can
+only be with the emergence of a new structure of society, based on the
+principle of solidarity and mutual aid among the individuals of a
+nation, and so extending to solidarity and mutual aid among nations,
+that peace can come to the Western world. It is the best hope of the
+present war that, like some frightful illness, it marks the working out
+of deep-seated evils and their expulsion from the social organism; and
+that with its ending the old false civilization, built on private gain,
+will perish, crushed by its own destructive forces; and in its place the
+new, the real culture, will arise, founded on the essential unity of
+mankind.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[18] Reprinted by permission from the _English Review_ for January,
+1915.
+
+[19] Lord Bryce in the _Daily Chronicle_, October, 1914.
+
+[20] In a letter to the _Times_, September 18, 1914.
+
+[21] There is no reason in itself why Commercialism should be false.
+Commerce and interchange of goods is of course a perfectly natural and
+healthy function of social life. Indeed, it is a function which should
+have a most beneficent influence in binding nations together. It is when
+that function is perverted to private gain that it becomes false. But of
+course without this perversion there would be no distinctively
+commercial _class_ with interests opposed to those of the community.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+PATRIOTISM AND INTERNATIONALISM
+
+Many Socialists and sympathizers with the Labour movement over the world
+belittle Patriotism, and seem to think that by decrying and discouraging
+the love of one's country one will bring nearer the day of
+Internationalism.
+
+I do not agree. Of course we all know there is a lot of sham and false
+Patriotism--such as, for instance, Pressmongers magnify and make use of
+in order to sell their papers, or such as comfortable, well-to-do folk
+with big dividends do so heartily encourage among the poorer classes,
+who can thus be persuaded to fight for them; we know, indeed, that there
+is a good deal of very mean and unworthy Patriotism--the flag-waving
+variety, for instance, which we saw in the Boer war--exultant over a
+small nation of farmers defending their homes, and whipped up
+deliberately by a commercial gang for their own purposes; or the
+narrow-minded, lying, canting variety which blinds a people to its own
+faults, and credits itself with all the moral virtues, while at the same
+time it gloats over every defamation of the enemy. There is a good deal
+of that variety in the present war. And it is easy to understand that
+many people, sick of that sort of Patriotism, would go straight for a
+ready-made denial of all frontiers and boundaries.
+
+Still, allowing to the full all that can be said in the above direction,
+one must admit also that there is such a thing as a true Patriotism, and
+I do not see why--however socialist or cosmopolitan we may be--we should
+not recognize what is an obvious fact. There is a love of one's own
+country--a genuine attachment to and preference for it--"in spite of all
+temptations to belong to other nations"--which after all is very
+natural, and on the whole a sound and healthy thing. There may be some
+people whose minds are so lofty that to them all peoples and races are
+alike and without preference; but one knows that the vast multitudes of
+our mortal earth are not made like that. "If a man love not his brother
+whom he hath seen, how shall he love God whom he hath not seen?" It is
+certainly easier and more natural to make an effort and a sacrifice for
+the sake of your own countrymen whom you know so well and with whom you
+are linked by a thousand ties than for the sake of foreigners who are
+little more than a name--however worthy you may honestly believe the
+latter to be. It is more obvious and instinctive for a man to work for
+his own family than to give his services to his municipality or his
+county council. Charity begins at home, and the wider spirit of human
+love and helpfulness which passes beyond the narrow bounds of the family
+hearth has perhaps to find an intermediate sphere before it can unfold
+itself and expand in the great field of Humanity among all colours and
+races.
+
+Personally, I am probably more International by temperament than
+Patriotic. I feel a strange kinship and intimacy with all sorts of queer
+and outlandish races--Chinese, Egyptian, Mexican, or Polynesian--and
+always a slight but persistent sense of estrangement and
+misapprehension among my own people. Flag-waving certainly, does not
+stir me. Still, I feel that, whatever one's country may be, the love of
+it has value and is not to be scoffed at. The Nation is bigger than the
+Parish; and to a man of limited outlook it is a means of getting him out
+of his own very narrow and local circle of life; to rob him of that in
+order to jump him into a cosmopolitan attitude (which to him may be
+quite empty and arid) is a mistake. It is easy enough to break the shell
+for the growing chick, but if you break it too soon your chick, when
+hatched, will be dead.
+
+If you look at the great majority of those who are enthusing just now
+about our country and patriotically detesting the Germans, you will see
+that notwithstanding lies and slanders and cant galore, and much of
+conceit and vanity, their patriotism _is_ pulling them together from one
+end of Britain to another, causing them to help each other in a thousand
+ways, urging them to make sacrifices for the common good, helping them
+to grow the sinews and limbs of the body politic, and even the wings
+which will one day transport that body into a bigger world. Really, I
+think we ought to be very grateful to the Germans for doing all this for
+us; and the Germans ought to be grateful to us for an exactly similar
+reason. You will see plainly enough that the great majority of those who
+are at this moment giving their thoughts and lives for their countrymen
+and neighbours either in Germany or in England could not by any manner
+of possibility be expected to act with similar self-surrender and
+enthusiasm in an International cause. They are not grown to that point
+of development yet, and it is better that they should learn helpfulness
+and brotherhood within somewhat narrow bounds than perhaps not learn
+these things at all in the open and indiscriminate field of universal
+equality. After all, to stimulate love and friendship there is nothing
+like a common enemy!
+
+It is an old story and an old difficulty. There comes a time when every
+institution of social life becomes rotten and diseased and has to be
+removed to make way for the new life which is expanding behind it.
+Broadly speaking, we may say that the institution of Patriotism is
+_approaching_ this period--at any rate over Western Europe. The outlines
+of an International life are becoming clearly visible behind it.
+
+What we have to do is to help on that international life and spirit to
+our best, and certainly clear out a lot of sham patriotism that stands
+in its way; but this has to be done with discrimination and a certain
+tact. People must be made to see that "my country, right or wrong," is
+not the genuine article. They must be made to understand how easily this
+sort of slapdash sentiment throws them into the hands of scheming
+politicians and wire-pullers for sinister purposes--how readily it can
+be made use of directly it has become a mere unreasoning instinct and
+habit. If a war is wanted, or conscription, or a customs tariff--it may
+be merely to suit the coward fears of autocratic rulers, or the selfish
+interests of some group of contractors or concession-hunters--all that
+the parties concerned have to do is to play the patriotic stop, and they
+stand a good chance of getting what they want. Just now there is a good
+bit of fleecing going on in this fashion--both of the public and the
+wage-workers. Even in its more healthy forms, when delayed in too long,
+patriotism easily becomes morbid and delays also the birth of the larger
+spirit which is waiting behind it. The Continental Socialists complain
+that their cause has hitherto made little progress in Alsace-Lorraine
+and Poland for the simple reason that political circumstances have
+over-accentuated the patriotic devotion in both these regions.
+
+Thus we have to push on with discrimination. Always we have to remember
+that the wide, free sense of equality and kinship which lies at the root
+of Internationalism is the real goal, and that the other thing is but a
+step on the way, albeit a necessary step. Always we have to press on
+towards that great and final liberation--the realization of our common
+humanity, the recognition of the same great soul of man slumbering under
+all forms in the heart of all races--the one guarantee and assurance of
+the advent of World-peace.
+
+That we are verging rapidly towards some altered perspective I quite
+believe; and the day is coming when in the social and political spheres
+International activity will make excessive patriotism seem somewhat
+ridiculous--as, in fact, it has already done in the spheres of Science
+and Industry and Art. Still, I also do not see any reason why the two
+tendencies should not work side by side. The health of local organs and
+members in the human body is by no means incompatible with the health of
+the whole organism, and we may understand the great map of Humanity all
+the better for its being differently coloured in different parts.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+THE PSYCHOLOGY OF, WAR AND RECRUITING
+
+_November_, 1914.
+
+I sometimes think the country-folk round about where I live the most
+sensible people I know. They say with regard to the War--or said at its
+outset: "What are they fighting about? _I_ can't make out, and nobody
+seems to know. What I've seen o' the Germans they're a decent enough
+folk--much like ourselves. If there's got to be fightin', why don't them
+as makes the quarrel go and fight wi' each other? But killing all them
+folk that's got no quarrel, and burnin' their houses and farms, and
+tramplin' down all that good corn--and all them brave men dead what can
+never live again--its scandalous, I say."
+
+This at the outset. But afterwards, when the papers had duly explained
+that the Germans were mere barbarians and savages, bent on reducing the
+whole world to military slavery, they began to take sides and feel there
+was good cause for fighting. Meanwhile almost exactly the same thing was
+happening in Germany, where England was being represented as a greedy
+and deceitful Power, trying to boss and crush all the other nations.
+Thus each nation did what was perhaps, from its own point of view, the
+most sensible thing to do--persuaded itself that it was fighting in a
+just and heroic cause, that it was a St. George against the Dragon, a
+David out to slay Goliath.
+
+The attitude of the peasant, however, or agriculturist, all over the
+world, is the same. He does not deal in romantic talk about St. George
+and the Dragon. He sees too clearly the downright facts of life. He has
+no interest in fighting, and he does not want to fight. Being the one
+honest man in the community--the one man who creates, not only his own
+food but the food of others besides, and who knows the value of his
+work, he perceives without illusion the foolery of War, the hideous
+waste of it, the shocking toll of agony and loss which it inflicts--and
+if left to himself would as a rule have no hand in it. It is only
+occasionally--when ground down beyond endurance by the rent-racking
+classes above him, or threatened beyond endurance by an enemy from
+abroad, that he turns his reaping-hook into a sword and his muck-fork
+into a three-pronged bayonet, exchanges his fowling-piece for a rifle,
+and fights savagely for his home and his bit of a field.
+
+England, curiously enough, is almost the only country in the world where
+the peasant or ordinary field-worker _has_ no field of his own[22]; and
+I find that in the villages and among the general agricultural
+population there is even now but little enthusiasm for the present
+war--though the raid on our coasts at Scarborough and other places
+certainly did something to stimulate it. Partly this is, as I have said,
+because the agricultural worker knows that his work is foundational, and
+that nothing else is of importance compared with it. [At this moment,
+for instance, there are peasants in Belgium and Northern France
+ploughing and sowing, and so forth, actually close to the trenches and
+between the fighting lines.] Partly it is because in England, alas! the
+countryman _has_ so little right or direct interest in the soil. One
+wonders sometimes why he _should_ feel any enthusiasm. Why should men
+want to fight for their land when they have no land to fight for--when
+the most they can do is to die at the foot of a trespass-board, singing,
+"Britons never, never shall be slaves!"
+
+If the War is ever finished, surely one of the first things to be
+insisted on afterwards, with regard to England, must be the settlement
+of the actual people (not the parasites) on the land. Else how, after
+all that they have gone through, can it be expected that they will ever
+again "fight for their country"? But that this vast landless population
+in the villages and country districts--hungering as it is for some sure
+tenure and interest in the soil--should actually, as now, be berated and
+scolded by superior persons of the "upper" classes, and threatened with
+conscription if it does not "come forward" more readily, is a spectacle
+sufficient to gratify the most hardened cynic.
+
+Certainly it is remarkable that such numbers of the great working masses
+of this country (including villagers) should come forward in connexion
+with the war, and join the standard and the ranks of fighting men--as
+they do--and it is a thing for which one must honour them. But in that
+matter there are not a few considerations to be kept in mind.
+
+In the first place a large number are not really very enthusiastic, but
+simply join because pressure to do so is put upon them by their
+"masters." The press-gangs of old exist no longer, but substitutes for
+them revive in subtler form. Many large landlords, for instance, have
+given notice to a percentage of their gamekeepers, gardeners, park
+employees, and the like, to the effect that their services are no
+longer required, but that if they enlist in the ranks now they will be
+reinstated in their masters' service again when the war is over ("if
+still alive" is, we presume, understood). Large numbers of manufacturing
+and other firms have notified their workmen and clerks in similar terms.
+This means pretty serious economic pressure. A man in the prime of life,
+suddenly ousted from his job, and with no prospect either of finding a
+similar job elsewhere or of learning any new one, is in a pretty fix.
+His only certain refuge lies in the fact that he can be taught to use a
+rifle in a few weeks; and in a few weeks perhaps it becomes clear to him
+that to accept that offer and the pay that goes with it--poor as it
+is--is his only chance.
+
+There are others, again--perhaps a very large number--who do not care
+much about the war in itself, and probably have only the vaguest notion
+of what it is all about, but for them to join the ranks means adventure,
+comradeship, the open air--all fascinating things; and they hail the
+prospect with joy as an escape from intolerable dullness--from the
+monotony of the desk and the stuffy office, from the dreary round and
+mechanical routine of the factory bench, from the depressing environment
+of "home" and domestic squalor.
+
+I must confess--though I have no general prejudice in favour of
+war--that I have been much struck, since the outbreak of the present
+one, by the altered look of crowds of young men whom I personally
+know--who are now drilling or otherwise preparing for it. The gay look
+on their faces, the blood in their cheeks, the upright carriage and
+quick, elate step--when compared with the hang-dog, sallow, dull
+creatures I knew before--all testify to the working of some magic
+influence.
+
+As I say, I do not think that this influence in most cases has much to
+do with enthusiasm for the "cause" or any mere lust of "battle" (happily
+indeed for the most part they do not for a moment realize what modern
+battle means). It is simply escape from the hateful conditions of
+present-day commercialism and its hideous wage-slavery into something
+like the normal life of young manhood--a life in the open under the wide
+sky, blood-stirring enterprise, risk if you will, co-operation and
+_camaraderie_. These are the inviting, beckoning things, the things
+which swing the balance down--even though hardships, low pay, and high
+chances of injury and death are thrown in the opposite scale.
+
+Nevertheless, and despite these other considerations, there does
+certainly remain, in this as in other wars, a fair number of men among
+those who enlist who are _bona fide_ inspired by some Ideal which they
+feel to be worth fighting for. It may be Patriotism or love of their
+country; it may be "to put down militarism"; it may be Religion or
+Honour or what not. And it is fine that it should be so. They may in
+cases be deluded, or mistaken about facts; the ideal they fight for may
+be childish (as in the mediaeval Crusades); still, even so it is fine
+that people should be willing to give their lives for an idea--that they
+should be capable of being inspired by a vision. Humanity has at least
+advanced as far as that.
+
+I suppose patriotism, or love of country--when it comes to its full
+realization, as in the case of invasion by an enemy, is the most
+powerful and tremendous of such ideals, sweeping everything before it.
+It represents something ingrained in the blood. In that case all the
+other motives for fighting--economic or what not--disappear and are
+swallowed up. Material life and social conditions under a German
+government might externally be as comfortable and prosperous as under
+our own, but for most of us something in the soul would wither and
+sicken at the thought.
+
+Anyhow, whatever the motives may be which urge _individuals_ into
+war--whether sheer necessity or patriotism, or the prospect of wages or
+distinction, or the love of adventure--a nation or a people in order to
+fight _must_ have a "cause" to fight for, something which its public
+opinion, its leaders, and its Press can appropriate--some phrase which
+it can inscribe on its shield: be it "Country" or "God" or "Freedom from
+Tyranny," or "Culture _versus_ Barbarism." It must have some such cry,
+else obviously it could not fight with any whole-heartedness or any
+force.
+
+The thing is a psychological necessity. Every one, when he gets into a
+quarrel, justifies himself and accuses the other party. He puts his own
+conduct in an ideal light, and the conduct of his opponent in the
+reverse! Doubtless if we were all angels and could impartially enter
+into all the origins of the quarrel, we should not fight, because to
+"understand" would be to "forgive"; but as we have not reached that
+stage, and as we cannot even explain why we are quarrelling--the matter
+being so complex--we are fain to adopt a phrase and fight on the
+strength of that. It is useless to call this hypocrisy. It is a
+psychological necessity. It is the same necessity which makes a mistress
+dismiss her maid on the score of a broken teapot, though really she has
+no end of secret grievances against her; or which makes the man of
+science condense the endless complexity of certain physical phenomena
+into a neat but lying formula which he calls a _Law of Nature_. He could
+not possibly give all the real facts, and so he uses a phrase.
+
+In war, therefore, each nation adopts a motto as its reason for
+fighting. Sometimes the two opposing nations both adopt the same motto I
+England and Germany both inscribe on their banners: "Culture _versus_
+Barbarism." Each believes in its own good faith, and each accuses the
+other of hypocrisy.
+
+In a sense this is all right, and could not be better. It does not so
+much matter which is really the most cultured nation, England or
+Germany, as that each should really _believe_ that it is fighting in the
+cause of Culture. Then, so fighting for what it knows to be a good
+cause, the wounds and death endured and the national losses and
+depletion are not such sad and dreadful things as they at first appear.
+They liberate the soul of the individual; they liberate the soul of the
+nation. They are sacrifices made for an ideal; and (provided they are
+truly such) the God within is well-pleased and comes one step nearer to
+his incarnation. Whatever inner thing you make sacrifices for, the same
+will in time appear visibly in your life--blessing or cursing you.
+Therefore, beware I and take good care as to what that inner thing
+really is.
+
+Such is the meaning of the use of a phrase or "battle-cry"; but we have,
+indeed, to be on our guard against _how_ we use it. It can so easily
+become a piece of cant or hypocrisy. It can so easily be engineered by
+ruling cliques and classes for their own purposes--to persuade and
+compel the people to fight _their_ battles. The politicians get us (for
+reasons which they do not explain) into a nice little entanglement
+--perhaps with some tribe of savages, perhaps with a great
+European Power; and before the nation knows where it is it finds itself
+committed to a campaign which may develop and become a serious war. Then
+there is no alternative but for Ministers to repair to a certain Cabinet
+where the well-dried formulae they need are kept hanging, and select one
+for their use. It may be "Women and Children," or it may be "Immoral
+Savages," or it may be "Empire," or it may be "Our Word of Honour."
+Having selected the right one, and duly displayed and advertised it,
+they have little difficulty in making the nation rise to the bait, and
+fight whatever battles they desire.
+
+Since the early beginnings of the human race we can perceive the same
+processes in operation. We can almost guess the grade of advancement
+reached among primitive tribes by simply taking note of their _totems_.
+These were emblems of the things which held the mind of the tribe, as
+admirable or terrible, with which it was proud to identify itself--the
+fox, for instance, or the bear, the kangaroo, or the eagle. To be worthy
+of _such ideals_ men fought. Later, every little people, every knightly,
+family, every group of adventurers, adopted a device for its shield, a
+motto for its flag, a figure of some kind, human, or more often animal.
+Even the modern nations have not got much farther; and we can judge of
+_their_ stage of advancement by the beasts of prey they, flaunt on their
+banners or the deep-throat curses which resound in their national
+anthems.
+
+But surely the time has now come--even with this world-war--when the
+great heart of the peoples will wake up to the savagery and the folly
+perpetrated in their names. The people, who, although they enjoy a
+"scrap" now and then, are essentially peaceful, essentially friendly,
+all the world over; who in the intervals of slaughter offer cigarettes
+to their foes, and tenderly dress their enemies' wounds; whose worst and
+age-long sin it is that they allow themselves so easily to be dominated
+and led by, ambitious and greedy schemers--surely it is time that they
+should wake up and throw off these sham governments--these governments
+that are three-quarters class-scheming and fraud and only one-quarter
+genuine expressions of public spirit--and declare the heart of
+solidarity that is within them.
+
+The leaders and high priests of the world have used the name of
+Christianity to bless their own nefarious works with, till the soul is
+sick at the very sound of the word; but surely the time has come when
+the peoples themselves out of their own heart will proclaim the advent
+of the Son of Man--conscious of it, indeed, as a great light of
+brotherhood shining within them, even amid the clouds of race-enmity and
+ignorance, and will deny once for all the gospel of world-empire and
+conquest which has so long been foisted on them for insidiously selfish
+ends.
+
+An empire based on brotherhood--a holy _human_ empire of the World,
+including all races and colours in a common unity and equality--yes! But
+these shoddy empires based on militarism and commercialism, and built up
+in order to secure the unclean ascendancy of two outworn and effete
+classes over the rest of mankind--a thousand times no! That
+dispensation, thank Heaven! is past. "These fatuous empires with their
+parade of power and their absolute lack of any real policy--this British
+Lion, this Russian Bear, these German, French, and American
+Eagles--these birds and beasts of prey--with their barbaric notions of
+Greed and War, their impossible armaments, and their swift financial
+ruin impending--will fall and be rent asunder. The hollow masks of them
+will perish. And the sooner the better. But underneath surely there will
+be rejoicing, for it will be found that so after all the real peoples of
+the earth have come one degree nearer together--yes, one degree nearer
+together."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[22] In Servia, for instance, which many folk doubtless regard as a
+benighted country, more than four-fifths of the people are peasant
+farmers and cultivate lands belonging to their own families. "These
+holdings cannot be sold or mortgaged entire; the law forbids the
+alienation for debt of a peasant's cottage, his garden or courtyard, his
+plough, the last few acres of his land, and the cattle necessary for
+working his farm." [Encycl. Brit.] In 1910 there were altogether _five
+hundred_ agricultural co-operative societies in Servia.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+CONSCRIPTION
+
+_December_, 1914.
+
+While protesting, as I have already done, against forced military
+service, it must still be admitted that the argument in favour of it
+retains a certain validity: to the extent, namely, that every one owes a
+duty of some kind to his own people, that it is mean to accept all the
+advantages of citizenship--security, protection, settled conditions of
+life, and so forth--and still to refuse to make sacrifice for one's
+country in a time of distress or danger. It is difficult of course for
+any one to trace all the threads and fibres which have worked themselves
+into his life from his own homeland--as it is difficult for a child to
+trace all the qualities of blood that it owes to its mother; but there
+they are, and though some of these native inheritances and conditions
+may not really be to a man's liking, yet he can hardly refuse to
+acknowledge them, or to confess the debt of gratitude that he owes to
+the land of his birth.
+
+Granting all this, however, most fully, there still remains a long
+stretch from this admission to that of forced military service. The
+drawbacks to this latter are many. In the first place compulsion anyhow
+is bad. A voluntary citizen army may be all right; but to _compel_ a man
+to fight, whether he will or not--in violation, perhaps, of his
+conscience, of his instinct, of his temperament--is an inexcusable
+outrage on his rights as a human being. In the second place it is gross
+folly; for a man who fights devoid of freewill and against his
+conscience, against his temperament, cannot possibly make a good
+fighter. An army of such recusants, however large, would be useless; and
+even a few mixed with the others do, as a matter of fact, greatly lower
+the efficiency of the whole force associated with them. In the third
+place compulsion means compulsion by a Government, and Government, at
+any rate to-day, means class-rule. Forced military service means service
+under and subjection to a Class. That means Wars carried on abroad to
+serve the interests, often iniquitous enough, of the Few; and military
+operations entered into at home to suppress popular discontent or to
+confirm class-power. To none of these things could any high-minded man
+of democratic temper consent. There are other drawbacks, but these will
+do to begin with.
+
+On the other hand, if we reject enforced militarism are we to throw
+overboard the idea of "national service" altogether?
+
+I think not. The way out is fairly clear and obvious. Let it be
+understood that there _is_ such a thing as national or public service,
+to which (within the limits of individual conscience and capacity) every
+one is bound to respond. Let it be understood that at a certain age, say
+from sixteen to eighteen (but the period would no doubt be a movable
+one) every one, boy or girl, rich or poor, shall go through a course of
+training fitting him or her for healthy and effective citizenship. This
+would include _first of all_ bodily exercises and drill (needed by
+almost all, but especially in the present day by town workers), all
+sorts of scouting-work, familiarity with Nature, camp and outdoor life;
+then all kinds of elementary and necessary trades, like agriculture in
+some form or other, metal-work, wood-work, cloth-work, tailoring,
+bootmaking; then such things as rifle-shooting, ambulance-work, nursing,
+cookery, and so on. Let it be understood that _every one_, male or
+female, rich or poor, learned or ignorant, is expected to qualify--not
+in the whole programme, but first of all and as far as humanly possible
+in the primary condition of physical health and development, and then
+after that in some one, at any rate, of the above-mentioned or similar
+trades--so that in case of general need or distress he can do
+_something_ of use. That would at least be an approach to a valuable and
+reasonable institution.
+
+As things are it is appalling to think of the abject futility and
+_uselessness_ of vast classes in all the modern nations of to-day,--but
+perhaps especially in our own nation. Think of the populations of our
+drawing-rooms, of our well-to-do clubs, of our universities, of our
+commercial and professional offices, whose occupations, whatever they
+are, are entirely remote from the direct needs and meanings of life; or
+again of the vast masses who inhabit the mean streets of our great
+towns, ignorant, ill-grown, unskilled, and in a chronic state of most
+precarious and uncertain employment. What would these populations do in
+any case of national crisis--say in a case of serious war or famine or
+huge bankruptcy of trade or multitudinous invasion by Chinese or
+Japanese, or of total collapse of credit and industry? With a few
+brilliant exceptions they would collapse too. They could not feed
+themselves, clothe themselves, or defend themselves; they could not
+build shelters from the storm, or make tools or weapons of any kind for
+their own use; they would be unable to nurse each other in illness or
+cook for each other in health. A tribe of Arabs or a commando of Boer
+farmers would be far more competent than they.
+
+But the said deficiency, which would be painfully illustrated by a
+serious crisis, is there equally in ordinary humdrum times of peace. The
+crippled and idiotic life which would bring disaster _then_ is
+undermining our very existence _now_. Is it not time that a sensible
+nation should look to it that every one of its members, when adult,
+should at least be healthy, well-fed, and well-grown, and that each
+should not only be decently developed in himself or herself, but should
+be capable of bearing a useful part of some kind in the life of the
+nation? Is it not time that the nation should place _first of all_ on
+its programme the creation of capable and healthy citizens? Can a nation
+be really effective, really strong, really secure, without this? I do
+not seem to doubt a large _willingness_ among our people to-day for
+mutual service and helpfulness--I believe a vast number of our young
+women of the well-to-do type are at this moment deeply regretting their
+inability to do anything except knit superfluous mufflers--but was there
+ever in the history of the world such huge, such wide-flooding
+_incompetence_? The willingness of the well-to-do classes may be judged
+from their readiness to come forward with subscriptions, their
+incompetence from the fact that they have _nothing else to offer_: that
+is, that all they can offer is to set _some one else_ (by means of their
+money) to do useful work in their place. They cannot themselves nurse
+wounded soldiers, or make boots for them, or build huts or weave
+blankets; they cannot help in housing or building schemes, or in schemes
+for the reclaiming and cultivation of waste lands; they cannot grow corn
+or bake bread or cook simple meals for the assistance of the indigent or
+the aged or the feeble, because they understand none of these things;
+but they can _pay some one else_ to do them--that is, they can divert
+some of the money, which they have already taken from the workers, to
+setting the latter toiling again! But what use would that be on the day
+when our monetary system broke down--as it nearly did at the
+commencement of this war? What use would it be on some critical day when
+a hostile invasion called every competent man and woman to do the work
+of defence absolutely necessary at the moment? What use would it be in
+the hour when complete commercial dislocation caused downright famine?
+Who would look at offers of money then? Could the nation Carry this vast
+mass of incompetents and idlers on its back then; and can it reasonably
+be expected to do so now?
+
+A terrible and serious crisis, as I have already said, awaits us--even
+when the War is over--a crisis probably worse than that which we are
+passing through now. We have to remember the debts that are being piled
+up. If the nations are staggering along now under the enormous load of
+idlers and parasites living on interest, how will it be then? Unless we
+can reorganize our Western societies on a real foundation of actual
+life, of practical capacity, of honest and square living, and of mutual
+help instead of mutual robbery, they will infallibly collapse, or pass
+into strange and alien hands. Now is the critical moment when with the
+enormous powers of production which we wield it may be possible to make
+a new start, and base the social life of the future on a generous
+recognition of the fellowship of all. How many times have the
+civilizations of the past, ignoring this salvation, gone down into the
+gulf! Can we find a better hope for our civilization to-day?
+
+It is clear, I think, that any nation that wants to stand the shock of
+events in the future, and to hold its own in the vast flux of racial and
+political changes which is coming on the world, will have to found its
+life, not on theories and views, or on the shifting sands of literature
+and fashion, but on the solid rock of the real _material_ capability of
+its citizens, and on their willingness, their readiness to help each
+other--their ingrained instinct of mutual service. A conscript army,
+forced upon us by a government and becoming inevitably a tool for the
+use of a governing class, we do not want and we will not have; but a
+nation of capable men and women, who know what life is and are prepared
+to meet it at all points--who will in many cases make a free gift of
+their capital and land for such purposes as I have just outlined--we
+_must_ have. Personally I would not even here--though the need is a
+crying one--advocate downright compulsion; but I would make these things
+a part of the recognized system of education, with appropriate
+regulations and the strongest recommendations and inducements to every
+individual to fall in and co-operate with them. Thus in time an urgent
+public opinion might be formed which would brand as disgraceful the
+conduct of any person who refused to qualify himself for useful
+service, or who, when qualified, deliberately refused to respond to the
+call for such service, if needed. Under such conditions the question of
+military defence would solve itself. Thousands and thousands of men
+would of their own free choice at an early age and during a certain
+period qualify themselves in military matters; other thousands, men and
+women, would qualify in nursing or ambulance work; other millions,
+again, would be prepared to aid in transport work, or in the production
+of food, clothing, shelter, and the thousand and one necessaries of
+life. No one would be called upon to do work which he had not chosen, no
+one would be forced to take up an activity which was hateful to him, yet
+all would feel that what they could do and did do would be helpful to
+the other ranks and ranges, and would be _solidaire_ with the rest of
+the nation. Such a nation would be sane and prosperous in time of peace,
+and absolutely safe and impregnable in the hour of danger.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+HOW SHALL THE PLAGUE BE STAYED?
+
+_Christmas_, 1914.
+
+People ask what new arrangements of diplomacy or revivals of
+Christianity--what alliances, _ententes_, leagues of peace, Hague
+tribunals, regulation of armaments, weeks of prayer, or tons of
+Christmas puddings sent into the enemies' camps--will finally scotch
+this pestilence of war. And there is no answer, because the answer is
+too close at hand for us to see it.
+
+Nothing but the general abandonment of the system of living on the
+labour of others will avail. _There is no other way_. This, whether as
+between individuals or as between nations, is--and has been since the
+beginning of the world--the root-cause of war. Early and primitive wars
+were for this--to raid crops and cattle, to carry off slaves on whose
+toil the conquerors could subsist; and the latest wars are the same. To
+acquire rubber concessions, gold-mines, diamond-mines, where coloured
+labour may be exploited to its bitterest extreme; to secure colonies and
+outlying lands, where giant capitalist enterprises (with either white or
+coloured labour) may make huge dividends out of the raising of minerals
+and other industrial products; to crush any other Power which stands in
+the way of these greedy and inhuman ambitions--such are the objects of
+wars to-day. And we do not see the cause of the sore because it is so
+near to us, because it is in our blood. The whole private life of the
+commercial and capitalist classes (who stand as the representatives of
+the nations to-day) is founded on the same principle. As individuals our
+one object is to find some worker or group of workers whose labour value
+we can appropriate. Look at the endless columns of stock and share
+quotations in the daily papers, and consider the armies of those who
+scan these lists over their breakfast-tables with the one view of
+finding some-where an industrial concern whose slave-driven toilers
+will yield the shareholder 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 12 per cent, on his capital.
+Undisguised and shameless parasitism is the order, or disorder, of our
+days. The rapacity of beasts of prey is in our social life but thinly
+veiled--thinly veiled indeed by a wash of "Christian" sentiment and by a
+network of philanthropic institutions for the supposed benefit of the
+very victims whom we have robbed.
+
+Is it any wonder that this principle of internecine warfare and rapacity
+which rules in our midst, this vulgar greed, which loads people's bodies
+with jewels and furs and their tables with costly food, regardless of
+those from whom these comforts are snatched, should eventuate ultimately
+in rapacity and violence on the vast stage of the drama of nations, and
+in red letters of war and conflict written across the continents? It is
+no good, with a pious snuffle, to say we are out to put down warfare and
+militarism, and all the time to encourage in our own lives, and in our
+Church and Empire Leagues and other institutions, the most sordid and
+selfish commercialism--which itself is in essence a warfare, only a
+warfare of a far meaner and more cowardly kind than that which is
+signalized by the shock of troops or the rage of rifles and cannon.
+
+No, there is no other way; and only by the general abandonment of our
+present commercial and capitalist system will the plague of war be
+stayed.[23]
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[23] When these hundreds and hundreds of thousands of men return home
+after the war is over, do we expect them to go meekly back to the
+idiotic slavery of dingy offices and dirty workshops? If we do I trust
+that we shall be disappointed. These men who have fought so nobly for
+their land, and who have tasted, even under the most trying conditions,
+something of the largeness and gladness of a free open-air life, will, I
+hope, refuse to knuckle down again to the old commercialism. Now at last
+arises the opportunity for our outworn Civilization to make a fresh
+start. Now comes the chance to establish great self-supporting Colonies
+in our own countrysides and co-operative concerns where real Goods may
+be manufactured and Agriculture carried on in free and glad and healthy
+industry.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+COMMERCIAL PROSPERITY THE PROSPERITY OF A CLASS
+
+The economics of the statement that "commercial prosperity means little
+more than the prosperity of a _class_"[24] may be roughly indicated by
+the following considerations: International trade means division of
+labour among the nations. There is certainly a gain in such division, a
+margin of advantage in production; and that gain, that margin, is
+secured by the trading class. That is all.
+
+Let us take an example, and to simplify the problem let us leave out of
+account those exotic products--like tea or rubber or raw cotton--which
+_can_ only be produced in one of the exchanging countries. Let us take
+the case of Germany and England, both producing cutlery and both
+producing cloth. There is no reason why each country should not produce
+_both_ articles exclusively for its own use; and as a matter of fact for
+a long time they did so. But presently it was found that the cost of
+production of certain kinds of cutlery was less in Germany, and the cost
+of production of certain kinds of cloth less in England. Merchants and
+dealers came in and effected the exchange, and so an intertrade has
+sprung up. The effect of this on the workers in England is simply to
+transfer a certain amount of employment from the cutlery trade to the
+cloth trade, and on the workers in Germany to transfer an equal amount
+from the cloth trade to the cutlery trade. This may mean dislocation of
+industry; but the actual number of persons employed or of wages received
+in both countries may in such a case remain just the same as before.
+There is nothing in the mere fact of exchange to alter those figures.
+There is, however, a gain, there is a marginal advantage, in the
+exchange; and that is collared by the merchants and dealers. It is, in
+fact, _in order to secure this margin_ that the merchant class arises.
+This is, of course, a very simple and elementary statement of the
+problem, and the exceptions to it or modifications of it may be supplied
+by the reader. But in the main it embodies the very obvious truth that
+trade is created for the advantage of the trader (who often also in
+modern times is the manufacturer himself). What advantages may here and
+there leak through to the public or to the employee are small and, so to
+speak, accidental. The mere fact of exchange in itself forms no index of
+general prosperity. Yet it is often assumed that it does. If, for
+instance, it should happen that the whole production of cutlery, as
+between Germany and England, were secured by Germany, and the whole
+production of cloth were secured by England, so that the _whole_ of
+these products on each side had to be exchanged, then doubtless there
+would be great jubilation--talk of the immense growth of oversea trade
+in both countries, the wonderful increase of exports and imports, the
+great prosperity, and so forth; but really and obviously it would only
+mean the jubilation and the prosperity of the merchants, the brokers,
+the railway and shipping companies of both lands. There would be an
+increase in _their_ riches (and an increase in the number of their
+employees). It would mean more merchant palaces in Park Lane, bigger
+dividends on the shares of transport companies; but after that the
+general position of the manual workers in both trades, the numbers
+employed, and their rates of wages would be much as before. Prices also,
+as regards the general Public, would be but little altered. It is only
+because this great trading, manufacturing, and commercial class has
+amassed such enormous wealth and influence, and is able to command the
+Press, and social position, and votes and representation on public
+bodies and in both Houses of Parliament, that it succeeds in impressing
+the nation generally with the idea that _its_ welfare is the welfare of
+the whole people, and its prosperity the advantage of every citizen. And
+it is in this very fact that its great moral and social danger to the
+community lies.
+
+It must not be thought (but I believe I have said this before) that in
+making out that the commercial classes are largely to blame for modern
+wars I mean to say that the present war, and many previous ones, have
+been _directly_ instigated by commercial folk. It is rather that the
+atmosphere of commercial competition and rivalry automatically leads up
+to military rivalries and collisions, which often at the last moment
+(though not always) turn out contrary to the wishes of the commercial
+people themselves. Also I would repeat that it is not _Commerce_ but the
+_class_ interest that is to blame. Commerce and exchange, as we know in
+a thousand ways, have the effect of drawing peoples together, giving
+them common interests, acquaintance, and understanding of each other,
+and so making for peace. The great jubilation during the latter half of
+the nineteenth century--from 1851 onwards--over world-wide trade and
+Industrial Exhibitions, as the heralds of the world's peace and amity--a
+jubilation voiced in Tennyson's earlier _Locksley Hall_--was to a
+certain extent justified. There is no doubt that the nations have been
+drawn together by intertrading and learned to know each other. Bonds,
+commercial and personal, have grown up between them, and are growing
+up, which must inevitably make wars more difficult in the future and
+less desirable. And if it had been possible to carry on this intertrade
+in a spirit of real friendliness and without grasping or greed the
+result to-day would be incalculably great. But, unfortunately, this
+latter element came in to an extent quite unforeseen and blighted the
+prophetic hopes. The second _Locksley Hall_ was a wail of
+disillusionment. The growth of large mercantile classes, intoxicated
+with wealth and pursuing their own interests _apart from, and indeed
+largely in opposition to_, those of the mass-peoples, derailed the
+forward movement, and led in some of the ways which I have indicated
+above to more of conflict between the nations and less of peace.
+
+Doubtless the growth of these mercantile classes has to a certain extent
+been inevitable; and we must do them the justice to acknowledge that
+their enterprise and ingenuity (even set in action for their own private
+advantage) have been of considerable benefit to the world, and that
+their growth may represent a necessary stage in affairs. Still, we
+cannot help looking forward to a time when, this stage having been
+completed, and commerce between nation and nation having ceased to be
+handled for mere private profit and advantage, the parasitical power in
+our midst which preys upon the Commonweal will disappear, the mercantile
+classes will become organic with the Community, and one great and
+sinister source of wars will also cease.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[24] See p. 50 above.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+COLONIES AND SEAPORTS
+
+There is another point of economics on which there seems to be some
+confusion of mind. If mere extension of Trade is the thing sought for,
+it really does not matter much, in these days of swift and international
+transport, whether the outlying lands with which the Trader deals or the
+ports _through_ which he deals are the property of his own nation or of
+some other nation. The trade goes on all the same. England certainly has
+colonies all over the world; but with her free trade and open ports it
+often happens that one of her colonies takes more German or French goods
+of a certain class than English goods of the same class; or that it
+exports more to Germany and France than it does to England. The bulk,
+for instance, of the produce of our West African colonies goes, in
+normal times, to Germany. German or French trade does not suffer in
+dealing with English colonies, though English trade may sometimes suffer
+in dealing with French, German or other foreign colonies on account of
+the preferential duties they put on in favour of their own goods. Except
+for these tariff-walls and bounty systems (which after all, on account
+of their disturbing and crippling effect, seem to be gradually going out
+of fashion) trade flows over the world, regardless of national barriers,
+and will continue so to flow. It is all a question of relative
+efficiency and price. German goods, owing to their cheapness and their
+accuracy of construction, have of late years been penetrating
+everywhere; and to the German trader, as a pure matter of trade, it
+makes no difference whether he sells to a foreign nation or a German
+colony.
+
+It is the same with seaports. Holland is delighted to provide passage
+for Germany's exports and imports, and probably does so at a minimum
+cost. The Berlin manufacturer or merchant would be no better off, as far
+as trade conditions are concerned, if Germany instead of Holland held
+the mouths of the Rhine. The same with a harbour like Salonika. Germany
+or Austria may covet dreadfully its possession; and for strategic or
+political reasons they may be right, but for pure trade purposes
+Salonika in the hands of the Greeks would probably (except for certain
+initial expenses in the enlargement of dock accommodation) serve them as
+well as in their own hands.
+
+Of course there _are_ other reasons which make nations desire colonies
+and ports. Such things may be useful for offensive or defensive purposes
+against other nations; they feed a jealous sense of importance and
+Imperialism; they provide outlets for population and access to lands
+where the institutions and customs of the Homeland prevail; they supply
+financiers with a field for the investment of capital under the
+protection of their own Governments; they favour the development of a
+national _carrying_ trade; and, above all, they supply plentiful
+official and other posts and situations for the young men of the middle
+and commercial classes; but for the mere extension and development of
+the nation's general trade and commerce it is doubtful whether they have
+anything like the importance commonly credited to them.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+WAR AND THE SEX IMPULSE
+
+_January_, 1915.
+
+It seems that War, like all greatest things--like Passion, Politics,
+Religion, and so forth--is impossible to reckon up. It belongs to
+another plane of existence than our ordinary workaday life, and breaks
+into the latter as violently and unreasonably, as a volcano into the
+cool pastures where cows and sheep are grazing. No arguments, protests,
+proofs, or explanations are of any avail; and those that are advanced
+are confused, contradictory, and unconvincing. Just as people quarrel
+most violently over Politics and Religion, because, in fact, those are
+the two subjects which no one really understands, so they quarrel in
+Warfare, not really knowing _why_, but impelled by deep, inscrutable
+forces. Spectators even and neutrals, for the same reason, take sides
+and range themselves bitterly, if only in argument, against each other.
+
+But Logic and Morals are of no use on these occasions. They are too
+thin. They are only threads in a vast fabric. You extract a single
+thread from the weaving of a carpet, and note its colour and its
+concatenations, but that gives you no faintest idea of the pattern of
+the carpet; and then you extract another, and another, but you are no
+nearer the design. Logic and morals are similar threads in the great web
+of life. You may follow them in various directions, but without
+effective result. Life is so much greater than either; and War is a
+volcanic manifestation of Life which gives them little or no heed.
+
+There is a madness of nations, as well as of individual people. Every
+one who has paid attention to the fluctuations of popular sentiment
+knows how strange, how unaccountable, these are. They seem to suggest
+the coming to the surface, from time to time, of hidden
+waves--groundswells of some deep ocean. The temper, the temperament, the
+character, the policy of a whole nation will change, and it is
+difficult to see why. Sometimes a passion, a fury, a veritable mania,
+quite unlike its ordinary self, will seize it. There is a madness of
+peoples, which causes them for a while to hate each other with bitter
+hatred, to fight furiously and wound and injure each other; and then lo!
+a little while more and they are shaking hands and embracing and
+swearing eternal friendship! What does it all mean?
+
+It is all as mad and unreasonable as Love is--and that is saying a good
+deal! In love, too, people desire to _hurt_ each other; they do not
+hesitate to wound one another--wounding hearts, wounding bodies even,
+and hating themselves even while they act so. What does it all mean? Are
+they trying the one to reach the other _at all costs_--if not by
+embraces, at least by injuries--each longing to make his or her
+personality felt, to _impress_ himself or herself upon the other in such
+wise as never again to be forgotten. Sometimes a man will stab the girl
+he loves, if he cannot get at her any other way. Sex itself is a
+positive battle. Lust connects itself only too frequently with violence
+and the spilling of blood.
+
+Is it possible that something the same happens with whole nations and
+peoples--an actual lust and passion of conflict, a mad intercourse and
+ravishment, a kind of generation in each other, and exchange of
+life-essences, leaving the two peoples thereafter never more the same,
+but each strangely fertilized towards the future? Is it this that
+explains the extraordinary ecstasy which men experience on the
+battlefield, even amid all the horrors--an ecstasy so great that it
+calls them again and again to return? "Have you noticed," says one of
+our War correspondents,[25] "how many of our colonels fall? Do you know
+why? It is for five minutes of _life_. It is for the joy of riding, when
+the charge sounds, at the crest of a wave of men."
+
+Is it this that explains the curious fact that Wars--notwithstanding all
+their bitterness and brutishness--do not infrequently lead to strange
+amalgamations and generations? The spreading of the seeds of Greek
+culture over the then known world by Alexander's conquests, or the
+fertilizing of Europe with the germs of republican and revolutionary
+ideas by the armies of Napoleon, or the immense reaction on the
+mediaeval Christian nations caused by the Crusades, are commonplaces of
+history; and who--to come to quite modern times--could have foreseen
+that the Boer War would end in the present positive alliance between the
+Dutch and English in South Africa, or that the Russo-Japanese conflict
+would so profoundly modify the ideas and outlook of the two peoples
+concerned?
+
+In making these remarks I do not for a moment say that the gains
+resulting from War are worth the suffering caused by it, or that the
+gains are _not_ worth the suffering. The whole subject is too vast and
+obscure for one to venture to dogmatize on it. I only say that if we are
+to find any order and law (as we must inevitably _try_ to do) in these
+convulsions of peoples, these tempests of human history, it is probably
+in the direction that I have indicated.
+
+Of course we need not leave out of sight the ordinary theory and
+explanation, that wars are simply a part of the general struggle for
+existence--culminating explosions of hatred and mutual destruction
+between peoples who are competing with each other for the means of
+subsistence. That there is something in this view one can hardly deny;
+and it is one which I have already touched upon. Still, I cannot help
+thinking that there is something even deeper--something that connects
+War with the amatory instinct; and that this probably is to be found in
+the direction of a physiological impact and fusion between the two (or
+more) peoples concerned, which fertilizes and regenerates them, and is
+perhaps as necessary in the life of Nations as the fusion of cells is in
+the life of Protozoa, or the phenomena of sex in the evolution of Man.
+
+And while the Nations fight, the little mortals who represent them have
+only the faintest idea of what is really going on, of what the warfare
+means. They _feel_ the sweep of immense passions; ecstasies and horrors
+convulse and dislocate their minds; but they do not, cannot, understand.
+And the dear creatures in the trenches and the firing-lines give their
+lives--equally beautiful, equally justified, on both sides: fascinated,
+rapt, beyond and beside themselves, as foes hating each other with a
+deadly hatred; seized with hideous, furious, nerve-racking passions;
+performing heroic, magnificent deeds, suffering untold, indescribable
+wounds and pains, and lying finally side by side (as not unfrequently
+happens) on the deserted battlefield, reconciled and redeemed and
+clasping hands of amity even in death.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[25] H.M. Tomlinson, in the _Daily News_.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+THE OVER-POPULATION SCARE
+
+Some cheerful and rather innocent people insist that because of the
+over-population difficulty wars must go on for ever. The population of
+the world, they say--or at any rate of the civilized countries--is
+constantly increasing, and if war did not from time to time reduce the
+numbers there would soon be a deadlock. They seem to think that the only
+way to solve the problem is for the men to murder each other. This says
+nothing about the women, who, after all, are the chief instruments of
+multiplication. It may also be pointed out that even the barbaric method
+of slaughter is not practicable. Although wars of extermination may have
+now and then occurred in the past among tribes and small peoples, such
+wars are not considered decent nowadays; and the numbers killed in
+modern campaigns--horribly "scientific" and "efficient" as the methods
+are--is such a small fraction of the population concerned as to have no
+appreciable result. The population of Germany is about seventy millions,
+and I suppose the wildest anti-Teuton could hardly hope that _more_ than
+a million Germans will be actually killed in the present conflict--less
+than 1-1/2 per cent.--a fraction which would probably soon be
+compensated by the increased uxoriousness of the returning troops.
+
+No, War is no solution for the over-population question. If that
+question is a difficulty, other means must be employed. We ask
+therefore: (1) Is it a serious difficulty? (2) If so, what is the
+remedy?
+
+That over-population is in certain localities a serious difficulty few
+would deny. China, with her four hundred millions, is probably
+over-populated; that is, with her present resources in production the
+population presses against the margin of subsistence and can only just
+maintain itself. There is evidence to show that in the past the natives
+of some of the Pacific islands, isolated in the great ocean and unable
+to migrate to other lands, have suffered from the same trouble. Britain
+is often said to be over-populated; but here quite other considerations
+come in. Though it might be pleasant for many reasons to have more land
+at our immediate command, we cannot fairly say that our population
+presses against the margin of subsistence, for the simple reason that
+with our immense powers of industrial production and the enormous wealth
+here yearly obtained the total, if evenly distributed (anything like as
+well, for instance, as in China), would yield to every man, woman, and
+child in the United Kingdom an ample affluence.[26] The _appearance_
+here of over-population arises from the fact that while the wage-earners
+actually produce this mass of wealth, two-thirds of it are taken by the
+employers and employing classes. Great portions, therefore, of the
+actual producers or producing classes _are_ on the margin of
+subsistence, while the rest of the wealth of the country is absorbed by
+those trading and dividend-consuming classes of whom I have spoken more
+than once in previous pages. There is over-population certainly, but it
+is an over-population (as any one may see who walks through the West End
+of London or the corresponding quarters of any of our large towns) of
+idlers and futile people, who are a burden to the nation. With our
+extraordinary industrial system--or want of system--it commonly happens
+that the abundance of ill-paid or unemployed workers at one end of the
+social scale, by reducing the rates of wages and so increasing the rates
+of dividends, actually creates a greater abundance of unemployed rich at
+the other end; but neither excess points in itself to over-population
+--only to a diseased state of distribution. What we really
+ought to aim at creating is a nation in which every one was
+capable of doing useful or beautiful work of some kind or other and was
+gladly occupied in doing it. Such a nation would be truly healthy. It
+would be powerful and productive beyond all our present dreams. But the
+Western nations of to-day, with their huge burdens of unskilled,
+ill-grown poor and their huge burden of incompetent, feeble rich--it is
+a wonder that they survive. They would not survive a decade or two if
+the Chinese or the Japanese in their numbers were to come into personal
+and direct competition with them.
+
+If Britain is not really at present over-populated, the same is probably
+even more true of Germany. For Germany, with a larger and more fertile
+area in proportion to her population, is safer than we are in the matter
+of self-support. But again in Germany the outcry of over-population has
+arisen, and has arisen from the same cause as here--namely, the rise of
+the commercial system, the division of the nation into extremes of
+poverty and riches, and the consequent _appearance_ of excess population
+in both directions. And this diseased state of the nation has led to a
+fever of "expansion" and has been (as already said) one of the chief
+causes of the present war. As long as the modern nations are such fools
+as to conduct their industrial affairs in the existing way they will not
+only be full of strife, disease, and discord in themselves, but they
+will inevitably quarrel with their neighbours.
+
+All this, however, does not prove that a genuine over-population
+difficulty may not occur even now in localities, and possibly in some
+far future time over the whole earth. And it may be just as well to
+consider these possibilities.
+
+Dismissing War and Disease as solutions--as belonging to barbarous and
+ignorant ages of human evolution--there remain, perhaps, three rational
+methods of dealing with the question: (1) the organization and
+improvement of industrial production on existing lands so far as to
+allow the support of a larger population; (2) the transport of excess
+populations to new and undeveloped lands (colonization); (3) the
+limitation of families.
+
+The first method hardly needs discussion here. Its importance is too
+obvious. It needs, however, more public discussion in England than it
+has hitherto received. The second method--operating at present only in a
+very casual and unsystematic way--ought, one would say, to be very
+systematically considered and dealt with by the modern States. For a
+nation to plant out large bodies of colonists on comparatively
+unoccupied lands, as in Africa or Australia or Canada, in a deliberate
+and organized fashion, with every facility towards co-operation and
+success, and yet on the principle of leaving, each colonial unit plenty
+of freedom and autonomy, would not be a very difficult task, nor a very
+expensive one, considering the end in view. And in such a case there
+would really be no adequate reason for jealousy between States having
+colonies in the neighbourhood of each other. If Germany (or any other
+country) wishes to have a colony in East Africa or West Africa, it is
+really ridiculous to go to war about such a matter. Any peaceful
+arrangement would be less expensive; and, as a matter of fact, a
+flourishing German (or other) colony in the neighbourhood of a British
+settlement would help to bring prosperity to the latter. The two
+colonies would benefit each other. It is only _unreasoning jealousy_
+which prevents people understanding this.
+
+Finally, there is the third method, of the intentional limitation of
+families. Surely the time has come when blind and unlimited propagation
+among civilized and self-respecting peoples must come to an end. The
+old text "Blessed is he that hath his quiver full of them" has ceased to
+have any use or application. Eugenic and healthy conditions of
+child-rearing and nurture demand small families. The well-to-do and
+educated do already limit their families; and for the poorer classes to
+breed and propagate indefinitely is only to play into the hands of the
+dividend-hunting rich by increasing the supply of cheap labour, while at
+the same time the general standard of the population becomes more and
+more degraded. It is indeed a curious question why, in the Press and
+among the official classes, every effort to spread abroad the knowledge
+of how in a healthy, humane, and eugenic way to limit the size of the
+family is discountenanced. Sometimes one thinks that this is done partly
+in order to encourage that said pullulation of workers which is so
+favourable to, the keeping down of wages; but, of course, ancient
+reasons of ignorance and religious bias weigh also. In the United States
+the persecutions of Comstockery are worse than here.
+
+The aborigines of Australia are so ignorant that they do not even know
+that conception arises from the meeting of the male and female elements.
+They think that certain bushes and trees are haunted by the spirits of
+babies, which leap unawares into the bodies of passing women. It can be
+imagined what evils and delusions spring from such a theory. We do not
+want to return to such a period; and yet it would seem that many folk do
+not want to go forward from our present condition, with all _its_ evils
+and delusions, to something better and more intelligent.
+
+If the nations haven't the sense to be able (if they wish) to limit
+their families--short of resorting to such methods as War, Cannibalism,
+the spread of Disease, the exposure of Infants, and the like--one can
+only conclude that they must go on fighting and preying upon each other
+(industrially and militarily) till they gain the sense. Mere unbridled
+and irrational lust may have led to wars of extermination in the past.
+Love and the sacrament of a true and intimate union may come some day
+with the era of peace.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[26] Militating also against the idea of over-population is the fact
+that so much of our agricultural land is obviously uncared for and
+neglected.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+THE FRIENDLY AND THE FIGHTING INSTINCTS
+
+_January_, 1915.
+
+Fighting is certainly a deeply ingrained instinct in the human race--the
+masculine portion. In the long history of human development it has
+undoubtedly played an important part. It has even (such is the
+cussedness and contrariety of Nature) helped greatly in the evolution of
+love and social solidarity. There is no greater bond in early stages
+between the members of a group or tribe than the consciousness that they
+have a common enemy.[27] It is also obviously still a great _pleasure_
+to a very large proportion of our male populations--as, indeed, the fact
+of its being the fulfilment of a deep instinct would lead us to expect.
+It does not follow, however, from these remarks that we expect war in
+its crudest form to continue for ever. There will come a term to this
+phase of evolution. Probably the impact and collision between
+nations--if required for their impregnation and fecundity--will come
+about in some other way.
+
+If fighting is an ingrained instinct, the sociable or friendly instinct
+is equally ingrained. We may, indeed, suppose it roots deeper. In the
+midst of warfare maddest foes will turn and embrace each other. In the
+tale of _Cuchulain of Muirthemne_[28] he (Cuchulain) and Ferdiad fought
+for three days on end, yet at the close of each day kissed each other
+affectionately; and in the present war there are hundreds of stories
+already in circulation of acts of grace and tenderness between enemies,
+as well as the quaintest quips and jokes and demonstrations of
+sociability between men in opposing trenches who "ought" to have been
+slaying each other. In the Russo-Japanese War during the winter, when
+military movement was not easy, and the enemy lines in some cases were
+very near each other, the men, Russians and Japanese, played games
+together as a convenient and pleasant way of passing the time, and not
+unfrequently took to snowballing each other.
+
+A friend of mine, who was in that war, told me the following story. The
+Japanese troops were attacking one of the forts near Port Arthur with
+their usual desperate valour. They cut _zig-zag_ trenches up the
+hillside, and finally stormed and took a Russian trench close under the
+guns of the fort. The Russians fled, leaving their dead and wounded
+behind. After the _melee_, when night fell, five Japanese found
+themselves in that particular trench with seven Russians--all pretty
+badly wounded--with many others of course dead. The riflemen in the fort
+were in such a nervous state, that at the slightest movement in the
+trench they fired, regardless of whom they might hit. The whole party
+remained quiet during the night and most of the next day. They were
+suffering from wounds, and without food or water, but they dared not
+move; they managed, however, to converse with each other a
+little--especially through the Japanese lieutenant, who knew a little
+Russian. On the second night the fever for water became severe. One of
+the less wounded Russians volunteered to go and fetch some. He raised
+himself from the ground, stood up in the darkness, but was discerned
+from the fort, and shot. A second Russian did the same and was shot. A
+Japanese did likewise. Then the rest lay, quiet again. Finally, the
+darkness having increased and the thirst and the wounds being
+intolerable, the Japanese lieutenant, who had been wounded in the legs
+and could not move about, said that if one of the remaining Russians
+would take him on his back he would guide the whole party into a place
+of safety in the Japanese lines. So they did. The Russian soldier
+crawled on his belly with the Japanese officer lying on his back, and
+the others followed, keeping close to the ground. They reached the
+Japanese quarters, and were immediately, looked after and cared for. A
+few days afterwards the five Russians came on board the transport on
+which my friend was engineer. They were being taken as prisoners to
+Japan; but the Japanese crew could not do enough for them in the way of
+tea and cigarettes and dressing their wounds, and they made quite a
+jolly party all together on deck. The Japanese officer was also on
+board, and he told my friend the story.
+
+Gallantry towards the enemy has figured largely in the history of
+War--sometimes as an individual impulse, sometimes as a recognized
+instruction. European records afford us plenty of examples. The Chinese,
+always great sticklers for politeness, used to insist in early times
+that a warrior should not take advantage of his enemy when the latter
+had emptied his quiver, but wait for him to pick up his arrows before
+going on with the fight. And in one tale of old Japan, when one Daimio
+was besieging another, the besieged party, having run short of
+ammunition, requested a truce in order to fetch some more--which the
+besiegers courteously granted!
+
+The British officer who the other day picked up a wounded German soldier
+and carried him across into the German lines, acted in quite the same
+spirit. He saw that the man had been left accidentally when the Germans
+were clearing away their wounded; and quite simply he walked forward
+with the object of restoring him. But it cost him his life; for the
+Germans, not at first perceiving his intention, fired and hit him in two
+or three places. Nevertheless he lifted the man and succeeded in bearing
+him to the German trench. The firing of course ceased, and the German
+colonel saluted and thanked the officer, and pinned a ribbon to his
+coat. He returned to the British lines, but died shortly after of the
+wounds received.
+
+"Ils sont superbes, ces braves!" said a French soldier in hospital to
+Mrs. Haden Guest, indicating the German wounded also there. And a dying
+German whispered to her: "I would never have fought against the French
+and English had I known how kind they were. I was told that I was only
+going on manoeuvres!"[29]
+
+The French are generous in the recognition of bravery. A small company
+rushed a Prussian battery in the neighbourhood of the Aisne and put all
+the gunners out of action, except one who fought gamely to the last and
+would not give in till he was fairly surrounded and made prisoner. "_Tu
+est chic, tu--tu est bien chic_" shouted the _pioupious_ with one
+accord, and shook him cordially by the hand as they led him away. How
+preposterous do such stories as these make warfare appear!--and others,
+such as the two opposing forces tacitly agreeing to fetch water at the
+evening hour from an intervening stream without molestation on either
+side; or the two parties using an old mill as a post-office, by means of
+which letters could pass between France and Germany in defiance of all
+decent war-regulations! How they illustrate the absolutely instinctive
+and necessary tendency of the natural man (notwithstanding occasional
+bouts of fury) to aid his fellow and fall into some sort of
+understanding with him! Finally the fraternizations last Christmas
+between the opposing lines in Northern France almost threatened at one
+time to dissolve all the proprieties of official warfare. If they had
+spread a little farther and lasted a little longer, who knows what might
+have happened? High politics might have been utterly confounded, and
+the elaborate schemes of statesmen on both sides entirely frustrated.
+Headquarters had, through the officers, to interfere and all such
+demonstrations of amity to be for the future forbidden. Could anything
+more clearly show the beating of the great heart of Man beneath the
+thickly overlying husks of class and class-government? When, oh! when
+indeed, will the real human creature emerge from its age-long chrysalis?
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[27] And even the hundred and one humane Associations of to-day derive a
+great part of their enthusiasm and vitality from fighting each other!
+
+[28] Put into English by Lady Gregory. (John Murray, 6s. net.)
+
+[29] From _T.P.'s Weekly_, November 7, 1914.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+NEVER AGAIN!
+
+Like a great cry these words to-day rise from the lips of the
+nations--"Never Again!" Never before certainly have such enormous masses
+of human beings been locked in deadly grip with each other over the
+earth, and never before, equally certainly, has their warfare been so
+horrible in its deliberate preparation, so hideous, so ghastly in its
+after-effects, as to-day. The nations stand round paralysed with disgust
+and despair, almost unable to articulate; and when they do find voice it
+is with the words above written.
+
+How are we to give effect to the cry? Must we not call upon the Workers
+of all countries--those who are the least responsible for the inception
+of wars, and yet who suffer most by them, who bear the brunt of the
+wounds, the slaughter, the disease, and the misery which are a necessary
+part of them--to rise up and forbid them for ever from the earth? Let us
+do so! For though few may follow and join with us to-day, yet to-morrow
+and every day in the future, and every year, as the mass-peoples come
+into their own, and to the knowledge of what they are and what they
+desire to be, those numbers will increase, till the cry itself is no
+longer a mere cry but an accomplished fact.
+
+It is a hopeful sign that not only among bewildered onlookers and
+outsiders but among the soldiers themselves (of the more civilized
+countries) this cry is being taken up. Who, indeed, should know better
+than they what they are talking about? The same words are on the lips at
+this moment of thousands and thousands of French and English and German
+soldiers,[30] and in no faint-hearted or evasive sense, but with the
+conviction and indignation of experience. We may hope they will not be
+forgotten this time when the war is over.
+
+The truth is that not only was this particular war "bound to come," but
+(among the civilized peoples) the refusal of war is also bound to come.
+Two great developments are leading to this result. On the one hand, the
+soldiers themselves, the fighters, are as a class becoming infinitely
+more sensitive, more intelligent, more capable of humane feeling, less
+stupidly "patriotic" and prejudiced against their enemies than were the
+soldiers of a century ago--say, of the time of Wellington; on the other
+hand, the horrors, the hideousness, the folly, and the waste of war are
+infinitely greater. It is inevitable that these two contradictory
+movements, mounting up on opposite sides, must at last clash. The rising
+conscience of Humanity must in the end say to the War-fiend, "Get thee
+behind me, Satan!" Never before have there passed over the fields of
+Europe armies so intelligent, so trained, so observant, so sensitive as
+those to-day of Belgium, France, England, and Germany. Some day or other
+they will return to their homes; but when they do it will be with a
+tale that will give to the Western world an understanding of what war
+means, such as it never had before.
+
+All the same, if the word _is_ to be "Never Again!" it must come through
+the masses themselves (from whom the fighters are mainly drawn); it must
+be through them that this consummation must be realized. It must be
+through the banding together and determined and combined effort of the
+Unions, local, national, and international, and through the weight of
+the workers' influence in all their associations and in all countries.
+To put much reliance in this matter upon the "classes" is rash; for
+though just now the latter are sentimentalizing freely over the
+subject--having got into nearer touch with it than ever before--yet when
+all is settled down, and the day arrives once more that _their_
+interests point to war, it is only too likely that they (or the majority
+of them) will not hesitate to sacrifice the masses--unless, indeed, the
+power to do so has already departed from them.
+
+And it is no good for _us_ to sentimentalize on the subject. We must not
+blink facts. And the fact is that "it's a long way" to _Never Again_.
+The _causes_ of War must be destroyed first; and, as I have more than
+once tried to make clear, the causes ramify through our midst; they are
+like the roots, pervading the body politic, of some fell disease whose
+outbreak on the surface shocks and affrights us. To dislodge and
+extirpate these roots is a long business. But there is this consolation
+about it--that it is a business which we can all of us begin at once, in
+our own lives!
+
+Probably wars will still for many a century continue, though less
+frequent we hope. And if the people themselves _want_ to fight, and must
+fight, who is to say them Nay? In such case we need not be overmuch
+troubled. There are many things worse than fighting; and there are many
+wounds and injuries which people inflict on each other worse than bodily
+wounds and injuries--only they are not so plain to see. But I certainly
+would say--as indeed the peasant says in every land--"Let those who
+begin the quarrel do the fighting"; and let those who have to do the
+fighting and bear the brunt of it (including the women) decide whether
+there _shall_ be fighting or not. To leave the dread arbitrament of War
+in the hands of private groups and cliques who, for their own ends and
+interests, are willing to see the widespread slaughter of their
+fellow-countrymen and the ruin of innumerable homes is hateful beyond
+words.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[30] See "A War-Note for Democrats," by H.M. Tomlinson _(English
+Review_, December, 1914). "This war was bound to come, and we've got to
+finish it proper. No more of this bloody rot for the kids, an' chance
+it."
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+THE TREE OF LIFE
+
+_February_, 1915.
+
+Finally, and looking back on all we have said, and especially on the
+Christmas scenes and celebrations between the trenches in this war and
+the many similar fraternizations of the rank and file of opposing armies
+in former wars, one realizes the monstrosity and absurdity of the
+present conflict--its anachronism and out-of-dateness in the existing
+age of human thought and feeling. The whole European situation resembles
+a game of marbles played by schoolboys. It is not much more dignified
+than that. Each boy tries on the quiet to appropriate some of the
+marbles out of another boy's bag. From time to time, in consequence,
+furious scrimmages arise--generally between two boys--the others
+looking' on and laughing, knowing well that they themselves are guilty
+of the same tricks. Presently, in the fortunes of the game, one boy--a
+little more blundering or a little less disguised than the others--lays
+himself open to the accusations of the whole crew. They all fall upon
+him, and give him a good drubbing; and even some of them say they are
+punishing him _for his good_! When shall we make an end, once for all,
+of this murderous nonsense?
+
+However our Tommy Atkinses have been worked up to fighting point by
+fears for the safety of old England, or by indignation at atrocities
+actually observed or distantly reported; however the German soldiers
+have been affected by similar fears and indignations, or the French the
+same; however the political coil has been engineered (as engineered in
+such cases it always is), and whatever inducements of pay or patriotism
+have been put in operation and sentiments circulated by the Press--one
+thing remains perfectly certain: that left to themselves these men would
+never have quarrelled, never have attacked each other. One thing is
+perfectly certain: that such a war as the present is the result of the
+activity of governing cliques and classes in the various nations,
+acting through what are called "Diplomatic" channels, for the most part
+in secret and unbeknown to their respective mass-peoples, and for
+motives best known to themselves.
+
+One would not venture to say that _all_ wars are so engineered, for
+there certainly are occasionally wars which are the spontaneous
+expression of two nations' natural hostility and hatred; but these are
+rare, very rare, and the war in which we are concerned at present is
+certainly not one of them. Also one would not venture to say that though
+in the present affair the actuating motives have been of class origin,
+and have been worked through secret channels, the motives so put in
+action have all been base and mean. That would be going too far. Some of
+the motives may have been high-minded and generous, some may have been
+mean, and others may have been mean and yet _unconsciously_ so. But
+certainly when one looks at the conditions of public and political life,
+and the arrangements and concatenations by which influence there is
+exerted and secured, and sees (as one must) the pretty bad corruption
+which pervades the various parties in all the modern States--the
+commercial briberies, the lies of the Press, the poses and
+prevarications of Diplomats and Ministers--one cannot but realize the
+great probability that the private advantage of individuals or classes
+has been (in the present case) a prevailing instigation. The fact that
+in Britain two influential and honourable Cabinet Ministers resigned at
+once on the declaration of war (a fact upon which the Press has been
+curiously silent) cannot but "give one to think." One cannot but realize
+that the fighting men in all these nations are the pawns and counters of
+a game which is being played for the benefit--or supposed benefit--of
+certain classes; that public opinion is a huge millstream which has to
+be engineered; that the Press is a channel for its direction, and Money
+the secret power which commands the situation.
+
+The fact is sad, but it must be faced. And the facing of it leads
+inevitably to the question, "How, then, can Healing ever come?" If (it
+will be said) the origin of wars is in the diseased condition of the
+nations, what prospect is there of their ever ceasing? And one sees at
+once that the prospect is not immediate. One sees at once that Peace
+Societies and Nobel Prizes and Hague Tribunals and reforms of the
+Diplomatic Service and democratic control of Foreign Secretaries and
+Quaker and Tolstoyan preachments--though all these things may be good in
+their way--will never bring us swiftly to the realization of peace. The
+roots of the Tree of Life lie deeper.
+
+We have seen it a dozen times in the foregoing pages. Only when the
+nations cease to be diseased in themselves will they cease fighting with
+each other. And the disease of the modern nations is the disease of
+disunity--not, as I have already said, the mere existence of variety of
+occupation and habit, for that is perfectly natural and healthy, but the
+disease by which one class preys upon another and upon the nation--the
+disease of parasitism and selfish domination. The health of a people
+consists in that people's real _unity_, the organic life by which each
+section contributes freely and generously to the welfare of the whole,
+identifies itself with that welfare, and holds it a dishonour to snatch
+for itself the life which should belong to all. A nation which realized
+_that_ kind of life would be powerful and healthy beyond words; it would
+not only be splendidly glad and prosperous and unassailable in itself,
+but it would inevitably infect all other nations with whom it had
+dealings with the same principle. Having the Tree of Life well rooted
+within its own garden, its leaves and fruit and all its acts and
+expressions would be for the healing of the peoples around. But a nation
+divided against itself by parasitic and self-exalting cliques and
+sections could never stand. It could never be healthy. No armaments nor
+ingenuity of science and organization could save it, and even though the
+form of its institutions were democratic, if the reality of Democracy
+were not there, its peace crusades and prizes and sentimental
+Conferences and Christianities would be of little avail.
+
+At this juncture, then, all over Europe, when the classes are failing us
+and by their underhand machinations continually embroiling one nation
+with another, it is above all necessary that the mass-peoples should
+move and insist upon the representation of their great unitary and
+communal life and interests. It is high time that they should open
+their eyes and see with clear vision what is going on over their heads,
+and more than high time that they should refuse to take part in the
+Quarrels of those who (professionally) live upon their labour. It is
+indeed astonishing that the awakening has been so long in coming; but
+surely it cannot be greatly delayed now. Underneath all the ambitions of
+certain individuals and groups; underneath all the greed and chicanery
+of others; underneath the widespread ignorance, mother of prejudice,
+which sunders folk of different race or colour-deep down the human heart
+beats practically the same in all lands, drawing us little mortals
+together.
+
+Strangely enough--and yet not strangely--it beats strongest and clearest
+often in the simplest, the least sophisticated. Those who live nearest
+the truth of their own hearts are nearest to the hearts of others. Those
+who have known the realities of the world, and what Life is close to the
+earth--they are the same in all lands--they have at least the key to the
+understanding of each other. The old needs of life, its destinies and
+fatalities, its sorrows and joys, its exaltations and depressions
+--these are the same everywhere; and to the manual workers
+--the peasant, the labourer, the sailor, the mechanic--the
+world-old trades, pursuits, crafts, and callings with which they are so
+familiar supply a kind of freemasonry which ensures them even among
+strangers a kindly welcome and an easy admittance. If you want to travel
+in foreign lands, you will find that to be skilled in one or two manual
+trades is better than a high official passport.
+
+Among such people there is no natural hatred of each other. Despite all
+the foam and fury of the Press over the present war, I doubt whether
+there is any really violent feeling of the working masses on either side
+between England and Germany. There certainly is no great amount in
+England, either among the country-folk or the town artisans and
+mechanics; and if there be much in Germany (which is quite doubtful) it
+is fairly obviously due to the _animus_ which has been aroused and the
+_virus_ which has been propagated by political and social schemers.
+
+We have had enough of Hatred and Jealousy. For a century now commercial
+rivalry and competition, the perfectionment of the engines of war, and
+the science of destruction have sufficiently occupied the nations--with
+results only of disaster and distress and ruin to all concerned. To-day
+surely another epoch opens before us--an epoch of intelligent
+helpfulness and fraternity, an epoch even of the simplest common sense.
+We have rejoiced to tread and trample the other peoples underfoot, to
+malign and traduce them, to single out and magnify their defects, to
+boast ourselves over them. And acting thus we have but made the more
+enemies. Now surely comes an era of recognition and understanding, and
+with it the glad assurance that we have friends in all the ends of the
+earth.
+
+We--and I speak of the European nations generally--have talked loudly of
+our own glory; but have we welcomed and acclaimed the glory and beauty
+of the other peoples and races around us--among whom it is our privilege
+to dwell? We have boasted to love each our own country, but have we
+cared at all for the other countries too? Verily I suspect that it is
+because we have _not_ truly loved our own countries, but have betrayed
+them for private profit, that we have thought fit to hate our neighbours
+and ill-use them for our profit too.
+
+What a wonderful old globe this is, with its jewelled constellations of
+humanity! Alfred Russel Wallace, in his _Travels on the Amazon_ (1853,
+ch. xvii), says: "I do not remember a single circumstance in my travels
+so striking and so new, or that so well fulfilled all previous
+expectation, as my first view of the real uncivilized inhabitants of the
+river Uaupes.... I felt that I was as much in the midst of something new
+and startling, as if I had been instantaneously transported to a distant
+and unknown country." He then speaks of the "quiet, good-natured,
+inoffensive" character of these copper-coloured natives, and of their
+quickness of hand and skill, and continues: "Their figures are generally
+superb; and I have never felt so much pleasure in gazing at the finest
+statue as at these living illustrations of the beauty of the human
+form." Elsewhere he says[31]: "Their whole aspect and manner were
+different [from the semi-civilized Indians]; they walked with the free
+step of the independent forest-dweller ... original and self-sustaining
+as the wild animals of the forest ... living their own lives in their
+own way, as they had done for countless generations before America was
+discovered. The true denizen of the Amazonian forests, like the forest
+itself, is unique and not to be forgotten."
+
+Not long ago I was talking to a shrewd, vigorous old English lady who
+had spent some forty years of her life among the Kafirs in South Africa
+and knew them intimately. She said (not knowing anything about _my_
+feelings): "Ah! you British think a great deal about yourselves. You
+think you are the finest race on earth; but I tell you the Kafirs are
+finer. They are splendid. Whether for their physical attributes, or
+their mental, or for their qualities of soul, I sometimes think _they_
+are the finest people in the world." Whether the old lady was right (and
+one has heard others say much the same), or whether she was carried away
+by her enthusiasm, the fact remains that here is a people _capable_ of
+exciting such enthusiasm, and certainly capable of exciting much
+admiration among all who know them well.
+
+Read the accounts of the Polynesian peoples at an early period--before
+commerce and the missionaries had come among them--as given in the pages
+of Captain Cook, of Herman Melville, or even as adumbrated in their past
+life in the writings of R.L. Stevenson--what a picture of health and
+gaiety and beauty! Surely never was there a more charming and happy
+folk--even if long-pig did occasionally in their feasts alternate with
+wild-pig.
+
+And yet how strange that the white man, with all his science and all his
+so-called Christianity, has only come among these three peoples
+mentioned (and how many more?) to destroy and defile them--to flog the
+mild and innocent native of the Amazons to death for greed of his
+rubber; to rob the Kafir of his free wild lands and blast his life with
+drink and slavery in the diamond mines; to degrade and exterminate the
+Pacific islanders with all the vices and diseases of "civilization"!
+
+Think of the Chinese--that extraordinary people coming down from the
+remotest ages of history, with their habits and institutions apparently
+but little changed--so kindly, so "all there," so bent on making the
+best of this world. "At the first sight of these ugly, cheery, vigorous
+people I loved them. Their gaiety, as of children, their friendliness,
+their profound humanity, struck me from the first and remained with me
+to the last."[32] And the verdict of all who know the people well--in
+the interior of the country of course--is the same. Think of the
+Japanese with their slight and simple, but exceedingly artistic and
+exceedingly heroic type of civilization.
+
+Or, again, of the East Indian peoples, so unfitted as a rule for making
+the best of this world, so passive, dreamy, subtle, unpractical, and yet
+with their marvellous spiritual gift, their intuition (also since the
+dawn of history) and conviction of another plane of being than that in
+which we mostly move, and their occasional power of distinctly sensing
+that plane and acting on its indications. Think of their ancient
+religious philosophy--their doctrine of world-unity--absolutely
+foundational and inexpugnable, the corner-stone of all metaphysics,
+science, and politics, and of the latest most modern democracy; and
+still realized and believed in in India as nowhere else in the world.
+
+Think of the gentle Buddhistic Burmese, the active, social Malays, the
+hard-featured, hard-lived Thibetans and Mongolians. Think of the Arabian
+and Moorish and Berber races, who, once the masters of the science and
+comforts of civilization, of their own accord (but in accordance also
+with their religion) abandoned the worship of all these idols and
+returned to the Biblical simplicity of four thousand years ago--having
+realized that they already possessed something better, namely, the glory
+of the sky and the earth, the sun and the desert sands, and the freedom
+of love and adventure. How strange, and yet how natural, that sundered
+only by a narrow strip of sea they even now should look back upon all
+the laborious, feverish, and overcrowded wealth of Europe and _seeing
+the cost thereof_ should feel for it only contempt! For that, indeed,
+is actually for the most part the case--though not of course without
+exceptions among certain sections of the population.
+
+Or again, the millions and millions of Great and Little Russian
+peasants. Big-framed, big-hearted, patient, friendly, with a great
+natural gift for association and co-operation, peacefully minded and
+profoundly religious; yet superstitious, and capable of rising at any
+moment _en masse_ to the call of a great crusade or "holy war"; it might
+seem that they hold all Western Europe in the hollow of their hands.
+Indeed they constitute not only a hope and promise of deliverance to our
+modern world, but also a considerable danger. All depends on how we
+dispose ourselves towards them. Should the nations of Western Europe
+rouse their hatred by chicanery and mean treatment the result might be
+fatal. If their flood once began to move, no battle array of armaments
+would be of any use--any more than a revolver against a rising tide--the
+flood would flow round and over us. But if on the other hand we could
+really reach the heart of this great people, if we could treat them
+really generously and with understanding, we should create a response
+there, and a recognition, which would remove all risk to ourselves, and
+possibly help to free Russia from the great burden of political
+servitude and ignorance which has so long oppressed her peasantry.
+
+Or think of the Servians--that hospitable people, good lovers and good
+haters, with their ancient, almost prehistoric, system of family
+communities surviving down to modern days, and blossoming out in a
+perfect genius for co-operative agriculture and Raffeisen banks!
+
+Or the Finns, the Swedes, the Norwegians, and the Danes (if I may class
+these together); what a clear, clean-minded, healthy people are these,
+so direct in their touch on Nature and the human instincts, so
+democratic, bold, and progressive in their social organizations--what a
+privilege to have them as our near neighbours and relatives! Or the
+Germans, in many ways resembling the last mentioned group, only richer
+and more varied in their culture and racial characteristics! Or the
+Dutch, so well-based and broad-seated both in body and mind, with their
+ample bowels of compassion and their well-equipped brains, so full of
+tenderness and of sturdy commonsense, what a gift has been theirs to
+Europe, what a legacy of artistic treasure and of heroic record! Or the
+Spanish with their beautiful and dignified women, or the French with
+their fine logical and artistic sense, or the Hungarians, Greeks, and
+Italians!
+
+Have we nothing to do but to prepare engines of death and of slaughter
+against all these peoples? Is our main idea of relation to them one of
+domination and profit? Have we no use for them but to gain their riches,
+and in exchange to lose our own souls? Or shall we, like the Prussians,
+seek to "impose" our own standards of so-called culture on them, and
+trim their infinite variety and grace to one sorry pattern? These are
+all in their diverse glory and beauty as leaves of the one great Tree
+whose branches spread over the earth. Whoever understands this, and
+penetrating to the great heart beneath, recognizes the same original
+life in them all, will possess the secret of salvation; whatever nation
+first casts aside the filthy rags of its own self-righteousness and the
+defiling and sordid garment of mercenary gain, and accepts the others
+frankly as its brother and sister nations, all of one family--that
+nation will become the Healer and Redeemer of the World.
+
+It is interesting to find that, according to the Book of Revelation, the
+tree of which we have been speaking grows with its roots "in the pure
+river of the water of Life, which proceeds from the throne of God and
+the Lamb." What exactly the author of the book meant by this passage has
+been much debated. It is clear that there is here a veiled allusion to
+the Zodiac--that mysterious belt of constellations which runs like a
+river round the whole starry heavens, and rises in the constellation of
+the Ram or He-lamb--but to debate _that_ question now would be
+unprofitable, even were one fully competent to do so. More to the point
+is it to see that this remarkable simile has an inner sense applicable
+to mankind, and so far independent of any allusion to the Zodiac. This
+Tree that is for the healing of the nations has its roots in the pure
+water of Life which flows from the great Throne. We have seen in an
+early chapter where the roots of Strife between the nations are to be
+sought for, and whence they draw their nourishment. They are to be found
+in the very muddy waters of domination and selfishness and greed. But
+the roots of the Tree of Healing are in the pure waters of Life. Right
+down below all the folly and meanness which clouds men's souls flows the
+universal Life pure from its original source. The longer you live, the
+more clearly and certainly you will perceive it. In the eyes of the men
+and women around you you will perceive it, and in the eyes of the
+children--aye, and even of the animals. Unclean, no doubt, will the
+surface be--muddied with meannesses and self-motives; and among those
+classes and currents of people who chiefly delight to dwell in the midst
+of such things (who dwell in the floating mire of malice and envy and
+self-assertion and avarice and conceit and deceit and domination and
+other such refuse), the waters will be foul indeed; but below these
+classes, among the simple, comparatively unselfconscious types of
+humanity who everywhere represent the universal life (without, in a
+sense, being aware of it), and again, above them, among those whose
+spirits have passed "in compassion and determination around the whole
+earth and found only equals and lovers," the water flows pure and free.
+These two groups--between them forming far the largest and most
+important mass of human kind--are those whose influence and tendency is
+toward peace and amity. It is only the scurrying, avaricious,
+fever-stricken, and, for all their wealth, poverty-stricken classes and
+cliques of the civilization-period who are the sources of discord and
+strife--and they only for a time. In the end it will be found that by
+every river and stream and tiny brook over the whole earth grows the
+invincible Tree of Life, whose roots are deep in the human heart, and
+whose leaves are for the healing of the Nations.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[31] _My Life_, vol ii, p. 288.
+
+[32] G. Lowes Dickinson, _Civilizations of India, China, and Japan_,
+p.43. See also Eugene Simon, _La Cite Chinoise,_ passim.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+
+[The following extracts, mostly from contemporaneous sources, are
+gathered together in an Appendix with the object of throwing
+side-lights, _often from opposing points of view_, on the questions
+raised in the text.]
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+
+
+A NEW AND BETTER PEACE.
+
+
+"If we now destroy the German national idol, it must not be to set up an
+idol of our own in its place. There will be ruin enough after the war to
+repair, and a heavy task for all the nations in repairing it; but if
+they have learned then that peace is not a disguised war but a state of
+being in which men and nations alike pursue their own ideas of
+excellence without rivalry, then we shall know that the irrevocable dead
+have not died in vain."--_"Times" Literary Supplement_, _September_ 17,
+1914.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CHANGE FROM THE GERMANY OF KANT AND GOETHE AND SCHUBERT TO THE
+GERMANY OF TO-DAY--AND THE DELUSION OF IMPERIALISM.
+
+
+"What, then, has wrought this wonderful change in a people so closely
+allied to ourselves, whose race is so similar that their children in the
+hotels of France and Italy are mistaken for British children? The human
+raw material is the same, and until half a century ago gave results
+which won our respect and admiration. What is this change of the last
+half-century which from the same material gives results so different?
+There can be only one answer. The old Germany was a Germany of small,
+self-governing States, of small political power; the new Germany is a
+'great' Germany, with a new ideal and spirit which comes of victory and
+military and political power, of the reshaping of political and social
+institutions which the retention of conquered territory demands, its
+militarization, regimentation, centralization, and unchallenged
+authority; the cultivation of the spirit of domination, the desire to
+justify and to frame a philosophy to buttress it. Some one has spoken of
+the war which made 'Germany great and Germans small.'..."
+
+"...So in our day, it is not the German national faith, the
+_Deutschtum_, the belief that the German national ideal is best for the
+German--it is not that belief that is a danger to Europe. It is a belief
+that that German national ideal is the best for all other people, and
+that the Germans have a right to impose it by the force of their armies.
+It is that belief alone which can be destroyed by armies. We must show
+that we do not intend to be brought under German rule, or have German
+ideals imposed upon us, and having demonstrated that, the Allies must
+show that they in their turn have no intention of imposing their ideals
+or their rule or their dominance upon German peoples. The Allies must
+show after this war that they do not desire to be the masters of the
+German peoples or States, but their partners and associates in a Europe
+which none shall dominate, but which all shall share."--_From "Shall
+this War End German Militarism?" by Norman Angell_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GERMAN PUBLIC OPINION IN 1913 WITH REGARD TO THE IMPENDING WAR.
+
+
+The Report on this subject given in the French Yellow Book (Section 5)
+throws much light on the attitude of the various classes in Germany. In
+favour of peace (it says) are "the large mass of workmen, artisans, and
+peasants, who are peaceful by instinct"; a considerable number of
+non-military nobility, and of "manufacturers, merchants, and financiers
+of minor importance, to whom even a victorious war would bring
+bankruptcy"; also a vast number of those who are continually in a state
+of "suppressed revolt against Prussian policy," like the "Government and
+ruling classes of the great southern States, Saxony, Bavaria,
+Wurtemburg," and so forth.
+
+On the other hand, in favour of war are the great, mainly Prussian, war
+party, consisting of the military aristocracy and nobility "who see with
+terror the democratization of Germany and the growing force of the
+Socialist party"; "others who consider war as necessary for economic
+reasons found in over-population and over-production, the need of
+markets and outlets"; the great _bourgeoisie_, "which also has its
+reasons of a social nature--the upper middle class being no less
+affected than the nobility by the democratization of Germany ... and,
+finally, the gun and armour-plate manufacturers, the great merchants who
+clamour for greater markets, and the bankers who speculate on the Golden
+Age and the indemnity of war. These, too, think that war would be good
+business."
+
+The whole paper is too long for extensive citation here, but is well
+worth reading.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POLITICAL IGNORANCE IN GERMANY.
+
+
+"On Tuesday last at the Union Society Mr. Dudley Ward, late Berlin
+correspondent of the _Daily Chronicle_ and other English papers, and
+Fellow of St. John's College, dealt with 'The War from the German Point
+of View.' Mr. Ward's profound knowledge of Germany, especially since
+1911, and his obvious attempt to review recent events with impartiality,
+was a revelation to Cambridge, and a very large audience showed its
+enthusiastic appreciation of his ability and his frankness.
+
+"Mr. Ward emphasized particularly the _astonishing political ignorance_
+of the German people as a whole, an ignorance quite unintelligible to
+any one unacquainted with their Press and their political institutions.
+Public opinion, as he said, counts for little in Germany, and the
+Government can generally guide it into any direction it may please, and
+this fact is essential to the understanding of the events--diplomatic
+events--which led to the declaration of war."--_From the "Cambridge
+Magazine," December 5, 1914._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"One of the political phenomena of America has always been the
+indifference of the German to active participation in politics. Efforts
+to persuade him to organize with any political party have never
+succeeded except in isolated cases. The German-American has been
+regarded as an independent politically. Until Europe's conflict raised
+concealed characteristics to the surface the German-American's
+indifference to politics had not been looked upon as a serious
+matter."--_From article by Alt. John Herbert in the London "Daily News,"
+December,_ 1914.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GERMANY'S PURPOSE.
+
+
+_According to Herr Maximilien Harden's article in "Die Zukunft," as
+reproduced in the "New York Times," December, 1914_.
+
+"Not as weak-willed blunderers have we under-taken the fearful risk of
+this war. We wanted it. Because we had to wish it and could wish it. May
+the Teuton devil throttle those whiners whose pleas for excuses make us
+ludicrous in these hours of lofty experience. We do not stand, and shall
+not place ourselves, before the Court of Europe. Our power shall create
+new law in Europe. Germany strikes. If it conquers new realms for its
+genius, the priesthood of all the gods will sing songs of praise to the
+good war.
+
+"We are at the beginning of a war the development and duration of which
+are incalculable, and in which up to date no foe has been brought to his
+knees. We wage the war in order to free enslaved peoples, and thereafter
+to comfort ourselves with the unselfish and useless consciousness of our
+own righteousness. We wage it from the lofty point of view and with the
+conviction that Germany, as a result of her achievements and in
+proportion to them, is justified in asking, and must obtain, wider room
+on earth for development and for working out the possibilities that are
+in her."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ENGLAND'S PERFIDY.
+
+
+_From the Manifesto of Professors Haeckel and Eucken, September, 1914._
+
+"What is happening to-day surpasses every instance from the past; this
+last example will be permanently characterized in the annals of the
+world as the _indelible shame of England_. Great Britain is fighting for
+a Slavic, semi-Asiatic Power _against Teutonism_; she is fighting, not
+only in the ranks of barbarism but also on the side of _wrong and
+injustice_, for let it not be forgotten that Russia began the war,
+because she refused to permit adequate expiation for a miserable
+assassination; but the blame for extending the limits of the present
+conflict to the proportions of a world-war, through which the sum of
+human culture is threatened, rests upon England.
+
+"And the reason for all this? Because England was _envious_ of Germany's
+greatness, because she was bound to hinder further expansion of the
+German sphere at any cost! There cannot be the least doubt that England
+was determined from the start to break in upon Germany's great conflict
+for _national existence_, to cast as many stones as possible in
+Germany's path, and to block her every effort toward adequate expansion.
+England lay in wait until the favourable opportunity for inflicting a
+lasting injury upon Germany should come, and promptly seized upon _the
+unavoidable German invasion of Belgian territory_ as a pretext for
+draping her own brutal national egotism in a mantle of decency.
+
+"_Or is there in the whole world a person so simple as to believe that
+England would have declared war upon France, had the latter Power
+invaded Belgium?_ In that event, England would have shed hypocritical
+tears over the necessary violation of international law, while
+concealing a laughing face behind the mask. The most repulsive thing in
+the whole business is this hypocritical Pharisaism; it merits only
+contempt.
+
+"History shows that such sentiments as these, far from guiding nations
+upward, lead them along the downward path. But we of this present time
+have fixed our faith firm as a rock upon our righteous cause, and upon
+the superior power and the inflexible will for victory that abide in the
+German nation. Nevertheless the deplorable fact remains, that the
+boundless egotism already mentioned has for that span of the future
+discernible to us destroyed the collaboration of the two nations which
+was so full of promise for the intellectual uplift of humanity. But the
+other party has willed it so. Upon England alone rests the monstrous
+guilt and the responsibility in the eye of world-history."
+
+"ERNST HAECKEL.
+
+"RUDOLF EUCKEN."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM THE MANIFESTO OF PROFESSOR EUCKEN.
+
+
+"Let us hope that our German weapons will show the Englishmen that they
+were entirely wrong in their reckoning; but first let us point out the
+wide discrepancy between their motives and ours.
+
+"With them it is self-seeking, envy, calculation; with us the conviction
+that we are fighting for the holiest possessions of our people, for
+right and justice."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NIETZSCHE ON DISARMAMENT.
+
+
+The following extract from _Nietzsche_ may be worth quoting as
+presenting one aspect of his many-sided thought:--
+
+"Perhaps a memorable day will come when a nation renowned in wars and
+victories, distinguished by the highest development of military order
+and intelligence, and accustomed to make the heaviest sacrifices for
+these objects, will voluntarily exclaim, 'We will break our swords,' and
+will destroy its whole military system, lock, stock, and barrel. To make
+ourselves defenceless (after having been most strongly defended), from
+loftiness of sentiment, is the means towards genuine peace.... The
+so-called armed peace that prevails at present in all countries is a
+sign of a bellicose disposition, that trusts neither itself nor its
+neighbour, and, partly from hate partly from fear, refuses to lay down
+its weapons. Better to perish than to hate and fear; and twice better to
+perish than to make oneself hated and feared."--_From "Human all too
+Human," vol. ii. (translated by P.V. Colm, 1911)_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE EFFECT OF DISARMAMENT.
+
+
+"Just as the growth of armaments increases the common danger, so a
+policy of reduction would have the opposite effect, and were one
+European country boldly to adopt disarmament it would strengthen
+incalculably the forces making for peace in all countries. The armaments
+of European nations are interdependent, and were such a policy pursued
+by one nation it would be followed, if not by immediate disarmament in
+other nations, at any rate, by very considerable reductions. It is very
+easy to underrate the feeling which for some time past has been growing
+throughout Europe against the colossal waste of armaments. Even in
+Germany, whose geographical position from a military point of view is
+weak, the Socialist vote, which is cast strenuously against armaments,
+has grown at each election until it now represents some 35 per cent, of
+the total electorate. The great weapon with which reaction has attempted
+to combat Socialist growth has been an appeal against the 'unpatriotic'
+opposition to armaments. What effect would this appeal have in face of
+disarmament abroad? The Socialist party, with its anti-militarist
+programme, would sweep Germany and compel the Government rapidly to
+follow suit. Sooner or later the internal pressure of public opinion
+would force the adoption of a similar policy upon the Government of
+every civilized country in Europe."--_From "Why Britain Should Disarm"
+by George Benson (National Labour Press, 1d.)_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PRINCIPLE OF NATIONALITY.
+
+
+"Now the war has come, and when it is over let us be careful not to make
+the same mistake or the same sort of mistake as Germany made when she
+had France prostrate at her feet in 1870. (Cheers.) Let us, whatever we
+do, fight for and work towards great and sound principles for the
+European system. And the first of those principles which we should keep
+before us is the principle of nationality--that is to say, not the
+conquest or subjugation of any great community or of any strong race of
+men, but the setting free of those races which have been subjugated and
+conquered; and if doubt arises about disputed areas of country we should
+try to settle their ultimate destination in the reconstruction of Europe
+which must follow from this war with a fair regard to the wishes and
+feelings of the people who live in them."--_From the speech of Mr.
+Churchill, September_ 11, 1914, at the London Opera House.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONSCRIPTION.
+
+"If we, in a moment of unthinking panic, adopt the advice of our
+militarists and develop an Army based on universal service, we shall
+prepare for ourselves the very situation in which Germany finds itself
+at this moment. However much we may protest that our aims are pacific,
+and that our Army is intended only for defensive purposes, foreign
+nations will view it with alarm, and will reflect that, by the help of
+our Navy, we can land an armed force in any country that has a sea
+coast. We shall thus incur the risk of a coalition against us. It is
+said that if we had had a conscript Army, the present war would not have
+taken place. But it is not realized that a different and far more
+dangerous war would have been probable, a war in which we should have
+had no continental Allies, but should have been resisted, as Germany is
+being resisted, in order to relieve Europe of an intolerable terror....
+
+"In a word, of all the measures open to us to adopt, none is so likely
+to bring us to disaster as universal military service."--_By Hon.
+Bertrand Russell (in "The Labour Leader," October 15, 1914)._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+H.G. WELLS ON THE REGULATION OF ARMAMENTS AND NEUTRALIZATION OF THE SEA.
+
+
+"If there is courage and honesty enough in men, I believe it will be
+possible to establish a world Council for the regulation of armaments as
+the natural outcome of this war. First, the trade in armaments must be
+absolutely killed. And then the next supremely important measure to
+secure the peace of the world is the neutralization of the sea.
+
+"It will lie in the power of England, France, Russia, Italy, Japan, and
+the United States, if Germany and Austria are shattered in this war, to
+forbid the further building of any more ships of war at all."--_From the
+"Daily Chronicle," August 21, 1914._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WAR AND DEMOCRACY.
+
+
+"It will be necessary soon to consider the relations of democracy to the
+war. The war is a war of nationalities, but it was not made by peoples.
+Its begetter was a comparatively small band of unscrupulous, blind, and
+conceited persons, who were clever and persistent enough to demoralize a
+whole people. In so far as they permitted themselves to be demoralized
+the people were to blame, but the chief blame lies on the small band.
+Europe is laid waste, hundreds of thousands of men murdered, and
+practically every human being in the occidental hemisphere made to
+suffer, not for the amelioration of a race, but in order to satisfy the
+idiotic ambitions of a handful. Let not this fact be forgotten.
+Democracy will not forget it. And foreign policy in the future will not
+be left in the hands of any autocracy, by whatever specious name the
+autocracy may call itself. Ruling classes have always said that masses
+were incapable of understanding foreign policy. The masses understand it
+now. They understand that in spite of very earnest efforts in various
+Cabinets, the ruling classes have failed to avert the most terrible
+disaster in history. The masses will say to themselves, 'At any rate we
+couldn't have done worse than that.' The masses know that if the war
+decision had been openly submitted to a representative German chamber,
+instead of being taken in concealment and amid disgusting chicane, no
+war would have occurred. It is absolutely certain that the triumph of
+democracy, and nothing else, will end war as an institution. War will be
+ended when the Foreign Offices are subjected to popular control. That
+popular control is coming."--_Arnold Bennett in the "Daily News," October
+15, 1914._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FUTURE SETTLEMENT.
+
+
+Let us turn, then, from the past to the future and ask, first, what the
+governmental mind, left to itself, is likely to make of Europe when the
+war is finished; secondly, what we, on our part, want and mean to make
+of it. What the diplomatists will make of it is written large on every
+page of history. Again and again they have "settled" Europe, and always
+in such a way as to leave roots for the growth of new wars. For always
+they have settled it from the point of view of States, instead of from
+the point of view of human life. How one "Power" may be aggrandized and
+another curtailed, how the spoils may be divided among the victors, how
+the "balance" may be arranged--these kinds of considerations and these
+alone have influenced their minds. The desires of peoples, the
+interests of peoples, that sense of nationality which is as real a thing
+as the State is fictitious--to all that they have been indifferent....
+
+What can be foreseen with certainty is, that if the peace is to be made
+by the same men who made the war it will be so made that in another
+quarter of a century there will be another war on as gigantic a
+scale....
+
+When this war is over Europe might be settled, then and there, if the
+peoples so willed it and made their will effective, in such a way that
+there would never again be a European War....
+
+First, the whole idea of aggrandizing one nation and humiliating another
+must be set aside.... Secondly, in rearranging the boundaries of States,
+one point, and one only, must be kept in mind: to give to all peoples
+suffering and protesting under alien rule the right to decide whether
+they will become an autonomous unit, or will join the political system
+of some other nation.... Let no community be coerced under British rule
+that wants to be self-governing. We have had the courage, though late,
+to apply this principle to South Africa and Ireland. There remains our
+greatest act of courage and wisdom--to apply it to India.--_G. Lowes
+Dickinson, "The War and the Way Out," pp. 34 et seq._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A WAR NOTE FOR DEMOCRATS.
+
+
+"The truth about the present fighting--well, it cannot be rendered in
+words significant enough to shock into understanding the people who are
+looking in the newspapers now for stories of heroism, 'brilliant bayonet
+charges,' and the rest of the inducements which sell stories of warfare,
+but tell us nothing about it. Perhaps, indeed, there are no words for
+it. I doubt whether the sincerest artist, finely sensitive, and with the
+choicest army of words at his ready and accurate command, could assemble
+the case. The mind of a witness in France is not stirred; it is stunned.
+One is speechless before the spectacle of men, not fighting in the way
+two angry men would fight, but coolly blasting great masses of their
+opponents to pieces at long range, and out of sight of each other, till
+a region with its wrecked towns and homesteads is littered with human
+bowels and fragments. It is possible to value human life too highly,
+maybe. But what profit, physical, moral, or economic, can be got from
+draining several nations' best male generative force into the clay, I
+leave it to worshippers of tribal war-gods of whatever church, and to
+the military minds, to explain. But unless the democracies of Europe,
+after settling this business, see to securing such a settlement
+--whatever the governing classes desire--that this Continental
+waste can never occur again, then one would have to admit human nature
+is too stupid and base to be troubled over any longer."--_H.M.
+Tomlinson, "English Review," December, 1914, p. 75_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PATRIOTISM!
+
+
+"It would seem, then, that love of our country can flourish only through
+the hatred of other countries, and the massacre of those who sacrifice
+themselves in defence of them. There is in this theory a ferocious
+absurdity, a Neronian dilettantism which repels me in the very depths of
+my being. No! Love of my country does not demand that I shall hate and
+slay those noble and faithful souls who also love their country, but
+rather that I should honour them, and seek to unite myself with them for
+our common good....
+
+"You Socialists on both sides claim to be defending liberty against
+tyranny--French liberty against the Kaiser, Germany liberty against the
+Tsar. Would you defend one despotism against another? _Unite and make
+war on both_. There was no reason for war between the Western nations;
+French, English, and German, we are all brothers, and do not hate one
+another. The war-preaching Press is envenomed by a minority, a minority
+vitally interested in maintaining these hatreds; but our peoples, I
+know, ask for peace and liberty, and that alone."--_From Romain
+Rolland's pamphlet "Above the Battlefield," Cambridge, 1914_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NO PATRIOTISM IN BUSINESS!
+
+
+The following leaderette is from the _Glasgow Evening Citizen_ for the
+15th of January:--
+
+"In business patriotism does not enter. Insistently the pocket comes
+first. And if the British consumer of aniline dyes can obtain his raw
+material more advantageously from the German than from the British
+producer, he will probably be ready to do so for the greater gain of
+more economic production in his own business."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MANIFESTO OF THE INDEPENDENT LABOUR PARTY.
+
+
+"We desire neither the aggrandizement of German militarism nor Russian
+militarism, but the danger is that this war will promote one or the
+other. Britain has placed herself behind Russia, the most reactionary,
+corrupt, and oppressive Power in Europe. If Russia is permitted to
+gratify her territorial ambitions and extend her Cossack rule,
+civilization and democracy will be gravely imperilled. Is it for this
+that Britain has drawn the sword?
+
+"To us who are Socialists the workers of Germany and Austria, no less
+than the workers of France and Russia, are comrades and brothers; in
+this hour of carnage and eclipse we have friendship and compassion to
+all victims of militarism. Our nationality and independence, which are
+dear to us, we are ready to defend, but we cannot rejoice in the
+organized murder of tens of thousands of workers of other lands who go
+to kill and be killed at the command of rulers to whom the people are as
+pawns.
+
+"The People must everywhere resist such territorial aggression and
+national abasement as will pave the way for fresh wars; and, throughout
+Europe, the workers must press for frank and honest diplomatic policies,
+controlled by themselves, for the suppression of militarism and the
+establishment of the United States of Europe, thereby advancing towards
+the world's peace. Unless these steps are taken Europe, after the
+present calamity, will be still more subject to the increasing
+domination of militarism, and liable to be drenched with blood."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RESPONSIBILITY RESTS ON THE WHOLE CAPITALIST CLASS.
+
+
+"Prussian militarism, as we have shown in previous issues, exists, as
+all militarism does, to further and protect trade. The furtherance of
+that trade meant territorial expansion, which in its turn was a menace
+to Britain and her allies. Thus it is that this war, carefully
+manoeuvred by the diplomats, is being fought to conserve to one set of
+capitalists their right to exploit the peoples, and to check another set
+from encroaching upon that right.
+
+"Germany--or rather, the capitalists of Germany, for whom the Kaiser has
+always been the "Publicity Agent"--has consistently worked toward the
+objective of challenging the right of Britain to a world-wide Empire. To
+the German capitalists this war is but the realization of their
+philosophy, "Might is Right," and, reckless of human life and suffering,
+a European war is to them the way to vaster fields of exploitation and
+greater wealth. Their militarism was the machine, and the workers the
+cogs of the wheels. British capitalists, on the other hand, determined
+to maintain what they hold, forgetful of how it had been obtained, were
+thus compelled to take up the cudgels for their own sakes; and here, as
+in Germany, the workers are the tools used to save their fortunes and
+conserve their rights."--"_The Voice of Labour," October_, 1914.
+
+"And it is not unlikely that the present bloody catastrophe will at last
+awaken the people from their indifference. The bitter pain and fearful
+suffering will perhaps make a deeper impression than the words of the
+revolutionaries. It is possible that the Social Revolution will be the
+last act in the present tragedy; possible that murderous militarism will
+be drowned in the blood of its numberless victims; that the people of
+the different countries will unite against the bloody regime of modern
+Capitalism and its institutions, and finally produce a new social
+culture upon the basis of free Socialism."--"_Freedom," September 14._
+
+In an American contemporary a quotation is given from an issue of
+_Vorwaerts_ which was suppressed by the German Government. It reads:--
+
+"The comrades abroad can be assured that the German working class
+disapproves to-day of every piratical policy of State just as it has
+always disapproved and that it is determined to resist the predatory
+subjugation of foreign peoples as strongly as the circumstances permit.
+The comrades in foreign lands can be assured that, though the German
+workmen are also protecting their Fatherland, they will nevertheless not
+forget that their interests are the same as those of the proletariat in
+other countries, who, like themselves, have been compelled to go to war
+against their will, indeed, even against their often repeated
+pronouncements in favour of peace."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TEXT OF LIEBKNECHT'S PROTEST.
+
+
+The _Berner Tagwacht_ publishes the full text of Karl Liebknecht's
+protest against the vote of credit by the Reichstag on December 2nd. The
+protest was not read, the President having vetoed it under pretext that
+it would entail a call to order. The protest was communicated to the
+German Press. Not one paper published it. It runs:--
+
+"This war, desired by none of the peoples concerned, has not broken out
+in behalf of the welfare of the German people or any other. It is an
+Imperialist war, a war for the capitalist domination of the world's
+markets and for the political domination of important regions for the
+placing of industrial and banking capital. From the point of view of
+rivalry in armaments, it is a preventive war provoked by the German and
+Austrian war parties together in the obscurity of semi-absolutism and of
+secret diplomacy."
+
+After declaring that this is not a defensive war for Germany, the
+protest continues:--
+
+"A rapid peace, one which does not humiliate anybody, a peace without
+conquests, this is what we must demand. Every effort in this direction
+must be favourably received. The continuous and simultaneous affirmation
+of this desire, in all the belligerent countries, can alone put a stop
+to the bloody massacre before the complete exhaustion of all the peoples
+concerned. A peace based upon the international solidarity of the
+working class and on the liberty of all the peoples can alone be a
+lasting peace. It is in this sense that the proletariats of all
+countries must furnish, even in the course of this war, a Socialist
+effort for peace.
+
+"But my protest is against the war, against those who are responsible
+for it, against those who direct it; it is against the capitalist policy
+which gave it birth; it is directed against the capitalist objects
+pursued by it, against the plans of annexation, against the violation of
+the neutrality of Belgium and Luxemburg, against military dictatorship,
+against the total oblivion of social and political duties of which the
+Government and ruling classes are still to-day guilty. For this reason,
+I reject the military credits asked for."--_From the "Daily News,"
+December 14, 1914._
+
+"KARL LIEBKNECHT.
+
+"BERLIN, _December 2_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DANGER OF RUSSIA.
+
+
+The following is the text of the resolution passed by the Central
+Committee of the Russian Social Democratic Party in reply to M.
+Vandervelde's appeal on behalf of the Allied cause:--
+
+"We recognize the anti-democratic character of the Prussian hegemony,
+but as Russian Social Democrats we cannot forget another enemy of the
+workers, and no less dangerous--Russian absolutism. In home affairs this
+enemy remains what it always has been, a merciless oppressor and an
+unceasing exploiter. Even at the present moment, when we should have
+thought this despotism would be more cautious, it remains the same and
+continues the political persecution of the democracy, and of all subject
+nationalities. To-day all Socialist journals are stopped, all working
+class organizations are disbanded, many hundreds of members are
+arrested, and our brave comrades are sent to exile just as before.
+Should this war end in victory for our present Government, it will
+become the centre and mainstay of international reaction.... Our
+immediate objective should be the convocation of a Constitutional
+Assembly. We demand this in the interests of the same European democracy
+on whose behalf you appeal. Our party is a very important section of the
+world's democracies, and by fighting for our interests we are at the
+same time fighting for the interests of all democracies, enlarging and
+strengthening them. We hope that our interests are not considered as
+opposed to those of other European democracies which we esteem as highly
+as our own. We are persuaded that Russian absolutism is the chief
+support of reactionary militarism in Europe, and that it has bred in the
+German hegemony the dangerous enmity towards European democracy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER ON RUSSIA FROM P. KROPOTKIN.
+
+
+"'But what about the danger of Russia?' my readers will probably ask.
+
+"To this question, every serious person will probably answer, that when
+you are menaced by a great, very great danger, the first thing to do is
+to combat this danger, and then see to the next. Belgium and a good deal
+of France _are_ conquered by Germany, and the whole civilization of
+Europe is menaced by its iron fist. Let us cope first with this danger.
+
+"As to the next, Is there anybody who has not thought himself that the
+present war, in which all parties in Russia have risen unanimously
+against the common enemy, will render a return to the autocracy of old
+materially impossible? And then, those who have seriously followed the
+revolutionary movement of Russia in 1905 surely know what were the ideas
+which dominated in the First and Second, approximately freely elected
+Dumas. They surely know that complete Home Rule for all the component
+parts of the Empire was a fundamental point of all the Liberal and
+Radical parties. More than that: Finland then actually _accomplished_
+her revolution in the form of a democratic autonomy, and the Duma
+approved it.
+
+"And finally, those who know Russia and her last movement certainly feel
+that _autocracy will never more be re-established in the forms it had
+before_ 1905, _and that a Russian Constitution could never take the
+Imperialist forms and spirit which Parliamentary rule has taken in
+Germany_. As to us, who know Russia from the inside, we are sure that
+the Russians never will be capable of becoming the aggressive, warlike
+nation Germany is. Not only the whole history of the Russians shows it,
+but with the Federation which Russia is _bound to_ become in
+the very near future, such a warlike spirit would be absolutely
+incompatible."--_Quoted in "Freedom," also in the "Manchester Guardian,"
+October, 1914_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FUTURE OF EUROPE.
+
+_Portion of a letter written by P. Kropotkin to Mr. R.J. Kelly, K.C., of
+Dublin, December 15, 1915._
+
+"The same for the South Slavs and for all nationalities oppressed in
+Europe. When the last Balkan War had shown the inner power of the South
+Slavs, I greeted in it the disintegration of the Turkish Empire, which
+would be followed by the disintegration of the three other
+Empires--Austria, Russia, and Germany--so as to open the way for two,
+three, or more federations. A South Slavonic federation--the Balkan
+United State was the dream of Bakunin--would be followed by a free
+Poland, free Finland, Free Caucasia, free Siberia, federated for peace
+purposes. Yes, dear Mr. Kelly, you are right, we are on the eve of great
+events in Europe. Warmest wishes that this should become a reality, or
+receive a sound beginning of realization, during the coming new year,
+and my very best wishes to you of health and vigour.--Sincerely yours,
+
+"P. KROPOTKIN."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SERVIA.
+
+
+"We are therefore justified in declining to accept such evidence. We are
+witnessing the birththroes of a new nation, the triumph of the idea of
+national unity among the disunited Southern Slavs, and it is the duty of
+Britain and France, whose Fleets are now operating on the Adriatic, to
+insist upon a just and permanent solution, based upon the principle of
+nationality and the wishes of the Southern Slav race. Only by treating
+the problem as an organic whole and avoiding patchwork we can hope to
+remove one of the chief danger centres in Europe."--_Lecture at Essex
+Hall, November 13, 1914, by R.W. Seton Watson_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BATTLEFIELD.
+
+
+"Then the camps of the wounded--O heavens what scene is this?--is this
+indeed _humanity_--these butchers' shambles? There are several of them.
+There they lie, in the largest, in an open space in the woods, from two
+hundred to three hundred poor fellows--the groans and screams--the odour
+of blood, mixed with the fresh scent of the night, the grass, the
+trees--that slaughter-house! Oh, well is it their mothers, their sisters
+cannot see them--cannot conceive and never conceived these things.
+
+"One man is shot by a shell, both in the arm and leg--both are
+amputated--there lie the rejected members. Some have their legs blown
+off--some bullets through the breast--some indescribably horrid wounds
+in the face or head, all mutilated, sickening, torn, gouged out--some in
+the abdomen--some mere boys--many rebels, badly hurt--they take their
+regular turns with the rest, just the same as any--the surgeons use them
+just the same. Such is the camp of the wounded--such a fragment, a
+reflection afar off of the bloody scene--while all over the clear, large
+moon comes out at times softly, quietly shining.
+
+"Amid the woods, the scene of flitting souls--amid the crack and crash
+and yelling sounds--the impalpable perfume of the woods--and yet the
+pungent, stifling smoke--the radiance of the moon, looking from heaven
+at intervals so placid--the sky so heavenly--the clear-obscure up there,
+those buoyant upper oceans--a few large, placid stars beyond, coming
+silently and languidly out, and then disappearing--the melancholy,
+draperied night above, around. And never one more desperate in any age
+or land--both parties now in force--masses--no fancy battle, no
+semi-play, but fierce and savage demons fighting there--courage and
+scorn of death is the rule, exceptions almost none."--_From Walt
+Whitman_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CHINESE CHRISTIANS ON THE WAR.
+
+
+"The most remarkable attitude yet taken in regard to the war by any body
+of people in the world is that of the native Christian Churches in
+China. I was told a fortnight ago by a missionary just returned from
+China that the Chinese Christians are holding daily prayer meetings to
+pray for peace. They are also praying earnestly that the Christians in
+Europe may be forgiven for killing each other, and, in particular, that
+the British and German churches and ministers may be forgiven for the
+blasphemy of praying to the Common Father for victory over one another,
+_i.e._ for Divine assistance in smashing and maiming and murdering more
+of their fellow Christians. I am also told that these Chinese Christians
+appreciate perfectly that for the most part the people to be killed are
+helpless, innocent workmen, who have had nothing to do with the cause of
+all the trouble.
+
+"That action of the Chinamen is of the essence of real Christianity. It
+is the real spirit. It has been expressed in Europe only by the Pope, on
+the one hand, and, on the other, by the Socialists of the neutral
+countries and by the I.L.P. in England. It is the echo of the angel song
+of the first Christmas two thousand years ago. It is the true note, the
+eternal note. It is the note which will bring mankind back to its senses
+when the hideous passions, the false idealisms, and the sordid greeds
+behind this world tragedy are shown up for what they are."--_By Dr.
+Alfred Salter in "The Labour Leader," December_ 31, 1914.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENTIAL FRIENDLINESS OF PEOPLES.
+
+
+"This essential friendliness, not between nations, but between people of
+different nations, is one of the biggest facts of civilization. And yet
+it has counted for so little that half the nations in Europe are
+fighting one another. Are the causes, then, that have set us fighting
+stronger still? Yes, when it is a question of national conscience. And
+one must regretfully say yes, as long as it is possible for those who
+rule nations and desire war to carry out their will.
+
+"Is that wicked, mediaeval power--in the hands of the few, but still
+strong enough to overrule the natural tendencies of peoples towards
+peace and friendship and to turn their likings into hatreds--is it going
+to continue when this war is over? Who can doubt, if it were possible to
+take a plebiscite of all the nations who are fighting now as to whether
+international disputes should be settled by war or arbitration, what the
+result would be? Is the desire of the many to have its chance when this
+war shall be ended, or shall we submit ourselves again to be dominated
+by the desire of the few?"--_From "The Daily News," October_ 5, 1914.
+
+"At one spot where there had been a fierce hand-to-hand fight there
+were indications that the combatants when wounded had shared their
+water-bottles. Near them were a Briton and a Frenchman whose cold hands
+were clasped in death, a touching symbol of the unity of the two nations
+in this terrible conflict."--_From "The Sheffield Telegraph," November
+14, 1914._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RECONCILIATION IN DEATH.
+
+
+_Letter written by a French cavalry officer as he lay wounded and dying
+in Flanders._
+
+"There are two other men lying near me, and I do not think there is much
+hope for them either. One is an officer of a Scottish regiment, and the
+other a private in the Uhlans. They were struck down after me, and when
+I came to myself I found them bending over me rendering first aid.
+
+"The Britisher was pouring water down my throat from his flask, while
+the German was endeavouring to staunch my wound with an antiseptic
+preparation served out to them by their medical corps. The Highlander
+had one of his legs shattered, and the German had several pieces of
+shrapnel buried in his side.
+
+"In spite of their own sufferings they were trying to help me, and when
+I was fully conscious again the German gave us a morphia injection and
+took one himself. His medical corps had also provided him with the
+injection and the needle, together with printed instructions for its
+use.
+
+"After the injection, feeling wonderfully at ease, we spoke of the lives
+we had lived before the war. We all spoke English, and we talked of the
+women we had left at home. Both the German and the Britisher had only
+been married a year.
+
+"I wondered, and I suppose the others did, why we had fought each other
+at all. I looked at the Highlander, who was falling to sleep exhausted,
+and in spite of his drawn face and mud-stained uniform he looked the
+embodiment of freedom. Then I thought of the tricolor of France, and all
+that France had done for liberty. Then I watched the German, who had
+ceased to speak. He had taken a prayer-book from his knapsack, and was
+trying to read a service for soldiers wounded in battle."
+
+The letter ends with a reference to the failing light and the roar of
+the guns. It was found at the dead officer's side by a Red Cross file,
+and was forwarded to his fiancee.--_From "The Daily Citizen," December
+21, 1914._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CHRISTMAS, 1914.
+
+
+_Letters from the Front (from the Daily Press)._
+
+"Last night (Christmas Eve) was the weirdest stunt I have ever seen. All
+day the Germans had been sniping industriously, with some success, but
+after sunset they started singing, and we replied with carols. Then they
+shouted, 'Happy Christmas!' to us, and some of us replied in German. It
+was a topping moonlight night, and we carried on long conversations, and
+kept singing to each other and cheering. Later they asked us to send one
+man out to the middle, between the trenches, with a cake, and they would
+give us a bottle of wine.
+
+"Hunt went out, and five of them came out and gave him the wine,
+cigarettes, and cigars. After that you could hear them for a long time
+calling from half-way, 'Engleeshman, kom hier.' So one or two more of
+our chaps went out and exchanged cigarettes, etc., and they all seemed
+decent fellows."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"We had quite a sing-song last night (Christmas Eve)," says one writer.
+"The Germans gave a song, and then our chaps gave them one in return. A
+German that could speak English, and some others, came right up to our
+trenches, and we gave them cigarettes and papers to read, as they never
+get any news, and then we let them walk back to their own trenches. Then
+our chaps went over to their trenches, and they let them come back all
+right. About five o'clock on Christmas Eve one of them shouted across
+and told us that if we did not fire on them they would not open fire on
+us, and so the officers agreed. About twenty of them came up all at
+once and started chatting away to our chaps like old chums, and neither
+side attempted to shoot."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I suppose I have experienced about the most extraordinary Christmas one
+could conceive. About seven o'clock on Christmas Eve the Saxons, who are
+entrenched about seventy yards from our trenches, began singing. They
+had a band playing, and our chaps cheered and shouted to them. After
+some time they stood on the top of their trenches, and we did likewise.
+We mutually agreed to cease fire, and all night we sang and shouted to
+each other. To cap everything, their band played 'God save the King.'
+
+"When daylight came two of our fellows, at the invitation of the enemy,
+left the trenches, met half-way, and drank together. That completed it.
+They said they would not fire if we did not; so after that we strolled
+about talking to each other."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"On Christmas morning it was very foggy, so we had a short run on the
+top of the trenches to get warm. When the fog lifted we, as well as the
+Germans, were exposed. No firing occurred, and the Germans began to wave
+umbrellas and rifles, and we answered. They sang and we sang. When we
+met we found they were fairly old fellows. They gave us sausages,
+cigars, sweets, and perkin. We mixed together, played mouth-organs, and
+took part in dances. My word! the Germans can't half sing part-songs. We
+exchanged addresses and souvenirs, and when the time came we shook hands
+and saluted each other, returning to our trenches."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"On Christmas morning one of the Germans came out of a trench and held
+up his hands. Then lots of us did the same, and we met half-way, and for
+the rest of the day we fraternized, exchanging cigars, cigarettes, and
+souvenirs. The Germans also gave us sausages, and we gave them some of
+our food. The Scotsmen then started the bagpipes, and we had a rare old
+jollification, which included football, in which the Germans took part.
+The Germans said they were tired of the war, and wished it was over.
+Next day we got an order that all communication and friendly intercourse
+must cease."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I went up into the trenches on Christmas night. One wouldn't have
+thought there was a war going on. All day our soldiers and the Germans
+were talking and singing half-way between the opposing trenches. The
+space was filled with English and Germans handing one another cigars. At
+night we sang carols."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EXTRACT FROM A LETTER PUBLISHED BY THE "_Berliner Tageblatt_" OF
+DECEMBER 24, 1914.
+
+The author of the letter is Baron Marschall von Bieberstein, a captain
+of the reserves and Prussian "Landrat," obviously a kinsman of the late
+diplomatist and Ambassador in London. He wrote on October 18 from the
+trenches. He said:--
+
+"Whoever fights in this war in the front ranks, whoever realizes all the
+misery and unspeakable wretchedness caused by a modern war ... will
+unavoidably arrive at the conviction, if he had not acquired it earlier,
+that mankind must find a way of overcoming war. It is untrue that
+eternal peace is a dream, and not even a beautiful one. A time will and
+must arrive which will no longer know war, and this time will mark a
+gigantic progress in comparison with our own. Just as human morality has
+overcome the war of all against all; just as the individual had to
+accustom himself to seek redress of his grievances at the hands of the
+State after blood feuds and duels had been banished by civil peace, so
+in their development will the nations discover ways and means to settle
+budding conflicts not by means of wars, but in some other regulated
+fashion, irrespective of what each of us individually may think."
+
+Unfortunately, the writer of this thoughtful letter fell on the
+battlefield.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Healing of Nations and the Hidden
+Sources of Their Strife, by Edward Carpenter
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+of the directory path. The path is based on the etext number (which is
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+example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/2/3/10234
+
+or filename 24689 would be found at:
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+
+An alternative method of locating eBooks:
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